By day, Billy โBad Assโ Prusinowski teaches eighth-grade language arts and social studies at Cesar Chavez Middle School in Watsonville. But after hours, like some kind of classic superhero, the charismatic 36-year-old takes on another identity as a kickboxing guru and folk dancer.
Like any good superhero, Prusinowski has a surprising secret in his origin story. In this case, heโs the great-nephew of a Lithuanian-Polish boxing legend almost lost to historyโBabe Risko, nรฉe Henry Pylkowski, born in 1911 after his family immigrated to the U.S. Risko took on his catchy fighting name to give himself a new, performance-ready identity. So did Prusinowski.
In fact, his โBilly Bad Assโ moniker was granted to him twice, coincidentally, by Ukranian dancers at โKozak nightsโ in New York City, and by his first boss at what was at the time Goldโs Gym in Santa Cruz.
โSo it had to stick,โ he says. โItโs catchy. People either laugh with me or laugh at me, but either way theyโre laughing.โ
Prusinowski teaches Risko Kickboxing by night in venues such as Santa Cruz Power Fitness, UCSC, and others, which are slowly beginning to resume in-person after a year on Zoom. Heโs also the founder of the Bay Areaโs Zoloti Maky (Ukranian for golden poppies) dance group, leading classes and choreographing traditional Ukranian folk dances at Morgan Hillโs Ballet Academy of Silicon Valley.
So what ties his day job to the many pursuits of his alter ego?
โIโm an educator,โ Prusinowski says.
And performance is his medium. Prusinowski had briefly given up Ukranian dance in high school because it โwasnโt cool,โ but found his way back after a short break.
Traditional Ukranian folk dance and boxing end up being a more complementary combo than one might initially think, which is all about the backstory of these Ukranian storytelling dances. โUkranian dance solos stem from Kozak freedom fighters coming back from battle,โ Prusinowski says. โItโs kind of a macho thing, proud solos and stuff.โ Both are quite hard on the legsโthink lots of squatting, lunging, and jumps.
Marisa Visnaw, owner and artistic director of the Ballet Academy of Silicon Valley, says Prusinowski โgives our young male dancers a role model and someone to look up to.โ BASV offers Ukranian dance for all levels, co-ed, and boys classes for children five and up. A pandemic silver lining for Prusinowski has been a young dancer in his Morgan Hill class studying Ukranian dance online with Prusinowskiโs New York company. For the last month, his Ballet Academy of Silicon Valley kids class has been back in person with small groups and health protocols. The group is performing virtually as part of the Calgary Ukranian Festival, to be livestreamed June 5-6.
YOU REMIND ME OF THE BABE
While heโll continue teaching and performing Ukranian dance, Prusinowski is also in the process of shifting his focus and expanding his offerings. โNow Iโd rather teach about this family legacy,โ he says, โbecause it celebrates both fitness and the immigrant story.โ His goal is to further align with his great-uncleโs tradition in the hopes that both he and Babe Riskoโs legacy can reach wider audiences.
The son of first-generation Polish immigrants in Syracuse, New York, the man who became known as Babe Risko learned to fight in the Navy, in which he enlisted at 17 using falsified documents. He went on to become World Middleweight Champion in 1935-36 before he died unexpectedly at age 46, of a โmassive coronary infarction,โ according to the elder Bill Prusinowski, Billyโs dad.
Risko became a champion fighter during his naval service in the early 1930s prior to defeating Teddy Yarosz to claim the Middleweight World Champion title in September 1935. He was one of those figures who was famous in his time, but while some boxing champions such as Mohammed Ali and Carmen Basilio have gone on to claim places in collective national memory, boxing halls of fame, or both, Babe Risko fell into near-total obscurity, perhaps because of his early and untimely death.
But he isnโt completely forgotten. Risko is a local celebrity in his birthplace and was inducted into the Greater Syracuse Sports Hall of Fame. Now, here in Santa Cruz, Prusinowski is sharing Riskoโs story in the hopes of fortifying his great-uncleโs legacy, that Risko might still somehow become a household name. With Prusinowskiโs fatherโs recent biography The Babe Risko Story, this story of a would-be boxing legend might get another chance.
