As one other caller mentioned - what I do as a caller is avoid looking at that dancer AT
ALL. That confuses me, and I will miscall if I get to caught up in what is happening
there. What I do is look ASAP for the dancers who are doing the moves smoothly and well,
and I call to them, making sure I call clearly at the start of the four beats before each
move will start, and not at the two beats before that I might often use, to give a little
extra time for the person to react. If there is a four in line down the hall, I will call
for the turn also on beat five of the phrase before (just as above, just saying it
differently) ensuring that they turn around and head back in time to cast off or do
whatever needs to be done in time for the next move. If I call carefully and steadily and
clearly at the appropriate time for a few times through the dance to the experienced
dancers, I generally find that once I look at the problem area, it has resolved. Also - I
don’t vary or shorten my calls, as I might otherwise, and I might say Neighbor balance and
swing, or With the next couple star left - telling them who to do it with and what, or
face across, right and left through - which way to face etc. especially on any figure that
might be confusing.
On Mar 6, 2017, at 3:45 PM, Alexandra Deis-Lauby via
Callers <callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
Inspired by Marie's other thread, I wonder what tools callers use when they encounter
a dance floor with such a dancer, especially if there is only one who is having so much
difficulty but who leaves confused dancers in their wake. Do you call to that dancer? Do
you call earlier? Do you adjust your program accordingly? Something else?
Thanks,
Alex
Sent from my iPhone
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