Thanks for the explanation. I was mistaken.
On Wed, Mar 2, 2016 at 12:13 PM, frannie <dancingfrannie(a)gmail.com> wrote:
  Ron Buchanan's "Revolving Door" figure
is described well by Rick Mohr.  In
 "Revolving Door", couples start a "wrong side" half promenade where
women
 pass right instead of men passing left. As the women meet they catch right
 hands and allemande right once around. The men drop out after crossing the
 set, and partners swing as the women come around. It flows easily and feels
 good. I often do a floor demo, both because it's unfamiliar and because
 it's pretty cool to watch. Since the promenade only lasts for a beat or two
 I think the easiest hold is for neighbors to join left hands, with the
 man's right arm briefly behind the woman's back.
 Dances that include that figure are
 Puttin' Cheese on the Ritz by Ron Buchanan
 Glenside Promenade by Ron Buchanan
 Gaye's Groove by Rick Mohr
 Cup of Joe by Rick Mohr
 Better Late than Never by Steve Z-A
 Not a Trip to Vegas by Chris Page
 Rick Mohr is also credited with varying this dance to include a Revolving
 Door.  It's the easiest of the dances.
 *The Missing Piece*
 Bronwyn Woods
 Type: Contra
 Formation: Duple-Improper
 A1 -----------
 (16) Neighbor balance and swing
 A2 -----------
 (8) Revolving door (W take N across set drop them off and return home to P)
 (8) Partner swing
 B1 -----------
 (8) Long lines, forward and back
 (8) Women Chain
 B2 -----------
 (8) Balance the ring and spin to the right (petronella)
 (8) Balance the ring and spin to the right (petronella) turn away from
 these N to new N
 Notes: Original A2 Men allemande L 1.5  to P swing
 On Wed, Mar 2, 2016 at 8:56 AM, Maia McCormick via Callers <
 callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
  Hmm. Alex, correct me if I'm wrong, but I
always thought that "revolving
 doors" was the reverse of a half promenade and butterfly whirl...?
 On Wed, Mar 2, 2016 at 11:53 AM, Luke Donforth via Callers <
 callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
  I interpreted that as a move that goes from one
circle with neighbors to
 another circle with other neighbors, such as David Kaynor's "Open Doors"
 (Sourced from: 
http://www.davidkaynor.com/Compositions.html )
 *Open Doors*
 Duple Improper
 A1 Circle Left 3/4; Swing Partner
 A2 Down Hall 4 - in - line; Wheel around as couples; return; bend line
 into long line
 B1 Long lines forward; Ladies pull neighbors out; swing neighbors; end
 progressed
 B2 Long Lines forward & back; Circle Right; turn alone to face new
 neighbors
 On Wed, Mar 2, 2016 at 11:34 AM, Aahz Maruch via Callers <
 callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
  On Sun, Feb 28, 2016, Alexandra Deis-Lauby via
Callers wrote:
 >
 > Anyone have any beginner or intermediate revolving door dances?
 What's a revolving door dance?  (Yes, I did try searching.)
 --
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 twirls,
 Frannie
 
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