When I'm dancing the lady's role the only thing I consciously think about
is putting my right and on the Gent's shoulder as we start to swing.  If I
get that right, everything else seems natural (to me).
Dale
On Tue, Jul 5, 2016 at 9:13 PM, tavi merrill via Callers <
callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
  Regarding swing position: With good frame, differences
between the roles
 in giving weight are slight. But not all dancers are accustomed to good
 frame.
 I find a mirrored ballroom hold (both dancers have right hand on the
 other's shoulder blade, left hand on the other's shoulder) offers several
 advantages:
        - In general, it's a good hold for dancers to know as it saves
 space in crowded halls.
        - It facilitates spinning out from a swing, useful when dancers
 encounter "string of swings" choreography
        - It allows both dancers to experience both sides of good frame
 The one challenge is that dancers need to remember which side they are
 ending the swing on, as it removes "pointer hands" from the equation.
 This a bit of a tangent, but related to the chain: If we just called gents
 chains (by either hand! the courtesy turn for a left-hand chain isn't
 REALLY that complicated, folks) more often, role differences WRT chain
 would be a moot issue, and both roles would be better equipped to
 understand/offer/ask/decline flourishes. All for the effort of teaching one
 move well, one move that's out there in good choreography waiting to be
 used.
 Susan, I'm assuming this workshop is at a gender-free series, but geared
 to encourage attendance by dancers who aren't yet accustomed to gender-free
 dance? Having danced both roles widely and called a bit of gender-free, I'd
 be happy to chat by phone or IM. Feel free to ping me on facebook - Tavi
 Merrill
 On 7/5/2016 11:32 AM, Susan Pleck via Callers wrote:
   Hi
folks,
 I'm to lead a workshop/extended intro lesson at a local dance this
 Saturday on gender-free dancing/dancing the "other" role/switching
 roles.  Not having done this before, I'd appreciate any thoughts or
 advice about what this should include.  For the gender-free aspect,
 I'm not sure there's much to discuss, really; ir'd be more just giving
 dancers a chance to practice responding to different terms.  For
 dancing the other role, though, what points of emphasis do you think
 would be most useful?  Two that come to mind are swing
 positioning/giving weight, and figures such as a chain where the
 actions of the two roles are different. 
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