Edmonton man performs traditional Cree dance on moving escalator - Action News
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Edmonton

Edmonton man performs traditional Cree dance on moving escalator

A Cree teen caught on camera performing a ceremonial dance on a moving escalator is grabbing attention online.

Donovan Shirt can often be found dancing and drumming around the city

Traditional grass dance on an Edmonton escalator

8 years ago
Duration 0:29
A video of rapper and drummer Donovan Shirt performing a traditional Cree dance on a moving escalator in Edmonton is garnering some major attention online.

A Cree teen caught on camera performing a ceremonial dance on a moving escalator is grabbing attention online.

In the video, 19-year-old Donovan Shirt performs a traditional grass dance as the escalatortreads move beneath him.

Off camera, Justin Wright Cardinal can be heard singing.

Moostoos shot the video of Shirt dancing at an underground transit station while the group was waiting for an LRT to arrive. (Gary Moostoos/Facebook)

The video was shot by Gary Moostoos, awell-known Indigenous cultural advisor in Edmonton, at the LRT platform beneath Commerce Place as the group waited for a train.

Since Moostoos posted the video to Facebookon Tuesday, it hasalready been viewed more than 38,000 times.

The steps Shirt performs wereonce danced by young Cree warriors and scouts sent ahead of the tribe to prepare the next campsite.

"What they would do is go and bless the area where the next camp was going to be and tamp down the grass anddance where each teepee would be set," Moostoos said. "It's a blessing.

"Walking around with Donovan all over the city, he's like my little scout. He dances in front of me like he's paving our way to wherever we're going."

'Walking around with Donovan all over the city, he's like my little scout. He dances in front of me like he's paving our way to wherever we're going,' Gary Moostoos says of Shirt. (Facebook)

No rehearsal necessary

For Shirt, who first learned the grass dance as a toddler, it was the story behind the dance that made him love it. Now, he continues to dance for the simple enjoyment.

"Being in the city,making my life here, you lose that kind of cultural sense and you just carry on with life. But I still dance whenever, because it's fun."

The escalator dance was totally spur of the moment, said Shirt, whodidn't even spill his coffee.

"I didn't really know (Moostoos) was filming until the last minute and then I was like, 'Aww, dammit. I have to keep dancing,' " he said with a laugh.

Several people have recognized Shirt from the video, asking if he's "that escalator guy," he said. Others have asked him to dance at powwows.

"I don't know you have to be quite fit," he said. "I really like singing instead."

Donovan Shirt (left) regularly sings and drums at events in Edmonton, Gary Moostoos says. (Donovan Shirt/Facebook)

Shirt and Wright regularly drum and sing together, often inMoostoos' home.

When not dancing his way across the city or drumming at home, Shirtworkswith at-risk youth at iHuman, an inner-city agency that helps youth stay off the streets,and also regularly speaksat conferencesas an ambassador for Indigenous youth.

"He's just one of these kids that's very in touch with what is happening with our people, and he advocates (on our behalf)," Moostoossaid of Shirt.