Does "dancing with same sex" new to Argentine Tango? We all know the answer to this! If you go back to the developmental stages of Tango, you see men dancing with other men. After a decade or so, women were introduced to Tango. Therefore pre-milongueros danced with each other either to practice, or to show off for status gain in the brotherhood, or to attract women at "peringundines: a.k.a academias". Even later around golden age of Tango, sometimes only best dancers could get to dance with good followers, if a leader wasn't that good he frequently would end up trying the moves with other guys.
Actually there was a thread in sometime last year titled "Early Dancing in Argentina" on Tango-L, and you can find the whole discussion from the archives, but here is my post to that thread last year. --------------------------------------------------- "Masculination of Women in Tango" While i was looking for something else i noticed this paragraph from the book called "Tango and the Political Economy of Passion" by M. Savigliano (pages 60-61). " No interpretations entertain the idea that women took pleasure in dancing with one another. Instead, male authors have reasoned that woman-with-woman tangoing must be either a preparation or a poor substitute for tangoing with men. There are also records of few early episodes of women dancing tango with each other in public. These performance have been constructed as acts presented for the pleasure of male spectators. Again, the assumption has been that a woman's erotic interest was not in her female tango partner but in the men who gazed at the spectacle.Thus, women's eroticism is constituted as restricted to a heterosexual money economy [...]. The milongueras eroticism circulated in a strictly limited way, confined to illegitimate encounters marked by heterosexism and class." Another interesting note from E.H. Puccia's book " El Buenos Aires de An. Villoldo 1860-1919", page 155) newspaper ["El Nacional" 27.01.1881] note about female leaders in the early years of Argentine Tango talks about a woman called Carlota Gonzalez who lives in La Boca at Suarez No 81, she was well known and respected dancer with masculine energy and her knife... In Historia del tango, Leon Benaros notes that Diccionario historico argentino defines the academies (a.k.a peringundines) as the venues dancing was between men only. Uruguayan Historian J.C Puppo in his book, Ese mundo del bajo, pages 29-30, informs us about "Cafe Zunino" in Montevideo, all regulars were men, also well known tango venue with many popular tango musicians and dancers visits ( i.e.Orquesta de Arolas played at Cafe Zunino in 1919). Cafe Zunino was a gay-cafe of the time where homosexuals call it "Conventillo Rosado". Some of the popular dancers were nicknamed with feminine meanings "El Yesero", "La Lora", "La Loca" Garcia, "La Vieja". Tango was a perfect match for "vida mala" those days, Lidia Ferrari claims that tango is innocent and it shouldn't be labeled, she says whoever wants to integrate their fantasies into tango, they are the responsible ones of the negative labeling. Body-Gender issues in Argentine Tango is a very interesting subject which remains left behind by "official" tango history. Burak Chicago On Thu, Oct 1, 2009 at 8:35 AM, Jack Dylan <[email protected]> wrote: >> From: Mario <[email protected]> >> >> Here, two godesses of the Milonguero cult, introduce a >> new wrinkle to the dance; one that I, myself and many others, were hoping to >> never see...Alas, fair Prince...we are no more. >> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yNcVDHdxCbY >> > > Firstly, this isn't Nuevo and, secondly, it's not a performance. It's clearly > a demonstration at the end of a class. > > But you'd be right to attend their classes. The wonderful Susanna Miller > and Maria Plazaola are 2 of the very best teachers of milonguero style. > > I'm not a big fan of same-sex dances [to put it mildy] but this is, by far, > the best demonstration I've ever seen by 2 women. > > Jack > > > > > > _______________________________________________ > Tango-L mailing list > [email protected] > http://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/tango-l > _______________________________________________ Tango-L mailing list [email protected] http://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/tango-l
