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Shabba doo
Shabba doo




  1. Shabba doo movie#
  2. Shabba doo series#

Oh, I didn’t sleep in my beaning and glasses, lol, I donned them because my vanity kicked in and I didn’t want you to see my bed head, and crusty eyes, haha… Have a great day peeps. Let’s goo! Thank you to everyone for your kind, sweet, and loving get well wishes and thoughts. One of the last messages that Shabba-Doo posted on social media said the following:Ī post shared by Adolfo “Shabba-Doo” Quinones News y’all!…I’m feeling all better just a wee bit sluggish from my cold, but the good news is I’m Covid 19 negative! Woo hoo!!! I awoke this morning to a gift from my pall, George “DJ 360” Jett! Thanks man!Īnyway, I’m excited lots of catching up to do. In addition to the live funeral service, there was another link where family members, friends, associates, and also fans left messages (video, photos, and tributes) to the masterful dancer and outstanding influencer of the Hip-Hop performing arts.

Shabba doo movie#

Known for his outstanding role as “Ozone” in the hit 1984 movie “Breakin,” Adolfo Quiñones (his real name) had a memorial service at a Los Angeles church where only his two children and siblings were able to attend.

shabba doo

He was 65.ĭue to the global pandemic prompted by the COVID-19 virus, his actual homegoing service was held in a hybrid ceremony (in-person and online) 17 days after his death. This article was originally published by The Hollywood Reporter.The pop-locker turned Hip-Hop icon Shabba-Doo transitioned to the glory a couple of weeks back on December 30th. Go to school, know your craft, know how it works and be in control of your destiny.” Survivors include his daughter and son. Asked in the 2014 interview what was the biggest lesson he had learned, Quiñones replied: “If I could tell anyone out there one thing, it’s that working on your craft is great, having the desire is great, passion is great, but the match that ignites it all is education.

shabba doo

Shabba doo series#

He had worked with Kennedy on the 2006 MTV series Blowin’ Up. Quiñones also appeared in such films as Xanadu (1980), Tango & Cash (1989), Lambada (1990) and choreographed the 2007 film Kickin’ It Old Skool, starring Jamie Kennedy and Maria Menounos. With The Lockers, he opened for Frank Sinatra at Carnegie Hall and presented an award at the Grammys with Franklin. His early influences ranged from Cab Calloway, Fred Astaire and Ray Bolger to James Brown and Jackie Wilson.Īfter his mother brought him and his sister, Fawn, to Los Angeles, Quiñones was dancing in clubs around the Crenshaw strip when he changed his street dance name from Sir Lance-a-Lock to Shabba-Dabba-Do-Bop, eventually shortened to Shabba-Doo at the suggestion of Greg “Campbellock Jr.” Pope. “I grew up in a mixed household … so I would listen to James Brown, Aretha Franklin and Tito Puente, all in the same moment.” “When I was three or four years old, I used to dance for my family at parties and holidays for change,” he said. … I knew it was going to be a hit.”Īdolfo Gordon Quiñones’ father was Puerto Rican and his mother was African American.

shabba doo

“In that way, there is no other feeling quite like it.

shabba doo

“ Breakin’ was more than just a dance film, it launched a cultural revolution,” he said in a 2014 interview. Quiñones starred opposite Michael “Boogaloo Shrimp” Chambers as Turbo in Cannon Films’ Breakin’ (1984), then returned as Ozone in Breakin’ 2: Electric Boogaloo (1984). That night, the group famously won the Oscar for best original song for “It’s Hard Out Here for a Pimp.”Īfter being accepted as a directing fellow at the American Film Institute - he didn’t have the required bachelor’s degree but got in with credit for his dance career - Quiñones helmed and co-wrote the musical Rave, Dancing to a Different Beat (1993), released by New Line Cinema. He also wrote, directed and appeared in 2017 documentary The Kings of Crenshaw, the title of his memoir that was published last year. He also worked alongside Lionel Richie and Luther Vandross and choreographed Three 6 Mafia’s performance at the 2006 Academy Awards. Quiñones toured with Madonna on her “Who’s That Girl?” tour in 1987 and served as her choreographer on several of her videos. Gone But Not Forgotten: Musicians We Lost in 2020






Shabba doo