--- On Wed, 11/19/08, Myk Dowling <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

Argentine Tango is a social dance, with no ruling body to define and 
control it. As such, it is free to adapt to changing preferences of the 
people who dance it. 

-----

That’s an excuse, not a reason.  There’s a difference.  Good posture is Tango 
101.  If there is some physical defect that makes it impossible for them to 
hold their heads and shoulders up, then that would be a reason.  It wouldn’t 
make the presentation any more elegant, but it mitigates the outcome of the 
performance.

I do hold couples doing a FORMAL PRESENTATION to a higher level of tango than I 
would for others simply dancing at a milonga.  Presentations should be measured 
by their OUTCOME, not their output.   Read Mario’s post again.  His first 
reaction is along the lines of “What the h…?”  This is outcome.  This 
presentation failed in that regard.  It also failed with me.  Think of demos as 
a job interview.  You wouldn’t dress in sweats because it would detract from 
your message.  Same thing here, only the poor posture is what is detracting 
from the message of the artists.

Presentations can leave a significant impression on its audience, particularly 
beginners.  As a long-time organizer I’m aware of the impact they can have 
weeks, months, or even years down the road.  I believe that organizers have a 
responsibility to present tango in a good way, not just anyway old way.  If 
there is very little tango in Zagreb and this was a young community, then I can 
understand why the host was gushing over this couple.  

This couple is obviously talented but they would be better served by being told 
the truth rather than being coddled.  If they paid more attention to basics 
like posture and looking elegant, then this couple would really be something.

Trini de Pittsburgh



      

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