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16 Facts About Storyboard P

1.

Storyboard P is one of the foremost practitioners of the flex genre of street dance, and is particularly noted for his improvisational style.

2.

Storyboard P was born Saalim Muslim, and grew up in Crown Heights, Brooklyn.

3.

Storyboard P danced under the name Professoar, but later switched to the name Storyboard P, with "Storyboard" referring to stop motion animation, and the "P" retained from Professoar.

4.

Storyboard P studied dance at the Harlem School of the Arts.

5.

Storyboard P is particularly known for flex, a style of street dance that originated in Brooklyn and involves pantomime and physical contortion.

6.

Storyboard P developed his own genre of street dance, called "mutation" or "mutant".

7.

Storyboard P has performed at venues including the Breakin' Convention at Sadler's Wells Theatre, the Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art, and Ithaca College, and he was commissioned to appear at Performance Space New York.

8.

In 2012, Storyboard P was featured in the film for Until the Quiet Comes by Flying Lotus, which won the Special Jury Award for Short Film at the Sundance Film Festival, and was identified by Okayplayer as the moment when Storyboard P "hit the mainstream".

9.

In 2017, Storyboard P was featured in the music video for the song "4:44" by Jay-Z.

10.

Storyboard P was then selected to dance solo in the 2013 video for "Picasso Baby" by Jay-Z, and he did not listen to the track beforehand, instead choosing to improvise his dance performance as he heard the track for the first time.

11.

Storyboard P performed in a commercial for the Apple Watch.

12.

At the Bessie Awards in 2015, Storyboard P won the Outstanding Emerging Choreographer Award.

13.

Storyboard P's dancing has been featured in The New York Times and The New Yorker, and was profiled in a cover feature for The Wire.

14.

Storyboard P was the subject of a study by the liquid blackness project.

15.

An article by The Guardian noted that Storyboard P is "widely regarded as the world's greatest exponent of flex", while in Okayplayer he was identified as "the king of flex dancing".

16.

Storyboard P has been compared to the neo-expressionist visual artist Jean-Michel Basquiat, and in The New Yorker Storyboard P was identified as "the Basquiat of street dance".