The
Jitterbug
Swing
Dancing – The Jitterbug
In popular dancing, the Jitterbug made its appearance
at the beginning of the decade. It was the first dance
in two centuries that allowed individual expression.
GI's took the dance overseas when they to war, dancing
with local girls, barmaids, or even each other if necessary.
The history of swing dates back to the 1920's, where
the black community, while dancing to contemporary Jazz
music, discovered the Charleston and the Lindy Hop.
On March 26, 1926, the Savoy Ballroom opened its doors
in New York. The Savoy was an immediate success with
its block-long dance floor and a raised double bandstand.
Nightly dancing attracted most of the best dancers in
the New York area. Stimulated by the presence of great
dancers and the best black bands, music at the Savoy
was largely Swinging Jazz. One evening in 1927, following
Lindbergh's flight to Paris, a local dance enthusiast
named "Shorty George" Snowden was watching
some of the dancing couples. A newspaper reporter asked
him what dance they were doing, and it just so happened
that there was a newspaper with an article about Lindbergh's
flight sitting on the bench next to them. The title
of the article read, "Lindy Hops The Atlantic,"
and George just sort of read that and said, "Lindy
Hop" and the name stuck.
In the mid 1930's, a bouncy six beat variant was named
the Jitterbug by the band leader Cab Calloway when he
introduced a tune in 1934 entitled "Jitterbug".
With the discovery of the Lindy Hop and the Jitterbug,
the communities began dancing to the contemporary Jazz
and Swing music as it was evolving at the time, with
Benny Goodman leading the action. Dancers soon incorporated
tap and jazz steps into their dancing.
In the mid 1930's, Herbert White, head bouncer in the
New York City Savoy Ballroom, formed a Lindy Hop dance
troupe called Whitey's Lindy Hoppers. One of the most
important members of Whitey's Lindy Hoppers was Frankie
Manning. The "Hoppers" were showcased in the
following films: "A Day at the Races" (1937),
"Hellzapoppin" (1941), "Sugar Hill Masquerade"
(1942), and "Killer Diller" (1948).
In 1938, the Harvest Moon Ball included Lindy Hop and
Jitterbug competition for the first time. It was captured
on film and presented for everyone to see in the Paramount,
Pathe, and Universal movie newsreels between 1938 and
1951.
In early 1938, Dean Collins arrived in Hollywood. He
learned to dance the Lindy Hop, Jitterbug, Lindy and
Swing in New York City and spent a lot of time in Harlem
and the Savoy Ballroom. Between 1941 and 1960, Collins
danced in, or helped choreograph over 100 movies which
provided at least a 30 second clip of some of the best
California white dancers performing Lindy Hop, Jitterbug,
Lindy and Swing.
In the late 1930's and through the 1940's, the terms
Lindy Hop, Jitterbug, Lindy, and Swing were used interchangeably
by the news media to describe the same style of dancing
taking place on the streets, in the night clubs, in
contests, and in the movies.
By the end of 1936, the Lindy was sweeping the United
States. As might be expected, the first reaction of
most dancing teachers to the Lindy was a chilly negative.
In 1936 Philip Nutl, president of the American Society
of Teachers of Dancing, expressed the opinion that swing
would not last beyond the winter. In 1938 Donald Grant,
president of the Dance Teachers' Business Association,
said that swing music "is a degenerated form of
jazz, whose devotees are the unfortunate victims of
economic instability." In 1942 members of the New
York Society of Teachers of Dancing were told that the
jitterbug (a direct descendent of the Lindy Hop), could
no longer be ignored. Its "cavortings" could
be refined to suit a crowded dance floor.
The dance schools such as The New York Society of Teachers
and Arthur Murray, did not formally begin documenting
or teaching the Lindy Hop, Jitterbug, Lindy, and Swing
until the early 1940's. The ballroom dance community
was more interested in teaching the foreign dances such
as the Argentine Tango, Spanish Paso Doblé, Brazilian
Samba, Puerto Rican Merengue, Cuban Mambo and Cha Cha,
English Quickstep, Austrian Waltz, with an occasional
American Fox-trot and Peabody.
In the early 1940's the Arthur Murray studios looked
at what was being done on the dance floors in each city
and directed their teachers to teach what was being
danced in their respective cities. As a result, the
Arthur Murray Studios taught different styles of undocumented
Swing in each city.
In the early 1940's, Lauré Haile, as a swing
dancer and competitor, documented what she saw being
danced by the white community. At that time, Dean Collins
was leading the action with Lenny Smith and Lou Southern
in the night clubs and competitions in Southern California.
Lauré Haile gave it the name of "Western
Swing". She began teaching for Arthur Murray in
1945. Dean Collins taught Arthur Murray teachers in
Hollywood and San Francisco in the late 1940's and early
1950's.
After the late 1940's, the soldiers and sailors returned
from overseas and continued to dance in and around their
military bases. Jitterbug was danced to Country-Western
music in Country-Western bars, and popularized in the
1980's.
As the music changed between the 1920's and 1990's,
(Jazz, Swing, Bop, Rock 'n' Roll, Rhythm & Blues,
Disco, Country), the Lindy Hop, Jitterbug, Lindy, and
Swing evolved across the U.S. with many regional styles.
The late 1940's brought forth many dances that evolved
from Rhythm & Blues music: the Houston Push and
Dallas whip (Texas), the Imperial Swing (St. Louis),
the D.C. Hand Dancing (Washington), and the Carolina
Shag (Carolinas and Norfolk) were just a few.
In 1951 Lauré Haile first published her dance
notes as a syllabus, which included Western Swing for
the Santa Monica Arthur Murray Dance Studio. In the
50's she presented her syllabus in workshops across
the U.S. for the Arthur Murray Studios. The original
Lauré Haile Arthur Murray Western Swing Syllabus
has been taught by Arthur Murray studios with only minor
revisions for the past 44 years.
From the mid 1940's to today, the Lindy Hop, Jitterbug,
Lindy, and Swing, were stripped down and distilled by
the ballroom dance studio teachers in order to adapt
what they were teaching to the less nimble-footed general
public who paid for dance lessons. As a result, the
ballroom dance studios bred and developed a ballroom
East Coast Swing and ballroom West Coast Swing.
In the late 1950's, television brought "American
Bandstand", "The Buddy Dean Show" and
other programs to the teenage audiences. The teenagers
were rocking with Elvis Presley, Little Richard, and
Chuck Berry leading the fray. In 1959, some of the California
dance organizations, with Skippy Blair setting the pace,
changed the name of Western Swing to West Coast Swing
so it would not be confused with country and western
dancing.
In the 1990's, dancers over 60 years of age still moving
their Lindy Hoppin', Jitterbuggin', Swingin', and Shaggin'
feet.
References:
Jitterbug
Reference 1
Jitterbug
Reference 2
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