Sonya Tayeh


Sonya Tayeh is a New York City-based choreographer. She has worked nationally and internationally across the worlds of dance and theater.
She has earned accolades for her work, including two Emmy nominations for Fox’s So You Think You Can Dance, and the Lucille Lortel and Obie Awards for “Outstanding Choreography” for her work on David Henry Hwang’s dance-play Kung Fu, for which she also received a Drama Desk nomination.

Life and career

Early life and education

Tayeh was born in Brooklyn, New York and raised in Detroit, Michigan. She has two sisters and one half-brother. Tayeh started dancing at age 15 when she began frequenting hip-hop and house dance parties with her sister. She started studying ballet and modern dance—as a subject—at age 17 when she was a student at Henry Ford Community College. Although Tayeh was a freestyle house dancer in her youth, she didn't take any formal dance classes until she was 18 and a student
at Wayne State University. Before starting her training, she was denied by six dance studios who wouldn't let her take classes because they felt she was too old. In addition to her classes, Tayeh was a member of Counter Groove and Full Circle dance companies.
During her time at Wayne State, Tayeh drew on dance history, anatomy, and performance to develop a style that is built on core strength, aggressive partner interaction, quirky, and stylized movements. She graduated Wayne State in 2002 with a bachelor's degree in Dance.

Dance career and mainstream exposure

Since gaining mainstream exposure, Tayeh has choreographed tours and/or live events for Madonna, Florence and the Machine, Kylie Minogue, Kerli, and Miley Cyrus. She has also choreographed for Steed Lord and spent three years in residence with the Los Angeles Ballet. In 2010, she choreographed indie singer Lucy Schwartz' music video "Graveyard".
Tayeh choreographed the rock musical The Last Goodbye which is based on Romeo and Juliet and set to a soundtrack of music by Jeff Buckley. It premiered in 2010, but a revised version of the show with a new cast opened in September 2013 at the Old Globe Theatre in San Diego, California. In 2011, she choreographed another musical called Spring Awakening for the San Jose Repertory Theatre. In 2014, she choreographed an off-Broadway play based on Bruce Lee's life called Kung Fu. It premiered February 24 with So You Think You Can Dance alumnus Cole Horibe playing the lead role.
In 2015 Martha Graham Dance Company commissioned a new work by Sonya Tayeh which she set to the music of Meredith Monk. It premiered in the company's New York season at The Joyce, Spring 2015 and has been performed by the company while on tour.

