About

Who is Infinite Flow Dance?

Infinite Flow Dance is an award-winning Los Angeles-based professional dance company that employs disabled and nondisabled dancers with diverse, intersectional identities. As a nonprofit, our mission is to advance disability inclusion, one dance at a time.

Since 2015, Infinite Flow has performed over 200 times, from school assemblies to events at Apple, Microsoft, adidas, and Red Bull, and other high-profile corporations. Our dance videos have been viewed over 100 million times across social media, and our dancers have been featured on NBC Today, Good Morning America, PBS, Inside Edition, and other national and international media outlets.

Infinite Flow was founded by Marisa Hamamoto, a stroke survivor and late-diagnosed Autistic. Marisa recently became the first professional dancer named People Magazine's “Women Changing the World.”

Infinite Flow Dance is a robust social justice entity committed to radical inclusion, systems change, and producing transformational experiences. Infinite Flow Dance is available for performances, keynotes, panels, school assemblies, and accessibility & inclusion workshops, virtually and in person.

 

What we believe

  • Dance doesn’t discriminate™ Dance is a universal language. When you dance with someone, you see beyond race, color, size, age, gender, ability, disability, etc.

  • Accessibility is a human right, not a luxury. An inaccessible world excludes people with and without disabilities. Accessibility is a gateway and a foundation to access other rights; thus, it should be considered first, not last.

  • Inclusion is about us, not “them”™ Othering people with disabilities, or any group, creates separation. Inclusion is not about one group serving another. It’s about each of us being part of the change together.

  • Inclusion inspires innovation. Disability inclusion benefits all of us and provides a diversity of thought, experience, and perspective. Some of the greatest innovations have emerged from designing for people with disabilities: the typewriter, touchscreen, OXO peeler and sliding doors were all developed for people with disabilities. What would the world look like if we placed disability inclusion first, not last?

  • Disability inclusion is intersectional. Intersectionality is a theoretical framework for understanding how aspects of a person's identity combine to create different modes of discrimination and privilege. We take an intersectional approach to better understand and advance disability inclusion, considering how each person’s multiple identities may affect their navigation of the world and their own disability.

We are available for

  • Performances

  • Speaking Engagements

  • Dance Workshops

  • Accessibility & Disability Inclusion

  • Consultation & Workshops

  • Corporate Events

  • School Assemblies

Featured in

Logos of Forbes, Good Morning America, Today, People. PBS, Refinery 29, Now This, Upworthy, Fastcompany, InStyle, Buzzfeed
 

partners include

Logos of Google, Apple Red Bull, Kaiser Permanente, adidas, Farmers Insurance, Porsche, Meta, International Monetary Fund, Deloitte, Paypal, Capezio

 

Infinite Flow’s Origin Story

Beyond being a survivor of spinal cord infarction (aka spinal stroke) and a late-diagnosed autistic, here’s Infinite Flow Dance Founder Marisa Hamamoto’s backstory.