โHis boxing was famous, and should still be famous, if it werenโt for his being abused and exploited by the corrupt, Mafia-owned National Boxing Association in the 1930s,โ Prusinowski says. This backstory of how fights were rigged and mobsters such as Frankie Carboโcalled in the Observer Sport Monthly โthe mobโs unofficial commissioner for boxingโ who โcontrolled a lot of the welters [welterweight 140-147 pounds] and middles [middleweight 152-165 pounds]โโis examined in detail in The Babe Risko Story. Carbo, Gabe Genovese, and their ilk were persistently behind the scenes โpulling the strings of โฆ invisible control of the fight game,โ as the elder Prusinowski writes in The Babe Risko Story. Both spent time at Rikers for โunlicensed managementโ of boxers.
Thereโs more than enough intrigue for a Hollywood biopicโand considering his Bad Ass descendent is a dead ringer for Risko, a perfect candidate to play him, as well.
โI look like him,โ Prusinowski agrees. He could easily play Risko, who was known for his good looks, in a movie version. (Gina Garcia, the founder and head instructor of Worldanzโwhere Prusinowski has taught Ukranian danceโapproves, saying โheโs so charismatic, heโd be great in movies, in Hollywood.โ
Prusinowski sees his great-uncleโs legacy as an untold story along the lines of โthat kind of movie about some random character in history, that youโve never heard of, but that once you learn about them, realize you loved their life story.โ
BALLET AND BREAKDANCING HAD A BABY
But why settle for being just a Risko doppelganger? Through the design of his kickboxing classes combined with the physical resemblance, Prusinowski has come as close as possible to resurrecting his relative. His style and methods are inspired by and modeled after what he has learned and observed of Babe Riskoโs boxing style.
โHe never has an off day,โ Garcia says. โHeโs passionate, super-on, just into it, into life. When I hire him to teach Ukranian [dance], everyoneโs like, ugh because itโs hard! Itโs like ballet and breakdancing had a baby. Itโs one of the toughest dance forms. I love it. Heโs really good at it, heโs been doing it his whole life.โ
Itโs no exaggeration. Ukranian dance and martial arts were the staples of Prusinowskiโs childhood in Syracuse, New York.
โMy dadโs karate dojo was a humongous part of my life,โ he says on a chilly evening by the tennis courts at UCSC. โI did karate from my dad, Ukranian dancing from my mom. She put me in it because thereโs a tight Ukrainian community in Syracuse.โ It was also because of that community and the tradition of oral history that he learned about his great-uncle Risko, who died before Prusinowski was born. โMy Uncle Thomas, Babeโs dad, escaped Russian soldiers wanting to kill him, so [he] hid himself in a pickle barrel to escape and ended up in America. My Lithuanian cousins swear by that story.โ
Though Prusinowski kept Risko Kickboxing alive on Zoom during the pandemic, heโs excited for restrictions to ease so he can get back to his signature energetic offerings in person. A brisk spring evening on the UCSC campus brings the first opportunity.
Prusinowski estimates that during pre-Covid times, a UCSC class could draw up to 50 students and staff, but as group fitness is only just beginning to return, six students gather on the outdoor tennis courts, more of an inch toward normalcy than a leap. As the music kicks in, though, there is plenty of jumping.ย
Itโs after 5pm and gusty, but inside the tennis court, the sun still beats down over the asphalt, already setting the stage for a sweaty experience. With Prusinowski bringing together his background in karate, boxing, dance, and self defense, the class moves dynamically through combos that are Babe Risko-inspired on the punching end, and kick sequences that are also taught in Prusinowskiโs fatherโs Kenpo Jutsu Karate.
Using his punching mitts to guide students through the combo, the class moves through โfront hand jab, rear hand straight punch, front hand hook, rear hand uppercut.โ He demonstrates examples of the combos on his TikTok (@billyprusinowski) so practitioners can reference them on the go.
