Beto Perez

Beto Pérez
Born 1970
Cali, Colombia
Occupation Zumba creator and instructor, entrepreneur
Website betoperez.zumba.com

Alberto "Beto" Pérez, born in 1970, is a Colombian dancer and choreographer who created the fitness program Zumba in the 1990s[1] that involves dance and aerobic elements with accompanying music that is mainly Latin but also incorporates various genres of music and associated martial arts moves, squats, lunges and other aerobic techniques.

Beginnings

Pérez was raised in Cali, Colombia by a single mother and was working three jobs by age 14 to support his family. His passion was dancing, but he could not afford dance lessons. After he won a national lambada contest in Colombia, he was accepted to one of Cali's best academies to study dance while he taught step aerobics in return.

Business

In 1999, Pérez moved to Miami, Florida "in search of the American Dream".[2] Besides teaching aerobics classes, he tried to promote his own fitness and dance routines, accompanied by music, in various venues with limited success until preparation for a 2003 infomercial. With financial and technical assistance from Alberto Perlman and Alberto Aghion,[1] workshops resulted that were based on Zumba routines. His routines, initially distributed as DVDs, gained momentum that resulted in an international following.

In 2006 Pérez established Zumba Fitness LLC,[3] an organization that sells Zumba videos and products and charges licensing fees to its network of instructors (ZIN™ – Zumba Instructors' Network). It employs more than 200 employees. Reportedly some 14 million people in more than 160,000 locations in 185 countries are Zumba practitioners and dance and sing to fun music mainly provided by the company.

Zumba Fitness has also released its own fashion line of Zumbawear. The company manufactures Zumbawear for age-specific groups, including seniors, mothers and children. Besides the general Zumba Fitness brand, fashion lines include styles for Zumba Toning, Aqua Zumba, Zumba Sentao, Zumba Gold, Zumba Gold-Toning, Zumba Kids and Zumba Kids Jr and the newly created Zumba Step. Its instruction programs are popular in community centers, youth activity centers, tourist venues, schools and retirement communities, among other venues.

Music

Though his Zumba Fitness routines, Pérez promotes music and musical artists associated with Zumba, which positively affects musical success for artists in various Latin music genres.[4] An Associated Press article states that the Zumba movement has created an international fan base for Latin music, citing acts including Pitbull, Don Omar and Daddy Yankee.[4] Daddy Yankee's "Limbo" shouts out for Zumba several times in the lyrics. Pitbull, Wyclef Jean and other stars have taken part in Zumba Fitness conventions. Other Zumba fans include Jennifer Lopez and Shakira.

Zumba Fitness has released a series of music albums including Zumba Fitness Dance Party with music for Zumba classes worldwide. Pérez has collaborated with the Colombian Latin star Mara (full name Mara Prada),[5] with whom he has a hit "Crazy Love" credited to Prada featuring Pérez. Prada, Haitian singer J. Perry and American singer Dahrio Wonder were named Zumba Fitness Emerging Artists.[4] A similar collaboration has developed with the well-established Brazilian star Claudia Leitte particularly after the adaptation of "Largadinho" to Zumba moves. An English translation was also included as "Lazy Groove."[6][7] Leitte has become the international ambassador to Zumba Fitness. Pérez was also featured as a "special guest"[8] in "Fiesta Buena",[9] a hit by DJ Mam's that also featured Luis Guisao and Soldat Jahman. The single topped the charts in France and Belgium,[9] following DJ Mam's international hit "Zumba He Zumba Ha".

Discography

Singles

Featured in
Year Single Peak
position
[9]
Album Music
videos
FR
[9]
BEL
(Wa)

[10]
2012 "Fiesta Buena"
(DJ Mam's feat. Luis Guisao & Soldat Jahman
and special guest Beto Perez)
12 50 DJ Mam's album
Fiesta Buena

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Wednesday, March 30, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.