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MTV Video Music Award for Best Dance Video
Annual music video award
Annual music video award
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | MTV Video Music Award |
| for Best Dance | |
| awarded_for | quality dance/electronic music videos |
| image | |
| imagesize | 100px |
| caption | The "moonman" trophy presented to the award winners |
| presenter | MTV |
| country | United States |
| year | 1989 |
| year2 | 2019 |
| holder | The Chainsmokers (featuring Bebe Rexha) – "Call You Mine"' () |
| most_wins | En Vogue, The Pussycat Dolls, Calvin Harris & Zedd (2) |
| most_nominations | Madonna & Janet Jackson (6) |
| website | VMA website |
for Best Dance The MTV Video Music Award for Best Dance was first awarded in 1989, and it was one of the original four genre categories that were added to the MTV Video Music Awards that year.
With a revamp of the awards in 2007, the category was cut out along with several others, yet it returned for the 2008 awards, where it was given a new name: Best Dancing in a Video. In 2009 the award for Best Dancing was again eliminated from the VMAs, but it was revived again in 2010 as Best Dance Music Video. The following year, though, the award was once again absent from the category list. Once again, the award was revived in 2012, this time under the name of Best Electronic Dance Music Video, celebrating the rise in popularity of EDM throughout the year. It was again eliminated from the 2013 awards. On July 17, 2014, MTV brought the category back, this time renaming it the MTV Clubland Award for the 2014 Awards. The pattern of awarding the Moonman every other year continued in 2016 where the award was renamed Best Electronic Video. Finally, in 2017 this award's name was changed to Best Dance, which it has kept until the present. It was again eliminated from the 2020 awards and has not been awarded since.
En Vogue, The Pussycat Dolls, Calvin Harris and Zedd are the category's biggest winners, with each having won it twice. Madonna and Janet Jackson, on the other hand, are the two most nominated artists, each having been nominated six times for this category; followed by Jennifer Lopez and Calvin Harris, who have been nominated five times.
Recipients
1980s
| Year | Winner(s) | Video | Nominees | Ref. | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Paula Abdul | "Straight Up" | {{smalldiv |
1990s
| Year | Winner(s) | Video | Nominees | Ref. | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MC Hammer | "U Can't Touch This" | {{smalldiv | |||
| C+C Music Factory | "Gonna Make You Sweat (Everybody Dance Now)" | {{smalldiv | |||
| Prince and the New Power Generation | "Cream" | {{smalldiv | |||
| En Vogue | "Free Your Mind" | {{smalldiv | |||
| Salt-n-Pepa with En Vogue | "Whatta Man" | {{smalldiv | |||
| Michael Jackson and Janet Jackson | "Scream" | {{smalldiv | |||
| Coolio | "1, 2, 3, 4 (Sumpin' New)" | {{smalldiv | |||
| Spice Girls | "Wannabe" | {{smalldiv | |||
| The Prodigy | "Smack My Bitch Up" | {{smalldiv | |||
| Ricky Martin | "Livin' la Vida Loca" | {{smalldiv |
2000s
| Year | Winner(s) | Video | Nominees | Ref. | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jennifer Lopez | "Waiting for Tonight" | {{smalldiv | |||
| NSYNC | "Pop" | {{smalldiv | |||
| P!nk | "Get the Party Started" | {{smalldiv | |||
| Justin Timberlake | "Rock Your Body" | {{smalldiv | |||
| Usher (featuring Lil Jon and Ludacris) | "Yeah!" | {{smalldiv | |||
| Missy Elliott (featuring Ciara and Fatman Scoop) | "Lose Control" | {{smalldiv | |||
| The Pussycat Dolls (featuring Snoop Dogg) | "Buttons" | {{smalldiv | |||
| colspan="4" | |||||
| The Pussycat Dolls | "When I Grow Up" | {{smalldiv | |||
| colspan="4" |
2010s
| Year | Winner(s) | Video | Nominees | Ref. | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lady Gaga | "Bad Romance" | {{smalldiv | |||
| colspan="4" | |||||
| Calvin Harris | "Feel So Close" | {{smalldiv | |||
| colspan="4" | |||||
| Zedd (featuring Hayley Williams) | "Stay the Night" | {{smalldiv | |||
| colspan="4" | |||||
| Calvin Harris and Disciples | "How Deep is Your Love" | {{smalldiv | |||
| Zedd and Alessia Cara | "Stay" | {{smalldiv | |||
| Avicii (featuring Rita Ora) | "Lonely Together" | {{smalldiv | |||
| The Chainsmokers (featuring Bebe Rexha) | "Call You Mine"' | {{smalldiv |
Notes
References
References
- "MTV Video Music Awards 1989". MTV.
- "MTV Video Music Awards 1990". MTV.
- "MTV Video Music Awards 1991". MTV.
- "MTV Video Music Awards 1992". MTV.
- "MTV Video Music Awards 1993". MTV.
- "MTV Video Music Awards 1994". MTV.
- "MTV Video Music Awards 1995". MTV.
- "MTV Video Music Awards 1996". MTV.
- "MTV Video Music Awards 1997". MTV.
- "MTV Video Music Awards 1998". MTV.
- "MTV Video Music Awards 1999". MTV.
- "MTV Video Music Awards 2000". MTV.
- "MTV Video Music Awards 2001". MTV.
- "MTV Video Music Awards 2002". MTV.
- "MTV Video Music Awards 2003". MTV.
- "MTV Video Music Awards 2004". MTV.
- "MTV Video Music Awards 2005". MTV.
- "MTV Video Music Awards 2006". MTV.
- "MTV Video Music Awards 2008". MTV.
- "MTV Video Music Awards 2010". MTV.
- "MTV Video Music Awards 2012". MTV.
- "MTV Video Music Awards 2014". MTV.
- "MTV Video Music Awards 2016". MTV.
- (August 27, 2017). "2017 VMA Winners and Performances". MTV.
- Nordyke, Kimberly. (August 20, 2018). "VMAs: Winners List". [[MRC (company).
- (August 26, 2019). "Here Are All the Winners From the 2019 MTV VMAs". [[Billboard (magazine).
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