In the KJK Kicking Combo, rather than โleg swings like they usually do in generic cardio kickboxing,โ Prusinowski explains, he demos Kenpo Jutsu Karateโs front snap kick, shuffle side kick (โinstead of side leg raisesโ), rear kick in place of โback kicks or back swings,โ and others influenced more by his childhood training in the classic art of self-defense at his fatherโs dojo, rather than kicks that might be effective for burning caloriesโbut not so much for fending off an attacker.
The outdoor cardio kickboxing workout is all this and more: high reps, a Tabata sequence of squats and lunges, even cartwheels (optional) make for a total-body conditioning experience, which can be taken on its own or as cross-training with other martial arts, sports, or practices like yoga or surfing.
ACTIVIST ATHLETE
Perhaps Prusinowskiโs Risko Kickboxing will catch fire in the booming post-pandemic flock back to group fitness classes. What is certain is that Prusinowski is no average instructor.
โI am lucky to call Billy a friend and always look forward to his warm, smiling face,โ Camile Periat, owner of Santa Cruz Power Fitness and social media fitness industry influencer, writes via email. โBecause of his charisma, the man otherwise known as โVegan Billy Badassโ pulls in quite the crowd and has a large following. He knows how to keep the class moving.โ
Periat praises him as โa phenomenal kickboxing instructor, one of the most positive people out there with high energy.โ
And one of the greatest fitness gurus in Santa Cruz, Garcia agrees.
โI took his kickboxing class at Santa Cruz Power Fitness,โ she says. โYouโd have pumpinโ music and he was very motivating. Even though heโs younger than me, heโs mindful of joints, making it sustainable, low impact. Itโs a very intelligent class. It wonโt wear you down but everyone gets excited and pumped.โ
With sweat cooled and post-workout soreness setting in (at least for me), Prusinowski sits on a bench in the wind overlooking the schoolโs East Upper Field and the Monterey Bay as the fog bank rolls in. He speaks on how he draws from his wide variety of lived experience to create his offerings.
โMy parents are gonna hate when I say growing up in Syracuse was very boring,โ he admits. But they will also more likely be glad they were the reason it wasnโt entirely a snoozefest. Coming of age in the Ukranian community in Syracuse was essential to shaping who โBilly Bad Assโ would become.
Prusinowski arrived in this area more than a dozen years ago, in his early twenties. โUkranians from Syracuse have stuck in Syracuse,โ he says. But after growing up there and graduating from Syracuse University, Prusinowski pulled up his roots. After a brief reprieve in Portland, Oregon, he landed in Santa Cruz in 2009, at first staying with friends he met through mutual activist work.
Prusinowskiโs activism has always been central to his identity. For a long time this activism revolved around veganism, and he entered competitions as part of a growing movement of vegan bodybuilders. (He has since given up on bodybuilding, but has remained a committed vegan since high school.)
โVegan athletes all stand for the animals,โ he says. โThatโs cool, Iโd like to think my โgainzโ are way more important than anyone elseโs who just wants cute muscles, because I am proving it can be done while still saving animalsโ lives.โ It illustrates his primary out-of-the-ring realization and philosophy as an instructor: โFitness should stand for something. Something beyond just vanity.โ
Prusinowskiโs activism has shapeshifted over the years but has remained a constant, central tenet of his life and identity. Lately, that aspect of his work centers around anti-racism andโtying in to his work with Watsonvilleโs students, as well as his family storyโimmigration.
โStalin starved Ukranians off their lands, forced famine; they came to Canada in the 1930s, there were all these diasporas up there โฆ. I appreciate immigrant stories. I am fourth generation, privileged and white, so I donโt have the same immigrant experience at all, but I think my Uncle Babe did. I admire the struggle of all of the Mexican immigrants I teach every year at Cesar Chavez. I am still figuring out how to celebrate the immigrant storyโmy politicsโand work it into my fitness classesโmy passion.โ
Billy Prusinowski is at @billyprusinowski on Instagram. His Ballet Academy of Silicon Valley group performs Ukranian dance June 5-6 at the virtual Calgary Ukranian Festival, which will be livestreamed at calgaryukrainianfestival.ca. More about Ballet Academy of Silicon Valleyโs Ukranian program can be found at balletsv.com.