AcademyFiguresWaterfallIntermediate
Intermediate

Waterfall

Intermediate Level

Going deeper — techniques and nuances for experienced dancers

The waterfall is a cascading dip that flows downward like liquid — the most cinematic moment you can create on a dance floor.

Intermediate focus

Start with the first 'step' of the waterfall only: a controlled backward lean from closed position where the follower tilts back about 30 degrees and returns. Master this until it's effortless. Then add a second phase: the lean transitions into a side stretch. Only when two phases are smooth and comfortable should you attempt the full cascading descent.

Tips

  • Practice near a wall first. The follower can touch the wall for security while learning to trust the descent.
  • Leaders: your legs are doing 80% of the work. If your arms are shaking, your base is wrong. Widen your stance and bend your knees more.
  • Time the waterfall for the most dramatic moment in the song. A waterfall on a random count is wasted. A waterfall on the perfect musical climax is art.

Common mistakes

  • Going too deep too fast — the waterfall should cascade, not drop
  • Leader using arm strength instead of leg strength to support the follower
  • Follower going limp — the core must stay engaged even in full surrender to the dip

Practice drill

Without music, practice the waterfall in extreme slow motion: 8 counts to descend, 4 count hold at the bottom, 8 counts to rise. This tempo forces both partners to use control rather than momentum. If you can't do it this slowly, you can't do it safely at any speed.

Related terms