Nathan Peck

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Teacher Bio

Nathan Peck recently choreographed Live From Lincoln Center Stars in Concert featuring Annaleigh Ashford, which will be broadcast this Spring on PBS. He has worked as dance/movement consultant on the Broadway productions of You Can't Take It With You and Sylvia with Ms Ashford, and contributed movement to Our Mother's Brief Affair with Linda Lavin....Read more

Nathan Peck recently choreographed Live From Lincoln Center Stars in Concert featuring Annaleigh Ashford, which will be broadcast this Spring on PBS. He has worked as dance/movement consultant on the Broadway productions of You Can't Take It With You and Sylvia with Ms Ashford, and contributed movement to Our Mother's Brief Affair with Linda Lavin. He served as Director of The Soul Sessions featuring Kyle Taylor Parker at Greenroom 42, choreographer of Desperado for the Spring 2017 edition of BC Beat, Joseph at Ridgefeild Playhouse (CT), and Old Maid in Broadway Bares XXVIII. Nathan is the current and original Dance Captain of Tony Award winning Kinky Boots on Braodway, having coached Wayne Brady, Todrick Hall, Brendon Urie, David Cook, Tyler Glenn, Conor Maynard, Tiki Barber, and Mark Ballas on their way to the stage.

Nathan's other Broadway performance credits include Wicked, La Cage aux Folles (Dance Captain, 2004), The Boy From Oz, Taboo, and Dance of the Vampires (Asst. Dance Captain). He also appeared in hte feature films Across the Universe and A Winter's Tale.

Nathan is a gradaute of Oklahoma City University with a BPA in Dance Performance, and has recieved the university's Distinguished Alumni Award for the School of Dance and Entertainment.

NathanPeckOnline.com

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Class Descriptions

Nathan grew up as a Jazz dancer, and hopes to use his class to get back to the elements of the style: line, rhythm, isolation, and grounded movement. His extensive background in Musical Theater also gives his class an undercurrent of creating, understanding, and conveying an emotion or idea through movement. Simple and complex choreography is juxtaposed to emphasize technique and style, as well as the power of space and breath.