Gallery: People Being Unimpressed in Jam Circles
Swungover Blog
by Bobby
2M ago
Paypal.me/bobbywhite3 Venmo: @bobbyswungover When we see Whitey’s Lindy Hoppers perform, their jam circle support tends to look like this 1939 promo photo: Original caption reads: “A couple do the ‘Out the Window’ part of the Lindy Hop, a dance by devotees of swing. 1939 The Savoy Club, Harlem, New York, USA.” This is the first time I’ve ever heard this name for this air step, which Frankie Manning called Over the Head. News reporters had often come up with zany names to describe swing moves and even instruments, though it’s annoying and can be pretty disrespectful, it was probably at it’s h ..read more
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[Classic Air Steps] Baby Doll Drop
Swungover Blog
by Bobby
3M ago
Venmo: @bobbyswungover PLEASE NOTE! When considering what to donate, please note the steps, the original dancers who danced them, the names of the steps, and the contributions of the many who helped put names to them are not my intellectual property, and therefore are not what I’m asking donations for. Basically, I do not ask for donations for the creation of the content, but merely the researching, gathering, and compiling of the information. Please take that into consideration when donating. Baby doll Norma Miller & Leon James performing what most people in the common era call “Baby d ..read more
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Mama Lu
Swungover Blog
by Bobby
4M ago
Most Lindy Hoppers who’ve been around awhile know the name Herbert “Whitey” White and know his basic story — he worked at the Savoy where he gathered together young Lindy Hoppers like Frankie Manning and Norma Miller, and made performance groups out of them, groups that under his leadership toured the world and performed in films like A Day at the Races and Hellzapoppin’. They might recall from Norma and Frankie’s books that Whitey both respected Lindy Hop greatly, and yet also exploited the young teenage talent, to various degrees based on who you asked. Most modern dancers have probably als ..read more
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The 1954 Harvest Moon Ball
Swungover Blog
by Bobby
5M ago
Venmo: @bobbyswungover This is part of the Harvest Moon Ball essay series. To see all the Harvest Moon Ball essays, please visit Swungover’s HMB page. Integration & Dancing On May 17, 1954, the Supreme Court ruled in the case of Brown vs. Board of Education that segregation was unconstitutional in public schools. From the south across the mid-west, the nation was about to get a little closer to equality. Though the New York-based NAACP and their famous Harlem-resident lawyer Thurgood Marshall were behind the case, and proud of their victory, Marshall knew there was no such thing as ..read more
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The 1953 Harvest Moon Ball
Swungover Blog
by Bobby
9M ago
Venmo: @bobbyswungover This is part of the Harvest Moon Ball essay series. To see all the Harvest Moon Ball essays, please visit Swungover’s HMB page. Community & Dancing From the Daily News, Oct. 18, 1953. The article above sheds light on something very important about Harlem, and Black American communities in general. Not only does the community greatly support performing arts, they support them from the amateur to the professional. Harlem history is a clear example of this. Contests like the famous Apollo amateur talent nights allowed Ella Fitzgerald to show what she was capable ..read more
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[Classic Air Steps] Side flip
Swungover Blog
by Bobby
1y ago
This is a new series breaking down the names of the original air steps of the pioneers of Lindy Hop from the 1930s-1980s. Check out other posts in the series here. PLEASE NOTE! When considering what to donate, please note the steps, the original dancers who danced them, the names of the steps, and the contributions of the many who helped put names to them are not my intellectual property, and therefore are not what I’m asking donations for. Basically, I do not ask for donations for the creation of the content, but merely the researching, gathering, and compiling of the informat ..read more
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The 1952 Harvest Moon Ball
Swungover Blog
by Bobby
1y ago
Venmo: @bobbyswungover This is part of the Harvest Moon Ball essay series. To see all the Harvest Moon Ball essays, please visit Swungover’s HMB page. (Essay 18 of 23.) Malcolm X & Dancing In January, 1952, Malcom X walked out of prison. He had walked in, in 1946, as Malcolm Little. Malcolm was a very intelligent youth, who suffered a great deal of personal trauma, on top of the general trauma developed by being a Black American man in America in his time. (Black Americans in general still experience trauma by growing up in America.) His father’s suspicious death, followed by his m ..read more
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[Classic Air Steps] Over-the-Back
Swungover Blog
by Bobby
1y ago
This is a new series breaking down the names of the original air steps of the pioneers of Lindy Hop from the 1930s-1980s. PLEASE NOTE! When considering what to donate, please note the steps, the original dancers who danced them, the names of the steps, and the contributions of the many who helped put names to them are not my intellectual property, and therefore are not what I’m asking donations for. Basically, I do not ask for donations for the creation of the content, but merely the researching, gathering, and compiling of the information. Please take that into consideration w ..read more
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300 Posts
Swungover Blog
by Bobby
1y ago
Dear readers, The writer at work in the early days of Swungover. Our last article was Swungover’s 300th post. We are, frankly, amazed, and also now realize where a great deal of our 30s went. Looking back, the articles weren’t all great. And many of them were long. And though there was good intent, we can see sometimes laughable, sometimes embarrassing, sometimes cringe-worthy examples of naiveite, self-indulgence, bias, and a characteristically ADHD approach to grammar, spelling, and not finishing series we started.     And perhaps you’ve noticed some of its specific idios ..read more
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R.I.P. Jean Veloz (1924-2023)
Swungover Blog
by Bobby
1y ago
Jean with her brother Ray Phelps. Photo courtesy of Rusty Frank. The legendary Californian Lindy Hopper Jean Veloz passed away Sunday, Jan 15, 2023. She was 98. Jean Veloz was born Jane Phelps on March 1, 1924 in Los Angeles. From a very young age she wanted to be in the movies. As a teenager, Jean learned SoCal’s local swing dances (“Swing,” Bal-Swing, and Balboa) and the recently-imported Lindy Hop. Like many of the dancers of the era, she learned from siblings and friends, most notably her brothers Robert and Raymond (“Ray”). Soon Jean developed a well-poised and theatrical swing dance styl ..read more
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