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VOA (Regular Speed), Fans Flocking to Michael Jackson's Music, Dance

Michael Jackson's 1983 "Thriller" has been described as the most successful music video of all time. A quarter of a century after its release, the song, and its dance routine, still speak to music lovers worldwide.

So when a student at Joe's Movement Emporium in Mount Rainier, Maryland, asked for a special class to teach the dance, artistic director Brooke Kidd jumped at the idea. "There are a couple steps where you need to understand some timing and weight shift, but overall the movements are available to anybody." Almost 60 people attended the class, getting tips from Kidd as they followed an online tutorial breaking down the dance into easy-to-follow segments.

Rumi spent her childhood watching Michael Jackson's iconic moves, and wanted to pass them on to her daughter Harper. "She's a fantastic dancer, but I grew up in the 80s and just wanted to learn the dance, and we thought it would be fun together." Even dancers like 16-year-old Maya, born a decade after "Thriller"'s release, wanted to honor the King of Pop. "I decided to come to pay a tribute to Michael Jackson's death, I feel like everybody should somewhere, so I just wanted to pay my respects as a dancer." They haven't quite perfected each step, but they have plenty of time to practice before October's "Thrill The World," when these dancers will join thousands of others in a dozen countries to break the record of the largest number of people performing "Thriller" at the same time. Kate Moody,Voice of America, Mount Rainier, Maryland

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Michael Jackson's 1983 "Thriller" has been described as the most successful music video of all time.

A quarter of a century after its release, the song, and its dance routine, still speak to music lovers worldwide.  

So when a student at Joe's Movement Emporium in Mount Rainier, Maryland, asked for a special class to teach the dance, artistic director Brooke Kidd jumped at the idea.  

"There are a couple steps where you need to understand some timing and weight shift, but overall the movements are available to anybody."

Almost 60 people attended the class, getting tips from Kidd as they followed an online tutorial breaking down the dance into easy-to-follow segments.

 

Rumi spent her childhood watching Michael Jackson's iconic moves, and wanted to pass them on to her daughter Harper. "She's a fantastic dancer, but I grew up in the 80s and just wanted to learn the dance, and we thought it would be fun together."

Even dancers like 16-year-old Maya, born a decade after "Thriller"'s release, wanted to honor the King of Pop. "I decided to come to pay a tribute to Michael Jackson's death, I feel like everybody should somewhere, so I just wanted to pay my respects as a dancer."

They haven't quite perfected each step, but they have plenty of time to practice before October's "Thrill The World," when these dancers will join thousands of others in a dozen countries to break the record of the largest number of people performing "Thriller" at the same time.

Kate Moody,Voice of America, Mount Rainier, Maryland