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social dancing USA Dance

Big dancing weekend

For a city of its size (about 100,000 people), Macon offers a lot more dance events than one would expect.  Various individuals and groups host dances every weekend of the month.  Sometimes, one dance will fall on a Friday and  one on a Saturday.  Then we all spend Sunday with big smiles on our faces, resting our tired feet!  This weekend has been one of those two-dance weekends.  I have my fuzzy slippers on as we speak.

This past Friday evening was Macon’s First Friday celebration.  On the first Friday of each month, downtown restaurants and entertainment venues throw open their doors with special events to encourage people to enjoy downtown nightlife.  We always attend Paula East’s First Friday dance at the Georgia Sports Hall of Fame.  Paula always kicks off the evening with a complimentary lesson, then we take over the center rotunda of the building to practice what we’ve just learned.  This month we learned some samba steps.  Someday, when our samba is all grown up, it will look like this one, but it’s not there yet.

Saturday night was our USA Dance chapter’s monthly social at the Howard Community Club.  Lately we have been mooching new steps from Paula’s assistant instructor Jim Riley at every chance we get; last night he taught us this crazy pretzel-y step in swing that is going to look very cool if we can get it clean and crisp enough.  Between ballroom CDs, John (chapter president) always plays a few line dances.  Daniel got up and learned the “Swamp Thing,” a complicated-looking line dance that I’d never seen before moving here.  It reminds me a little of the “South Side Shuffle,” which I used to dance back in Oklahoma.

The best part of going to these regular weekend dances is seeing the people who AREN’T regulars.  I’m always excited to see new dancers showing up and having a good time, because that means our dance “scene” is growing and gaining momentum.  Hooray!

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dance events social dancing

Inaugural Sunday Night Dance Party: Success!

Daniel’s first Sunday night dance (March 29) went even better than we hoped it would.  About 40 people turned out and everyone danced and had a good time:sdc10401sdc10398sdc10397sdc10396

Several people brought requests and Daniel enjoyed playing them all, in addition to the music he brought with him.  One of our main goals in hosting this dance was to branch out and diversify the music we dance to, and that goal was achieved!  We got a lot of positive feedback from the people who attended.  It was wonderful to see everyone come and dance in a casual and relaxed setting–perfect for squeezing in a last bit of enjoyment before heading back to work on Monday morning!

If you attended the dance on Sunday night, please leave a comment and give us your impressions.  What did you think?  In particular, we are considering moving to earlier start  & end times–possibly 6:30 to 9:30 instead of 7:30 to 10:30.  We’d appreciate your thoughts on that idea or anything else you’d like to comment on.  Also, please mark your calendars for the next Sunday Night Dance Party, April 26.  We’ll be sure to finalize and confirm the time beforehand.

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Thank you for attending and making our dance a success!

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dance events social dancing

Gearing up for tomorrow night’s dance

Daniel is excitedly preparing for his first Sunday Night Dance Party tomorrow night.  We have sodas and bottled water and ice and plenty of change and a guestbook for collecting people’s emails and about 1,000,000 MP3s.  This dance will be a great novelty compared to my usual Sunday night spent folding the laundry and watching 60 Minutes!  If you, too, would rather dance than fold laundry (or whatever your standard Sunday evening gig is), please come and join us at the Howard Community Club from 7:30 to 10:30.  Admission is $5 per person. Dress casually and get ready to dance to some great new music!

This dance will be a monthly event, typically the 4th Sunday of each month, so if you can’t make it tomorrow night, please mark your calendar for April 26.  Daniel has big plans for future dances, including contests, giveaways, and reacquainting us all with the Macarena.  (Hey, we can’t dance ballroom all the time, can we?)

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dancing in the media USA Dance

USA Dance president on the radio

Via Angela Prince, USA Dance PR Director:  In the coming weeks, Dr. Kay Picart will conduct 2 interviews on her radio show with Peter Pover, USA Dance’s president.  They will discuss the upcoming National DanceSport Championships, the future of ballroom dancing, and USA Dance. 

The first interview segment will air Sunday, March 29 from 12:30-1:00 p.m. EDT and the second will air Sunday, April 5 from 12:30-1:00 p.m. EDT.  The interviews will be carried on WJZT–click the link and then click on “Listen Live.”

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dance events social dancing

Cherry Blossom Gala Ball

In a “casual Friday” world, dressing up and attending an elegant ball is a rare treat.  Before I started ballroom dancing, I had never been to anything called a “ball!”  Now I attend at least one a year, usually more.  Even in a small city such as Macon, dance opportunities (with and without dress codes) are more plentiful than one might imagine. 

