Demonstrations
vs. Words
Adapted
from a rec-folk-dancing post (1998) in response to a dancer who said that
callers should stay at the microphone rather than coming onto the floor to
demonstrate figures.
> The only figure that must be demonstrated is the courtesy turn.
That’s also the figure that’s hardest for new dancers to learn.
Hmm… it IS one of the figures
I demonstrate most often, partly to show an alternative to the twirls and
partly to demonstrate how folks can connect via eye contact to turn what might
otherwise seem a boring filler for the men into a fun figure for all.
The most common reason I jump down from the stage to demonstrate a
figure (which I do far more often than asking dancers on the floor to demo
something) is to make a point about styling.
Take the sequence "Lady round two and the gent cut through,
etc." as in "New Friendship Reel" or "Honor Among
Thieves." I can talk people through the figure and most people get it,
although it’s harder for those newer dancers who are inactive halfway down the
set to remember what to do when they become active. But after walking folks
through the dance, I’ll sometimes jump into the center of the hall and show
people how to dance it. I often see it done as a humorous rat race with
exaggerated scrambling and dashing feet, but I like it the way Ted Sannella
wanted it, as an smooth figure with just time enough to slide easily into the
following "Circle to the left." So, acknowledging that folks will
dance it as they please, I demonstrate one way of moving through the figure
that gives me great pleasure and invite the dancers to consider that as a
possibility when it’s their turn.
> And indeed, part of your job as a caller is to deliver those
clear, concise, accurate walkthroughs in the shortest possible time. The
dancers are here to dance.
This is just one part of the caller’s job and that there are additional
reasons why dancers are here. This varies from series to series, but at our
monthly dance, there are avid dancers who can be found sitting out a dance or
two happily talking with friends whom they only see at the monthly dance.
Another part of the caller’s job, which conflicts with the piece you
mention, is to provide entertainment, to be master of ceremonies, to be sensitive
to the energy flow of the evening and to help establish a welcoming atmosphere.
It might be to teach quickly and to get out of the way. On the other hand,
there are evenings and crowds when dancers would appreciate a break, a joke, a
story, a bit of dance history… Anytime a caller attempts to teach styling is
necessarily time taken away from teaching dances "in the shortest time
possible." But such teaching, applied judiciously, can be time well spent
in improving the overall quality of the dance series.