![]() ![]() The new owner, Russell Geyser, said the allegations have nothing to do with the current company, and that people involved with purported misconduct no longer work for Break The Floor. and Canada for weekend workshops and competitions.īut in January, as the AP and the Star were investigating allegations of sexual misconduct against him and others involved in the company, Stroming announced that he had sold Break the Floor and stepped down as CEO. The company was launched 22 years ago by a charismatic dancer, Gil Stroming, who came to fame in the 1990s, performing in the off-Broadway show “Tap Dogs,” described in The New York Times as a “beefcake tap-a-thon.”īreak The Floor now draws around 300,000 dance students, some as young as 5, to packed hotel ballrooms across the U.S. ![]() This story was reported as a partnership between The Associated Press and the Toronto Star
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