I Was Left Shark in Katy Perry’s Super Bowl Halftime 10 Years Ago. What Really Happened on Stage and How the Singer Felt (Exclusive)

Mar. 15, 2025

Bryan Gaw x Left Shark

In an exclusive interview with PEOPLE ahead of the 2025 Super Bowl, Left Shark — whose real name, unmasked, is Bryan Gaw — recalls what took place on that halftime stage 10 years ago, what Perry really thought of his viral moment and how his life has changed in the decade that followed.

Bryan Gaw, widely known as “Left Shark,” dances with Katy Perry during the 2015 Super Bowl halftime show.Kevin Mazur/WireImage

Recording artist Katy Perry performs onstage during the Pepsi Super Bowl XLIX Halftime Show at University of Phoenix Stadium on February 1, 2015 in Glendale, Arizona

Kevin Mazur/WireImage

“Where has the time gone?” Gaw, baffled, tells PEOPLE looking back at his iconic performance. “What do I remember? Honestly, it was everything you can imagine… if you can imagine.”

Picture taking center stage alongside one of the world’s biggest pop stars in front of 73,000 fans in Arizona’s University of Phoenix Stadium and hundreds of millions of eyes turning into one of the year’s most-watched telecasts from home. Adrenaline runs high — and to Gaw, it’s incomparable.

“The energy when you enter the stadium is unmatched. I’ve never felt such nervous, excited energy in my life,” he says. “It’s the pinnacle of so many people’s career paths. It is a culmination of hard work… and on top of it, you’re so nervous.”

But nerves look different on someone like Gaw, who landed the halftime gig with Perry after years of working as a professional dancer for brands like Disney and Nickelodeon and artists like Lady Gaga, Miley Cyrus and more. “My first job with Katy was in 2010 for the Teen Choice Awards,” he notes.

Katy Perry and Bryan Gaw attend the screening of “Katy Perry: The Prismatic World Tour” in Los Angeles in March 2015.Kevin Winter/Getty

Singer Katy Perry and dancer Bryan Gaw attends the screening of EPIX’s Katy Perry: The Prismatic World Tour at The Theatre at Ace Hotel Downtown LA on March 26, 2015 in Los Angeles, California.

Kevin Winter/Getty

In the five years that followed, Gaw — who’s originally from Texas and moved to Los Angeles to pursue a career in dance — worked with Perry for promo shows and various gigs after auditions upon auditions, eventually securing a spot on her Prismatic World Tour.

“It is such a special part of a dancer’s career to basically ride the wave of stardom with somebody,” Gaw says. “Katy took off in such a big way. It was really, really cool… Everybody remembers that era of Katy,” he continues. “Just to be part of somebody’s experience is really, really special to me.”

He adds, “Katy gave me an amazing opportunity, an opportunity of a lifetime.”

So for someone with a lifetime of dance experience and years of professionally-trained work with the best in the biz, it’s hard to believe Left Shark flubbed the Super Bowl halftime choreography in comparison to Right Shark like the viral social media memes led the internet to believe. Right?

“The reality of it is, it was a free moment,” Gaw says of his steps that went viral, clarifying that he used that open count to freestyle because the dance allowed for it at that part in the song. Looking back, he notes “you actually don’t” see a huge difference between his moves and Right Shark.

Bryan Law (far left) performing as Katy Perry’s backup dancer during her “Prismatic” world tour in May 2015 in Macau.Anthony Kwan/Getty

Katy Perry performs on the stage during her ‘Prismatic’ world tour concert at Cotai Arena on May 1, 2015 in Macau.

Anthony Kwan/Getty

As for why he went viral, the dancer thinks the credit should be attributed to the social media savvy user who exported the dance into a meme-making generator, posted it online and made it “a thing” — which evolved into the pop culture phenomenon we know today.

“It’s so funny because it was such a small thing, and the internet culture made it such a big thing,” he says. “I really love that basically America grabbed hold of it. Not [just] America, but the world really.”

Gaw, meanwhile, “didn’t realize” his performance had gone viral until the morning after the Super Bowl when he flew back to L.A. “To be honest with you, it scared me,” he admits. “My phone was full. My mailbox was full… from my agent, from every news source saying they want to talk to me.”

“Getting the attention, I guess, made me realize that it was a big thing,” the dancer adds.

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Bryan Gaw (Left Shark) dances with Katy Perry at the 2015 Super Bowl halftime show in Glendale, Arizona.Kevin Mazur/WireImage

Recording artist Katy Perry performs onstage during the Pepsi Super Bowl XLIX Halftime Show at University of Phoenix Stadium on February 1, 2015 in Glendale, Arizona.

“I was purposely not speaking to press about it because I was still working with Katy — and the thing is, the show is about Katy. It’s not about me,” he says. “It’s such a huge accomplishment for any performer to get asked to do the Super Bowl… and the moment should be rightfully still about her.”

Still, Perry — who’s widely known for her over-the-top looks, unique sense of humor and fun-loving personality — got a kick out of the Left Shark moment and even played into it herself. “We all kind of had a joke about it,” he says of the singer and his Right Shark counterpart.

“We went [back] on tour,” he recalls of the “funny” moment that happened the week after the Super Bowl. “We were in a foreign country and Katy pulled us into the dressing room and gave us a shark suit… like a onesie,” he reveals. “It was just very, very, very cute. We all laughed. We put them on.”

Bryan Gaw

From his years of experience working alongside Perry, Gaw notes “she knows when and when not to take herself too seriously.” He says, “I think is a great lesson and metaphor for all of us. This is fun. This is entertaining, you know what I mean?”

“I finished out touring with Katy that year, and then I took a year off to get my cosmetology license,” says Gaw, who now works for his self-started business as a hairstylist at Serrano Salon in L.A. “That is my bread and butter,” he adds.

“I always knew I still wanted to be part of the creative entertainment industry and have my hand in art, creativity and be involved with people as well,” Gaw explains. “I love that dance is such a mainstream thing, but it’s a lot of work… I wanted to pivot my transition gracefully.”

Bryan Gaw now works for his self-started business as a hairstylist at Serrano Salon in L.A.Courtesy of Bryan Gaw

Bryan Gaw hair stylist

Courtesy of Bryan Gaw

Still, rhythm is in Left Shark’s blood. “I do dance still. I haven’t taken a dance job in quite some time,” Gaw says. “I’m in my era of, ‘I want to dance for myself to have fun,’ going along with my life’s motto. … Not take it so seriously.”

This year,Kendrick Lamarand therecently-announced surprise performer SZAwill takethe halftime stageat Super Bowl LIX. While Gaw won’t be performing himself, he’s sure of one thing: he will be watching. “The Super Bowl is a huge thing for us. ‘Who’s performing? What’s going to happen?'”

The latter question, especially, rings true for Gaw, who ultimately became the unexpected, talked-about variable of his year. In fact, he says he didn’t fully realize the “grandiosity” of his halftime opportunity that he deemed the “pinnacle” of career paths because he was so dialed in at the time.

Now, 10 years later, Gaw is confidently riding that wave of Left Shark nostalgia as he “truly takes it in” and thinks, “Wow, that was such an awesome moment.”

source: people.com