- Lil' C
Infobox Musical artist
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Name = Lil' C
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Birth_name = Christoper A. Toler
Origin =Los Angeles, California flagicon|USA
Genre = Krump
Occupation =Dancer , choreographer
Years_active = 2001–present (Dancer)
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URL =Lil' C (born Christopher A. Toler in January 1983) is an American dancer and choreographer. He has choreographed for "So You Think You Can Dance", along with many top music icons.
Career
Since 2006, Lil' C has been a choreographer for the
Fox dance reality showSo You Think You Can Dance . In season 2, he choreographed a routine for Martha Nichols and season runner-upTravis Wall . In season 3, he choreographed a routine for Sara VonGillern and Jesús Solorio in the top 16, as well as for Lauren Gottlieb and Dominic Sandoval in the top 8. He was also a choreographer and guest judge in season 4.Lil C has appeared in music videos for artists such as
Jennifer Lopez ,Ciara ,Missy Elliot ,Christina Millian ,Sean Paul ,Fall Out Boy ,Gwen Stefani , and Se7en. Some videos include "Crazy" by Se7en (2004), and "Hung Up " (2005) and "Sorry" (2006) by Madonna . [http://www.realitybug.com/soyouthinkyoucandance/cast/196-Lil-C]He has also appeared in and choreographed for numerous television dance performances including Fox's
Bones , the 2007Teen Choice Awards , and the 2007NAACP Image Awards . Other notable television credits include The 50th Annual Grammy Awards, VH1 Big in 06 Awards, and the 2005American Music Awards . [http://www.fox.com/dance/bios.htm]Lil' C is featured in the critically-acclaimed 2005 documentary film, "Rize", which documents the history of the krumping and clowning dance styles. He has also appeared in the film
Stomp the Yard and choreographed for the filmsBe Cool and Bring It On Yet Again. [http://www.fox.com/dance/bios.htm]Lil C is featured in the David Michalek exhibit "Slow Dancing", which is described as "a series of 43 larger-than-life, hyper-slow-motion video portraits of dancers and choreographers from around the world, displayed on multiple screens. Each subject's movement (approximately 5 seconds long) was shot on a specially constructed set using a high-speed, high-definition camera recording at 1,000 frames per second (standard film captures 24 frames per second). The result is approximately 10 minutes of extreme slow motion." The exhibit was featured in
New York City ,Los Angeles, California , andLondon . It has also been profiled by Apple.External links
*imdb name|id=1969481|name=Lil' C
* [http://www.slowdancingfilms.com]
* [http://www.reeltalkreviews.com/browse/viewitem.asp?type=review&id=1347]
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