Savion Glover - Tap Dancing Sensation
- DSA
- Apr 12, 2021
- 2 min read
Hello Dancers! Wow! This term just flew by! Hopefully you all didn't suffer too much during these last couple of weeks of the term:) This week's feature is Savion Glover, an extremely talented tap dancer originating from New Jersey! Fun fact, Glover was actually the choreographer for Mumble the penguin in the animated movie Happy Feet (2006).

Tap dancer, choreographer and actor Savion Glover was born on November 19, 1973 in Newark, New Jersey. Glover began taking in music classes at Newark Community School of the Arts at four years old. He soon progressed to advanced classes, becoming the youngest student in the school’s history to receive a full scholarship. In 1991, Glover graduated from Newark’s Arts High School.
Glover appeared on Broadway for the first time at ten years old in The Tap Dance Kid. He was featured in the title role! From 1988 to 1989, Glover danced in Black and Blue, a Broadway musical revue of black Parisian culture in the interwar period. His performance earned him a Tony Award nomination for Best Performance by a Featured Actor in a Musical, and he was dubbed a “teen-age prodigy” by The New York Times’ . In 1989, Glover made his film debut dancing in Tap, alongside Gregory Hines. The following year, at the age of seventeen, Glover made his choreographic debut at the Apollo Theater’s Rat-A-Tat-Tap Festival in New York City, and began dancing on Sesame Street. Upon his graduation from Newark’s Arts High School, Glover portrayed the young Jelly Roll Morton, appearing again with Gregory Hines, in George C. Wolfe’s Jelly’s Last Jam. In 1996, Glover rejoined Wolfe to conceive, choreograph and star in Bring in da Noise, Bring in da Funk, a Broadway musical revue of black history. Glover returned to film in 2000 and appeared in the television biopic Bojangles (2001), Classical Savion. Glover opened his tap school, The HooFeRzCLuB School for TaP, in Newark in 2009. He continued performing pieces such as SoLe Sanctuary (2011) and Om (2014) at the Joyce Theater, until reuniting with director George C. Wolfe as choreographer of the 2016 musical Shuffle Along, or, the Making of the Musical Sensation of 1921 and All That Followed.
Here are some videos of Savion doing his thang:
And just like that, the term comes to an end! Thank you so much for tuning in this yesar Dancers! Hope you all stay safe and enjoy your very much needed summer vacation!
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