Beginner

Pro-Am

Beginner Level

The foundation — what every new dancer needs to know

A competition format pairing a professional dancer with an amateur, judged on the amateur's skill and the couple's overall performance.

Beginner focus

Attending a Pro-Am as a spectator is inspiring—you'll see amateurs of all levels performing with confidence alongside professionals. If competing interests you, ask your instructor about Pro-Am opportunities. Most participants say the preparation process alone is worth it, regardless of results.

Tips

  • Set a personal goal beyond placement: 'I want to smile naturally on stage' or 'I want to hit every musical accent'
  • Film your rehearsals to track progress—seeing improvement is powerfully motivating
  • Enjoy the process: the practices, the costume shopping, the backstage nerves—this is the experience

Common mistakes

  • Choosing a professional partner based on fame rather than teaching compatibility
  • Focusing solely on the routine and neglecting to improve your overall social dancing
  • Comparing Pro-Am to open division competition—they're different categories with different goals

Practice drill

If you're considering Pro-Am, do a trial run: ask an advanced dancer or instructor to dance one choreographed song with you at a social or practice. The experience of dancing a planned piece with a skilled partner will tell you whether competition energy excites or overwhelms you.

Related terms