Good advice from both Alan and Rich. I agree with Rich that you could repeat more than
one well-received dance from last time.
Alan wrote:
and have a couple slightly more challenging ones -
with progression, etc - up your sleeve but without any emotional investment in actually
using them.
Definitely agree on the "without any emotional investment" part. Long-term, do
you have an ambition for these events to evolve into "contra" dances, or would
you be happy as a clam to keep having events where facility at ending a swing side-by-side
with the _____ on the left and the _____ on the right is not an important skill, so long
as you have a room full of smiling dancers?
I have a few comments and questions about your notes:
The notes say "beginner's lesson (circle, Lark Raven, ...)" but the dance
descriptions use "ladles" and "gentlespoons". What terms did you
actually use? If you used "Larks" and "Ravens", did you say anything
at all about their relation to traditional gender roles? In practice how much correlation
was there between what people looked like and which role they danced in?
Leaving aside the waltz and the polka, it looks like the only two dances where the roles
of Lark/Gentlespoon vs. Raven/Ladle were significant were the roll away dance and Mad
Scatter.
Notes on the roll away dance say "succeeded at walkthrough, weren't going to make
it through the dance." If you could tell, did the confusion seem to have to do with
figuring out wha was in what role, or was it mostly about something else, such as getting
from the star to the lines of four?
[Two side comments on that dance: (1) Notes say "This variation is Wade
Pearson's, removing the right-left-through. ...", but the "original"
version you link to doesn't have a right and left through. It has a cross trail. (2)
Personally, I don't think it would be a great loss to drop this dance from the
repertoire, regardless of the role terminology or the manner of setting up the lines of
four. I could say more on both points but don't want to go even further off topic.]
The other dance description that mentions the roles is Mad Scatter. How did that work out
in practice? I note that it doesn't really matter which member of each pair goes into
the center for an allemande or star and which one orbits, provided nobody minds who they
get for new partner. But I'm curious about what actually happened.
Notes on Mad Scatter say "Avoid a mixer last even though they voted for it." Do
you have reason to believe that people were disappointed about that? I certainly know of
many dance series where people would bristle at having a mixer as the "last"
dance of the evening (even if followed by a waltz as the really last dance), but I'm
wondering whether you actually sensed such bristling at your event. Note also Rich's
comment on ending a barn dance with a circle mixer.
--Jim