For dancers, the Gala Ball is the highlight of the annual Cherry Blossom Festival.  It is held in the beautiful Macon City Auditorium, with two live bands, a big dance floor, drinks, hors d’oeuvres, remarks by local dignitaries, and the presentation of the Cherry Blossom Festival royalty.  If you are not a dancer, it’s worth attending just to watch–my parents, who attended with Daniel and me this year, can attest to that.  If you are a dancers, then it’s an opportunity to look your best and dance your best in a really lovely atmosphere.  Here are a couple of pictures:

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dancing in the media USA Dance

DWTS cancels juniors competition

As a USA Dance member I received an email this afternoon from the organization announcing that Dancing with the Stars “will not be able to hold the Juniors Competition this season.”  The message says that the producers love the juniors comp. and hope to do it again in the future, but it doesn’t explain why it was dropped this season.  Mysterious!  I feel bad for the kids who tried out–and for my own part, I’m sorry I don’t get to see them dance on the show.  They are amazingly talented and accomplished.

On a happier note, Paula sent me two photos this afternoon from the exhibition that Daniel and I performed in a few months ago.  Her Webmaster, Rick, took and edited the pictures.  You can see them on the Photo Gallery page in the “Exhibitions” album.

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behind the curtain

Pushing the baby bird out of the nest

2 weeks after starting to build it, I am finally making our Web site public.  Leave a comment and let us know what you think!

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competitions

Our Next Competition

In 2009 we will be going to Louisiana twice: once to New Orleans for the PCA/ACA annual conference (not dance related at all, though there are some conference sessions about dance) and once to Baton Rouge for the Gumbo DanceSport Championships, June 26 and 27, 2009.  “Gumbo DanceSport Championships” is funny enough, but this event used to be called “Gumbo of Ballroom” until USA Dance decided that all National Qualifying Events had to be called the “[Something] DanceSport Championships.”

Just looking at the entry form puts a smile on my face–and, to be honest, makes my palms sweat slightly.  In addition to the syllabus events we’d normally enter they have an “Open Six-Dance” event for all competitors below Gold level, plus “Cabaret” and “Theatre Arts” events.  I’m not actually sure what those last two are, but I’d like to find out, because I’m all about lots of dancing.  USA Dance comps are so great because they charge a flat entry fee for as many dances as you can enter (as opposed to charging per heat).

The only challenge will be getting out of town in time to get ourselves there for the competition.  According to the tentative schedule we’ll be dancing on Friday afternoon, which means leaving here Thursday so we can get a good night’s sleep in before we compete.  I am supposed to teach till 12:30 on Thursday but I suppose we could leave after that.  I don’t like to drive at night, but Daniel does, which is one of the many things that make us such a good team.

Gumbo, here we come!

Categories
competitions

Triangle Open Dancesport Championship

On Saturday, February 21, 2009, we competed in our first USA Dance-sanctioned competition, the Triangle Open Dancesport Championship.  Since the summer we’d been working hard to improve our dancing and were rewarded with 5 first-place results!  Although we are still just beginners compared to a lot of the dancers we saw, we had no shortage of events to enter or company on the floor.  More importantly, we met lots of very friendly people and had a wonderful time.  We enjoyed seeing our fellow Georgians Rick & Cindy Pellin again after meeting them in Tampa in July–it’s easy to see that after a few more competitions, every time we compete will feel like traveling to see a big group of friends.  Even when you don’t know anyone, the atmosphere is very welcoming: we heard strangers yelling our number to encourage us as we danced.  Daniel always tells people that he wants to “share his passion” for dancing, and that’s what this competition was all about.  I wish I could tell you something about how we danced, but I remember so few details. We just got out there and…did it. I remember almost stepping on someone in Senior I waltz; I remember the gentleman from a Gold-level couple that we know smiling at me as we danced and then nodding approvingly when I smiled back; I remember making flirty eyes at the judges while doing a grapevine in the foxtrot; I remember trying to slow my heartbeat between cha-cha and swing; I remember lining up on deck over and over, and curtsying over and over. I remember thinking how much I love dancing. It was such a great, fun day, and it gave us both so much motivation to keep working and keep competing.

Here are the events we entered and our placements:
+ Adult Bronze Waltz, Tango, Foxtrot: made the cut from first round to quarterfinal in all of these
+ Senior I Bronze Waltz: 4th of 4
+ Senior I Bronze Tango: 2nd of 3
+ Senior I Bronze Foxtrot: 1st of 3
+ Adult Bronze Cha-Cha: did not make the first cut
+ Adult Bronze Rumba: made the cut from first round to quarterfinal
+ Adult Bronze Swing: made 2 cuts, from first to quarter and from quarter to semi
+ Senior I Bronze Cha-Cha: 1st of 3
+ Senior I Bronze Rumba: 1st of 4
+ Senior I Bronze Swing: 1st of 3
+ Senior I Silver Rhythm (cha-cha & rumba): 1st of 5

Categories
behind the curtain

The inevitable “Hello World!” post

Welcome to our new Web site, chronicling and commenting on our pursuit of ballroom dancing in performance and competition.  Stay tuned as we add more content!