Lindy Hop Dancer Frankie Manning Would Have Been 102 on May 26, 2016

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Frankie Manning didn’t invent the “Lindy Hop”, but he was instrumental in making it popular. The Lindy Hop was a “street dance”, i.e., something invented by the dancers themselves, rather than more elite dancing instructors. (In that respect it shares with the sophisticated Argentine Tango, which grew out from its origins in brothels.) It was being developed at the Savoy ballroom in Harlem (a black ghetto in New York City), and got named the Lindy Hop by one of the dancers there (Georges “Shorty” Snowden) when he was asked by a journalist what its name was, who groped for an answer and found it in the headlines about Charles Lindbergh’s flight across the Atlantic. Lindy went national and became higher class (and its name was changed to Jitterbug), particularly with Benny Goodman and big band swing starting in 1936. Frankie Manning wandered by the Savoy in 1929, and soon became a passionate Lindy dancer and the ambassador for it … to the extent that he was worshipped around the world for his artistry. Frankie’s favorite song was Count Basie’s “Shiny Stockings”, which seems slow to Wilddancer for Lindy Hop, but you can see hundreds of folks doing it in a tribute video made on his 88th birthday. We at Wilddancer had been dancing for 10+ years when we saw a swing dancer do a back flip onto his hands, and back onto his feet during a “For Dancers Only” program at Stanford University on April 14, 2000 by Wynton Marsalis and the Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra. It must have been Frankie Manning, who would have been “only 86” at the time. And he was 89 when he astonished a crowd in Sweden.

President Obama’s Tango in Argentina Boosted Both Dance and Statesmanship

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Some pundits likened President Obama’s dancing the tango during a state dinner in Argentina, when terrorists were killing people in Brussels, to Nero “fiddling” while Rome burned. But we believe that his dance performance, when coupled with his visit to Cuba, was an important step (no pun intended) in showing his solidarity between the U.S. and Latin America. Obama has generally shown that he is a good sport. And the tango is the Number One tourist attraction in Argentina, so to the Argentines the fact that he gave a decent account of himself on the dance floor can only help the relationship between the two countries.

Argentine tango is a challenging dance. It is unlike the American social version or the International competition version, and tangueros often dance only the tango. The place or event where they dance is a milonga, and milongas are found around the world. A few years ago, Wilddancer was traveling in Seoul, Korea in the evening, and when the taxi rounded a corner, he saw a whole group of tangueros dancing outdoors in a vacant lot.

Fusion Dance Mixes Ballroom with Other Dance Forms

Fans of ballet know what partnering means in ballet, which normally does not resemble social couples dancing. But now FJK Dance, the brainchild of Fadi J. Khoury, the Baghdad-born son of an Iraqi ballet director, is mixing ballet with ballroom, Middle Eastern, and jazz dance, including presenting “Tango Unframed” as part of a program at New York Live Arts on July 23 and 24, according to The New York Times.