I've attended several workshops with this theme, led on different
occasions by Carol Ormand and Jo Mortland. A few of the exercises have
been described already, including teaching the dance to half of each
couple and not calling, messing with the music, dancing with pool
noodles, and dancing to the calling of figures with names as nonsensical
as our familiar figures are to first time dancers.
A variant on the pool noodle theme used one teddy bear in each square.
One of my favorites is a different approach to the lost dancer
situation. After the group takes hand four, the caller one dancer from
each minor set, shuffling around which one. They go to the bottom and
make new minor sets. This leaves one empty spot in each set occupied by
a ghost. The teaching and calling proceeds, with the dancers having to
find their ways through the dance without the orientation of the full
set. As the dance progresses, sometimes a whole set of four
materializes,sometimes it's three dancers, sometimes it's only two.
This really emphasizes awareness of your position in the set. It's also
a useful skill when a partner or neighbor doesn't show up at the right
place and time.
I've danced with a fraction of the dancers in a contra set blindfolded.
I also remember a simple square that we danced multiple times,
increasing the number of blindfolded dancers by one each time through.
Again, positional awareness and communication.
A dance with enforced taking of everyone's less familiar role can help
build acceptance.
One time we were divided into two sets, one with all gents and the other
with all ladies. Some gents came away impressed by how violently they
were being swung around while dancing as robins while some ladies
complained about the wimpy larks they danced with. And some in both
lines enjoyed the better matches of forces and energy.
Late in a regular evening dance a caller recently threw in a contra with
larks and robins progressing in opposite directions or at different
rates. Although it was announced as a mixer, it was sufficiently
unexpected that chaos and discomfort ensued. I'd have been happier with
that in a workshop setting. "Dance with who's coming at you."
On 1/24/2024 11:35 AM, Maia McCormick via Contra Callers wrote:
Whoops, I never came back to this, but, some exercises
I've
done/seen/considered:
- half the room gets the walkthrough and half doesn't, the ones who
got the walkthrough need to guide the others through the dance NONVERBALLY
- nonsense dance: substitute all the dance vocab with random words,
define a few terms for every dancer, call a nonsense dance and the
hall has to piece together what's what
- excision dance (requires real tight collab with the band): take a
simple dance and, once the hall has it, you and the band conspire to
just drop 8 or 16 counts at a time (or more!) and dancers need to get
themselves in place for the next move. E.g. if the dance ends with a
chain + star and starts with a new neighbor, you might call "robins
chain... new neighbor balance and swing" and the band goes to the top
of A1 (i.e. cutting out the last 8 beats of B2). Dancers need to know
how the dance flows and where moves start and end to compensate for
missing moves
- noodly beginners: this one is a Lindsey Dono gem. You've got a bunch
of friends coming, they're raw beginners, who will volunteer to dance
with them and get them through the next dance? And the friends in
question turn out to be... pool noodles. How do dancers
accommodate partners who quite literally can't do a single thing?
- esp. in very slanted halls, I've challenged dancers to do a dance
with lots of movement up/down the line (think 3-33-33) without the
sets getting bent out of shape. That's it, that's the whole challenge.
- a good exercise on its own or can be combined with the above:
practice dropping a full hands-4 out of the set. This is a recovery
skill that isn't necessarily taught, but if e.g. one dancer has an
injury or urgently needs to drop out, the thing to do is to remove
your entire hands-4 from the set (and people can re-enter from the
bottom if they still want to dance). I ran around with various hats,
placing them on people's heads to denote an "injury"—that person had
to then nonverbally get their hands-4 out of the set, and was then
licensed to put the "injury" hat on someone else's head. (Could also
be done with tagging people out.)
- i've seen some dancers put bandanas on arms/hands/shoulders to
represent an injury, and folks interacting with them need to notice
and be cognizant of it/modify around it
- i wrote my dance Neighbor, Neighbor on the Wall
<https://contra.maiamccormick.com/dances.html#neighborneighboronthewall>
for an exercise where the first time meeting this neighbor, you
communicated a preference or stylistic request about the swing, and
the second time you met them, you got to enact that preference/request.
- "practice saying no": normal dance but dancers are encouraged to
non-verbally say "no thank you" to flourishes/spins/fancy things at
least n times during the dance. Good practice for communicating and
listening for non-verbal "no's"
- beginner detection: randomly assign beginner-like dance flaws to a
number of the dancers (think "always a beat late", "dizzy",
"grips
tight and moves slow", "always looks in the wrong direction", etc.).
Dancers without an assigned flaw practice quickly evaluating someone
they're dancing with and getting a sense of skill level/whether they
need extra help, and then providing that help. (If you want to "check
people's work", you could at the end have all the assigned-beginner
dances identify themselves, and everyone else can see if they clocked
folks correctly.)
I've done a lot of workshops like this so I've got a lot of junk to
suggest, ha. Hope some of this is useful (and that I haven't missed my
window for suggesting things—apologies for the delay!). Let us know
how it goes!
Cheers,
Maia
--
Maia McCormick (she/her)
917.279.8194
On Wed, Jan 17, 2024 at 1:54 PM Emily Addison via Contra Callers
<contracallers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
Hey Folks,
Thanks so much to all those who have chimed in on the question I
posted.
Really neat that people like Richard and Joseph had experienced a
similar activity as me. And fascinating discussion about sharing
weight John, Joseph and others! I really like the idea that every
allemande/swing is a new opportunity for connecting with
someone different and figuring out that connection. I think it was
Will Mentor that referred to enjoying the little differences in
every swing which made me all the more present and noticing what I
liked about different people's swings.
I'm wondering if there are any other particular fun activities to
do with dancers who already know the basics but who want to
improve their dancing ability/understanding?
:) Emily
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