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Close-up of white resin powder scattered across a dark wooden dance studio floor.

Brighton breakdance jam brings BGirl Ambush to South East Dance

BGirl Ambush is due in Brighton for a Breaking Open Jam at South East Dance, with the session listed for people from beginner level through to pro.

The event is scheduled to run from 29 June 2026 to 21 December 2026 at South East Dance, 28 Kensington Street, Brighton, BN1 4AJ. The listed price is £15.00. A start time and end time are not shown in the source details provided by Visit Brighton Events.

Detail Information
Event Breaking Open Jam: with BGirl Ambush
Dates 29 June 2026 to 21 December 2026
Time Not listed in the source details
Venue South East Dance, 28 Kensington Street, Brighton, BN1 4AJ
Price £15.00
Suitable for Beginner to pro

A floor-focused session for different levels

Breaking Open Jam: with BGirl Ambush is listed as a Workshop/Jam, placing it somewhere between a training session and an open floor environment. The source describes the offer simply: train with BGirl Ambush, who is associated with Risky Business in London, as she comes to Brighton to share years of experience on the floor.

That matters for the way readers should understand the event. This is not presented as a seated performance or a one-way showcase. The wording points to a participatory session for people who want time, movement and direct exposure to a breaker with experience in the scene.

The audience note is broad: beginner to pro. That makes the listing relevant both to people trying breaking for the first time and to dancers who already have a vocabulary and want to sharpen it in a shared space.

When and where the Brighton jam is listed

The event is attached to a long date window, from Monday 29 June 2026 to Monday 21 December 2026. The source details do not provide individual session times, so readers should treat the time as unconfirmed from the information currently available here.

The venue is South East Dance, at 28 Kensington Street in Brighton. For local readers, the location places the jam in the city rather than on the outskirts, with the source giving the full address as Brighton, BN1 4AJ, United Kingdom.

The price is listed as £15.00. No separate booking instruction, entry condition or organiser name is included in the event brief supplied, so this preview does not add those details.

What BGirl Ambush brings to the listing

The source identifies BGirl Ambush with Risky Business, London, and says she is coming to Brighton to share years of experience on the floor. That is the clearest signal of the event’s focus: practical breaking knowledge rather than a general dance taster.

For beginners, the appeal is the chance to enter a breaking environment that is explicitly not restricted to advanced dancers. For more experienced participants, the draw is different: time around a practitioner with a track record in the scene and space to test movement in a jam setting.

Because the event is described for beginner to pro, attendees should not assume it is aimed at only one skill band. The format suggests a mixed-room setting, where the value may come as much from observing and exchanging as from direct instruction.

What to check before attending

The key confirmed details are the event name, the Brighton venue, the date range, the £15.00 price and the broad audience level. The missing details are just as practical: the source information provided here does not list a start time, end time, organiser name or booking instruction.

Anyone planning around work, school, travel or another evening commitment should confirm the session timing before setting out. The address to note is South East Dance, 28 Kensington Street, Brighton, BN1 4AJ, and the event title to look for is Breaking Open Jam: with BGirl Ambush.

Source: Visit Brighton Events

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Nadia Ellis

Nadia Ellis

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Nadia Ellis covers Camden with a focus on public services, planning decisions, housing, transport, and neighbourhood issues. She has worked on local news desks across north London, checking council papers, public notices, and community sources to explain decisions clearly. Her reporting aims to give residents reliable context on civic developments, consultations, and changes affecting daily life

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