Dear caller friends,
Apologies if you've received this already. I'm trying to get the word out to
many folks.
I'm hoping that some members of this list might be enticed to join us in New
Hampshire on January 12-14, 2007, for the 20th annual Ralph Page Dance Legacy
Weekend. Here's the website with details:
http://www.neffa.org/rplw.html
The two callers most associated with traditional New England dancing are Dudley
Laufman and Ralph Page, so it is particularly apt that Dudley's accomplishments
are being celebrated this year at the Ralph Page weekend. Ralph preserved the
traditional dances of the Monadnock region and shared them with a new audience
especially in the post-WWII years, and Dudley extended that audience
dramatically in the late 1960s and 1970s. Indeed, "Dudley dancers" from that
era
were responsible for spreading interest in traditional New England dancing to
all parts of the United States, from San Diego to St. Louis to Seattle, from
Knoxville and Bloomington to Houston and Lansing. The list goes on and on...
From his first calling experiences in the late 1940s,
through the heyday of his
years as leader of the Canterbury Country Dance Orchestra,
from performances at
the 1965 Newport Folk Festival and the National Folk Festival at Wolf Trap, from
his rigorous schedule of dances throughout New England, from Boston area high
society weddings to countless New Hampshire schoolrooms, from his influential
recordings to his current busy schedule (250 gigs a year) with Two Fiddles-- for
fifty years, Dudley Laufman has been an influential dancing master and musician.
Given the number of dance communities that were inspired by Dudley dances, a
case can be made that Dudley is the single individual most responsible for the
fact that folks in America enjoy dancing contras today.
He has been recognized for his contributions in many ways, including the 2001
New Hampshire Governor's Award in the Arts for Folk Heritage and a nomination
for the 2006 National Heritage Fellowship.
Folks on this trad-dance-callers list certainly have enjoyed his strong
opinions, his perspectives, his stories, his dances, and his poems. Now it's
time for the dance community to honor him. The Friday night dance at the Ralph
Page weekend will feature music of Dudley's Canterbury Orchestra. Saturday's
program includes the world premiere of a new documentary about Dudley by David
Millstone, and a Retrospective dance session focused on Dudley's long career.
Staff callers for the weekend include Tony Parkes and Carol Ormand, with stellar
music being provided Friday by the Canterbury Orchestra and on Saturday and
Sunday by two bands: The Old Grey Goose, a Maine band with long connections to
Dudley, and a trio comprising Bob McQuillen on piano, Laurie Andres on
accordion, and Vince O'Donnell on fiddle. The weekend includes opportunities for
musical jams, there are calling and music workshops, there's an open mic for
callers, and there's plenty of good dancing to be had. Of all the dance weekends
I know, this one does more than any other to pay tribute to our rich dancing
heritage while also celebrating the lively contemporary dance scene. It's also
the only dance event I know of where dancers expect a generous number of duple
proper and triple minor dances in the program, and where you can count on
dancing Money Musk at least once, as well as numerous other chestnts.
Over the years, this dance weekend has attracted a particularly large number of
callers, both old hands and relative beginners, who come to share in the dancing
and to talk shop. It's a great time, and I hope you can join us. Please spread
the word!
David Millstone