Life-size dancing gorillas are becoming a major entertainment trend at weddings and celebrations in Hyderabad. Event organisers say the interactive mascots keep guests engaged, create social media-friendly moments, and are increasingly being booked for baraats, sangeet nights, birthdays and cocktail parties
Published Date – 15 May 2026, 02:58 PM
Hyderabad: What once looked like a bizarre internet meme is now turning into one of the biggest entertainment trends at weddings and celebrations — life-size dancing gorillas. Just when guests think the energy at an event is beginning to fade, a seven-foot-tall gorilla storms onto the dance floor, instantly pulling the crowd onto it.
Within moments, phones are out, guests are laughing, and dance floors that were beginning to empty suddenly come alive again. From baraats and sangeet nights to cocktail parties and birthdays, these giant mascots are quickly becoming the unexpected stars of events across the city.
The trend is gaining popularity for one simple reason: it breaks the usual flow of celebrations. Instead of performances remaining limited to a stage, the gorilla moves directly through the crowd, dancing with guests, photobombing family pictures, and encouraging even hesitant attendees to join in.
“The idea is to keep guests entertained throughout the event. We have been getting bookings for carnivals, baraats and sangeet nights, and people love the sudden excitement it creates,” says Salman, founder of Hyderabad Dancing Gorilla, the first to introduce the concept in the city.
As weddings become increasingly focused on creating memorable and social media-friendly moments, hosts are moving beyond traditional entertainment and experimenting with interactive experiences that surprise guests. The gorilla trend has become one such attraction.
“The gorilla is a high-energy entertainment act where a performer in a giant costume becomes part of the celebration itself by dancing and interacting with guests,” explains Sunny Khandelwal, Director of MIGHTY Events & Weddings.
Unlike traditional entertainers, these mascots blend directly into the celebration. They dance beside the bride and groom, interact with elderly guests and children, and often become the most photographed part of the event.
“The reactions are always genuine because guests do not expect it. People naturally gather around, dance, laugh, take videos and record reels. It especially helps involve guests who would otherwise be sitting quietly,” he adds.
The trend is also turning into a successful business for performers. “We charge around Rs 8,000 per event for three hours of entertainment, and we have already done close to 100 events this month,” says Salman.
With celebrations increasingly becoming larger-than-life spectacles, oversized mascots are fast emerging as the newest crowd-pullers. Alongside dancing gorillas, life-size pandas are also beginning to make appearances at weddings and parties across the city.
