|
Bob Chapman - Vintage Dancer |
||||
|
The term Vintage Dance was coined by Stanford University dance historian and teacher Richard Powers to describe the social dances from the mid-Victorian era (1850s) through the Ragtime era (late 1910s). About What appealed to us about Vintage Dance was its social nature: unlike many modern ballroom dancing programs, it is oriented strictly toward socializing and enjoyment, rather than competition. Participants learned the waltz, foxtrot, one-step or dozens of quadrilles for the pure fun
of After a couple of years we felt confidant enough to begin attending weekend dance workshops conducted by the likes of Richard Powers, and ventured away from the “safe” confines of Hartford to scary places like Cincinnati and Boston, where we made many good friends among the members of the Commonwealth Vintage Dancers (CVD). Over the years we’ve also attended Vintage Dance weeks in Cincinnati and San Diego, Prague and Vienna. And every spring we spend a lovely weekend in the gorgeous Victorian town of Cape May, dressing up and dancing at the Hotel Chalfonte. By far the most spectacular ball we’ll probably ever attend was the millennial ball in Paris in 2000. TRIANGLE VINTAGE DANCE Bob and Mary now dance with Triangle Vintage
Dance,
a Vintage Dance group in For many years, Bob produced Vintage Dance Events, an e-newsletter listing and describing various balls and workshops held throughout North America (and occasionally Europe). Distributed online to about 600 dancers
worldwide, it ceased publication in 2008.
For more information and lots of photographs, check out the following sites:
|
||||
Contact Me: 919-723-8295 or http://www.theclassicalstation.org/opera.shtml |
|||||