Oops. I wrote:
... a different (and, I think, simpler) version of
grand square for eight dancers than the one in the video John cited.
Of course, I should have written either "for sixteen dancers" or "for eight
couples".
--Jim
On Jul 24, 2019, at 2:40 PM, jim saxe
<Jim.Saxe(a)gmail.com> wrote:
On Jul 24, 2019, at 5:28 AM, john(a)modernjive.com [trad-dance-callers]
<trad-dance-callers(a)yahoogroups.com> wrote:
Hi all,
I've just seen the video of Seth calling a Double Grand Square:
https://www.facebook.com/seth.tepfer/videos/10204536010419503
...
But I found a number of earlier references to "Double Grand Square". Does
anyone know whether any other versions of a Double Grand Square exist?
...
There's a dance by Ted Sannella called "Ted's Double Quadrille No. 1"
(or "... #1") that includes a different (and, I think, simpler) version of grand
square for eight
[That should be "for sixteen". --js]
dancers than the one in the video John cited. The
starting formation is a square with two couples side-by-side on each side of (as in
Rod's Quads) and the action is simply for each couple to act the part of an individual
in a normal eight-person grand square. If I recall correctly, when I danced to Ted's
calling at Augusta Dance Week in 1985, he had partners put our near arms around each
other's backs as in a star promenade, but it might also be done with partners simply
holding near hands.
Side couples begin by facing up or down the hall toward the other side couple in their
foursome and backing away, while heads begin by dancing forward towards the opposite head
couple. On the fourth beat each couple, turns as a unit 90 degrees to face across the
square. On the next four beats, the original heads back out toward the side spots, while
the original sides advance toward the head spots, all couples turning on the last beat to
face uo and down. Etc.
A spreadsheet index of Ted's dances linked from
http://davidsmukler.syracusecountrydancers.org/ted-sannella-index/
lists the date of composition as 1965.
--Jim