The earliest use I know of in a contra dance of the _action_ of dancing the track of a
do-si-do around one person while maintaining eye contact with another person was in
"Saint Paddy's Day" by Kirston Koths, written in 1982:
http://www.ibiblio.org/contradance/thecallersbox/dance.php?id=3998
http://www.quiteapair.us/calling/acdol/dance/acd_137.html
Kirston, however, did not use the words "Mad Robin" to describe the figure, but
referred to it as a "full sashay".
I believe the first use of the words "Mad Robin" to describe such a figure in a
contra dance was in connection with "One Hundred Years of Mischief" by Susan
Kevra.
http://www.ibiblio.org/contradance/thecallersbox/dance.php?id=3156
The description of the dance in _Give-and-Take_ says "Written for Mary Lea and Earl
Gaddis' 50th birthday in March 1995."
As I'm sure you (Brooke) are well aware, though some other readers may not be, the
English country dance "Mad Robin"
https://playforddances.com/dances/mad-robin/
does not actually include the contra dance action to which the name is now attached.
However I've sometime seen playful dancers maintain eye contact with partners
throughout the figures in the first four bars of the B parts (instead of turning away as
the word "cast" would suggest), and I presume that whoever first used the name
"Mad Robin" in connection with the contra figure (I'm guessing Susan Kevra
herself, but I don't know for sure) had also seen this improvisation.
--Jim
On Jun 28, 2023, at 2:47 PM, Brooke Friendly via
Contra Callers <contracallers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
Anyone know the date / 1st contra dance to use the Mad Robin figure?
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