Choreography for So You Think You Can Dance

SeasonWeekDancersStyleSongNote
43Kourtni Lind
Matt Dorame
Contemporary"Wrestlers "—Hot Chip
46Chelsie Hightower
Gev Manoukian
Contemporary
48Courtney Galiano
Mark Kanemura
Jazz"The Garden"—Mirah
5LVWAll DancersJazz"Great DJ "—The Ting Tings
52Melissa Sandvig
Ade Obayomi
Jazz"24 Hours" —Terry Poison
54Kayla Radomski
Kūpono Aweau
Contemporary"Eyes On Fire"—Blue Foundation
57Janette Manrara
Evan Kasprzak
Jazz"Move" —CSS
58Top 3 maleJazz"True Romance"—She Wants Revenge
58Top 3 femaleJazz"Kick It "—Nina Martine
59Jeanine Mason
Evan Kasprzak
Jazz"Heartbreaker"—MSTRKRFT featuring John Legend
59Talia FowlerJazz"Shot You Down"—Audio BullysGuest Dancer
Result Show
6MT20Mollee Gray
Pauline Mata
Ellenore Scott
Jazz"On a Cloud"—Platinum Pied Pipers
61Ellenore Scott
Ryan Di Lello
Contemporary Jazz"Arcadia"—Apparat
65Kathryn McCormick
Jonathan "Legacy" Perez
Jazz"So Deep"—Hot Chip
65Ashleigh Di Lello
Jakob Karr
Lyrical Jazz"Time Flies"—Lykke Li
66Ellenore Scott
Jakob Karr
Contemporary Jazz"Tore My Heart"—OONA and Dave Tweedie
67Top 8Jazz"Pon de Floor" —Major Lazer feat. Vybz Kartel —La Roux
81Top 20Jazz"XR2"—M.I.A.Result Show
83Ashley Rich
Chris Koehl
Jazz"Lights Go Down" —Telepathe
83Ryan Ramirez
Ricky Jaime
Contemporary"With Every Heartbeat" —Robyn
86Allison Holker
Marko Germar
Contemporary"I Know It's Over"—Jeff Buckley
86Melanie Moore
Sasha Mallory
JazzGame On—District 78
87Tadd Gadduang
Ellenore Scott
Jazz"The Gulag Orkestar"—Beirut
87Marko Germar
Caitlynn Lawson
Lyrical Jazz"Heavy in Your Arms"—Florence and the Machine
88Sasha Mallory
Mark Kanemura
Jazz"Raise Your Weapon"—Deadmau5
9LVWAll DancersJazz"Freak Out "—My Brightest Diamond
9MT20Audrey Case
Tiffany Maher
Janelle Issis*
Jazz"Sail"—Awolnation
9MT20Top 10 guysJazz"Precognition" —Steed Lord
91Tiffany Maher
George Lawrence Jr.
Contemporar"Turning Page"—Sleeping At Last
92Amelia Lowe
Will Thomas
Contemporar"3326"—Ólafur Arnalds
92Audrey Case
Matthew Kazmierczak
Jazz"Hear Me Now" —Steed Lord
96Allison Holker
Cole Horibe
Contemporary"Possibly Maybe" —Björk
96Lindsay Arnold
Alex Wong
Jazz"Somebody That I Used to Know"—Gotye feat. Kimbra
97Top 6Jazz"Scream"—Kelis
98Tiffany Maher
William Wingfield
Jazz"Time is Now"—Moloko
98Cyrus "Glitch" Spencer
Chehon Wespi-Tschopp
Jazz"Fangs" —Little Red Lung
99Tiffany Maher
William Wingfield
Jazz"Time is Now"—Moloko
99Cyrus "Glitch" Spencer
Chehon Wespi-Tschopp
Jazz"Fangs" —Little Red Lung
99Top 20Contemporary/Hip-hop"Torn"—Nathan LanierSonya Tayeh
Christopher Scott
10LVWAll DancersJazz"Latch"—Disclosure
10MT20Jasmine Mason
Amy Yakima
Jazz"Enjoy"—Björk
10MT20Top 20Jazz"Ghost of Sky" —Steed Lord
101Jasmine Harper
Aaron Turner
Jazz"Bottom of the River"—Delta Rae
101Amy Yakima
Du-Shaunt "Fik-Shun" Stegall
Contemporary"Elsa"—The Valerie Project
103Top 18Jazz"Pretty Face" —SóleyChristopher Scott
Sonya Tayeh
103Malece Miller
Marko Germar*
Contemporary"In the Embers"—Sleeping at Last
105Top 14Jazz"Dimman Kryper Sakta In"—District 78Dmitry Chaplin
Sonya Tayeh
105Alexis Juliano
Nico Greetham
Contemporary"Ashes"—The Bengsons
105Makenzie Dustman
Paul Karmiryan
Jazz"You'll Find a Way" —Santigold
11LVWAll DancersJazz"F for You"—Disclosure feat. Mary J. Blige
11MT20Top 20Jazz"Stalker Ha"—Kingdom
11MT20Jessica Richens
Ricky Ubeda
Contemporary"Vow"—Meredith Monk
111Tanisha Belnap
Rudy Abreu
Jazz"You Need"—Bengsons
111Carly Blaney
Serge Onik
Contemporary"Latch "—Sam Smith
113Jacque LeWarne
Zack Everhart Jr.
Jazz"Back to Black"—Beyoncé feat. André 3000
113Brooklyn Fullmer
Casey Askew
Emilio Dosal
Emily James
Serge Onik
Tanisha Belnap
Valerie Rockey
Zack Everhart Jr.
Contemporary"So Broken" —Björk
115Zack Everhart Jr.
Amy Yakima
Contemporary"Europe, After The Rain"—Max Richter
1110Top 10
All-stars
Contemporary/Hip-Hop"Sweet Disposition"—The Temper TrapSonya Tayeh
Christopher Scott
12TBATBATBATBATBA

Due to a shoulder injury, Mitchell Kelly was barred from performing in his routine. He was replaced for the evening by season 7's Robert Roldan and was automatically in danger of going home.

Teaching

Tayeh is a faculty member at the Edge Performing Arts Center in Los Angeles. She has also taught classes at The Hip Drop Dance Complex, Monsters of Contemporary, Broadway Dance Center, 24 Seven Dance, Hall of Fame Dance Challenge, Loyola Marymount University, NUVO, and Spotlight Dance Works.

Style and influences

Tayeh describes her choreography style as combat jazz because in her words "t’s staccato, aggressive, and engaged, even when it’s slow." SanJose.com characterized it as "fearless, provocative and unique." She has several influences which include two of her former college professors Diane Mancinelli and Erica Wilson-Perkins, Broadway choreographers Twyla Tharp and Bill T. Jones, Mexican artist Frida Kahlo, her favorite choreographer Jiří Kylián, and her family. In addition, she calls competitive hip-hop dancer Salah her "idol" and Icelandic singer Björk her "ultimate hero".

Awards and recognition

In January 2009, Tayeh was named one of Dance magazine's "25 to Watch". In 2010, she was honored by the Detroit Arts Council and she made the December cover of Dance Teacher magazine. At Wayne State University there is a scholarship named after her called the Sonya Tayeh Endowment Fund that is awarded to students who want to pursue a degree in dance.
In July 2013, Tayeh was nominated for an Emmy Award for Outstanding Choreography for "Possibly Maybe", "Turning Page", and "Sail"—three routines she choreographed on season nine of So You Think You Can Dance. At the 2013 Primetime Emmy Awards ceremony, she joined the other seven choreography nominees and created a routine honoring dance that was performed just before the Outstanding Choreography award was presented. 2013 was the first year the Outstanding Choreography award was presented at the Primetime Emmys telecast rather than at the Creative Arts Emmys ceremony which takes place a week prior.