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Luis Arrieche: Finding Fame as a Breakdancer

When he wasn’t hitting the law books, Luis Arrieche was hitting his head on the pavement.

Arrieche, 31, practiced law when he lived in Venezuela, but he also breakdanced. Since he began breaking as a teenager, he’s won 10 national breaking competitions between Venezuela and Memphis.

A Memphian since 2013, Arrieche has been breaking at events, including Memphis Grizzlies games.

Michael Donahue

He did “head flips” with fellow members of HotHouse Groove last June at an opening reception for the “Bouguereau & America” exhibit at the Memphis Brooks Museum of Art. He also performed his signature “hand hop,” where he balances his 175-pound body on one hand for about 70 seconds.

Arrieche again will perform in New Ballet Ensemble’s Nut ReMix, which will be held November 15th through 17th at the Cannon Center.

Growing up in Merida, Venezuela, Arrieche did his first handstand in middle school. By 14, he was jumping up a flight of stairs while wearing rollerblades. But his rollerblade stunts ended. “I just did a jump — a 360 flip — something like that. And when I landed, I landed a bad way. I broke my left arm,” he says.

Four years later, Arrieche fell in love with breakdancing after watching “b-boys” perform at a party. Tight-knit “street crews” took him under their wings and taught him.

“Musicality,” Arrieche says, is the main trait aspiring breakdancers need to have. They have to be able to keep to the beat of the music while breaking.

Breakdancing has four elements: “toprock,” which is upper body dancing — standing up and “doing b-boy steps”; “footwork” — doing different combinations of steps while using your hands and feet; “freeze” — using your head and shoulders; and “power move,” spinning on your whole body, including your head, shoulders, back, and hands.

Arrieche was in his first year of law school when he took up breaking. His parents didn’t support him because they thought breaking would interfere with his studies. “I showed everybody I could do both,” he says. “Why not? If you focus, you can do it.”

He performed with his first dance crew, Evolution Family Group, while in law school. They breaked to Latin hip-hop music in clubs and festivals.

Arrieche continued to break after he graduated. “I was working my regular day in a law office and by 4, 5, 6, I was free, and I could go to practice,” he says. “I guess I was kind of famous in my city. All the time, I received invitations to perform in shows.”

He joined “The Chosen Few,” which he described as “a super crew for competitions.”

In 2012, Arrieche met a woman, got a visa, and moved to Memphis, where her dad lived. He didn’t know any other breakdancers, so he practiced by himself in a garage. “I dance for me, first of all,” he says. “That’s my thing. I dance for me. For my body. For my soul.”

He eventually met other dancers and re-formed The Chosen Few.

Arrieche was no longer interested in pursuing law, so he took construction, roofing, and other jobs.

He danced in Nut ReMix. And he joined HotHouse Groove, which is a combination of dancers, singers, hip-hop performers, and other artists.

Arrieche also began teaching children at L.Y. E. Academy and giving private lessons.

But his family and friends in Venezuela were most impressed after he joined the Memphis Grizzlies as part of the Claw Crew, the entertainment group that performs at games. “When I did my first post about the Grizzlies thing on Facebook, oh, my God, I received a lot of comments,” he says. “Everyone loves me now.”

Arrieche was excited when breakdancing recently became a sanctioned U.S. Olympics sport. That will show the world breaking is an actual sport, he says. “A weird kind of sport, but definitely athletic activity.”

Arrieche usually goes straight to practice after he gets off work at Radians, an industrial products business.

He might go back to school so that he can practice in the U.S. as a lawyer or a paralegal, but he also is thinking about one day opening a dance studio or academy.

For now, Memphis is where he wants to be. “I’ve been here for six years, and I feel it’s my home now,” Arrieche says. “I created a world around me here.”

See Luis Arrieche bust a move in New Ballet Ensemble’s 2019 performance of Nut ReMix, which will be held November 15th through 17th at the Cannon Center.

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News The Fly-By

Preparations Underway for Olympic Boxing Trials

The road to Rio is going straight through Memphis.

In March, news broke that Memphis will play host to the 2016 U.S. Olympic women’s boxing trials and the men’s Olympic boxing trials qualifier. And last week, Congressman Steve Cohen was named as the honorary captain of the event.

The trials, which will be open to the public, will be held from October 25th through the 31st at the Memphis Cook Convention Center, with the final event held at the Cannon Center for the Performing Arts on Halloween night.

The women’s boxing trials will be the final step on the road to the Olympics. Female fighters who win the event in Memphis will go on to compete in Rio de Janeiro. The men’s event is a qualifying tournament, and those who win in Memphis will make the cut for the men’s Olympic trials, which will be held elsewhere. In other words, Memphis is the final step for women before the Olympics and the second-to-last step for men.

Next year’s Olympics ceremony in Rio will mark only the second time women’s boxing has been included as a sport, following its first appearance in London in 2012. It will also be the first time in United States boxing history that a returning women’s Olympic boxing medalist, Claressa Shields, will compete in the Olympic trials.

Last week’s press conference introduced new sponsors for the event, and it was announced that St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital will receive some of the proceeds from ticket sales for the events. After being named honorary captain, Cohen expressed enthusiasm for the boxing trials.

“This will be special because the [amateur boxers] are fighting to represent our nation and to bring back gold. I hope they do, and I’ll be there with them,” Cohen said. “It’s going to be a great event for Memphis. I hope everyone will participate and cheer these young women on.”

One of the new sponsors is City Gear, an athletic outfitter based in Memphis, which has agreed to be the title sponsor of the event. City Gear has 124 stores in 15 states, more than 10 of which are in the Memphis area. City Gear President and CEO Mike Longo stressed the national importance of Memphis hosting this event.

“Memphis has a deep and rich tradition and history of supporting amateur sports. We stand with the amateur athletes. We support them. They do a great job, and we are excited to be part of that yet again,” Longo said.

One of the boxers who will be competing at the trials, Ginny Fuchs, shared her excitement for the weeks ahead.

“In my head, I’m just thinking I can’t wait to get to Rio and stand on the top of the podium and get that gold medal. That’s what I’ve been focused on doing,” Fuchs said. “I put all my dedication and soul into this. So when y’all see me, I will put on a great show.”

Tickets for the trials, including the final at the Cannon Center, can be purchased on TicketMaster. Tickets start at $15.

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News News Blog

Memphis To Host Women’s U.S. Olympic Boxing Trials

Memphis has been selected to host the U.S. Team Olympic Trials for Women’s Boxing. Fighters who win that trial round will move on to compete in the Olympics.

At the same time, Memphis will also host the final qualifying tournament for U.S. Olympic Team Trials for Men’s Boxing. In that tournament, male boxers compete to make the cut for the U.S. Team Olympic Trials for Men, which will be held elsewhere. In other words, Memphis is the final step for women before the Olympics and the second to last step for men.

The will only be the second women’s team trials in history since the female sport was only introduced to the Olympics in 2012. As such, it will also be the first time in U.S. boxing history that a returning Olympic medalist competes in the Olympic Trials. Both Claressa Shields (2012 Olympic gold medalist) and Marlen Esparza (2012 bronze medalist) will compete in the Memphis trials.

Both events will run from October 25th through the 31st at the Memphis Cook Convention Center. The Memphis Convention & Visitor’s Bureau anticipates the event will have a $1.7 million economic impact on the city.

2012 Olympic gold medalist Claressa Shields will compete in the Olympic women’s boxing trials in Memphis.