Title: Tap Dance
1Tap Dance A Brief History by Wendy Oliver
Savion Glover, 2004
2Rhythm in Motion
- One of the few dance forms in which hearing the
dance is as important as seeing it
- The dancers creates rhythms, or patterns of
beats, using metal taps under the toe and heel
- Like other dance forms, a standardized vocabulary
has developed
- Most tap dance is choreographed, but it may also
be improvised
- Performance styles have changed over time
3Tap Styles
- Tap styles include hoofing, class acts, and
flash acts, among others
- Hoofing emphasizes intricate footwork (Savion
Glover, Gregory Hines)
- Class acts emphasize full body movement, with an
elegant flair (Fred Astaire, Ginger Rogers)
- Flash acts combine tap with acrobatics (Nicholas
Brothers)
- Soft shoe dancing is simply performing tap steps
without the taps
Frank Sinatra Gene Kelly doing a soft
shoe at the Press Photographers Ball, 1948
4Roots of Tap
- It is a combination of two distinct cultural
styles
- Tap is uniquely American, and has its roots in
slavery
- Plantation slaves, forbidden to use drums, beat
out rhythms with their feet, hands, or with
bones
- Plantation masters introduced clogs, jigs, and
reels from their Irish and English backgrounds
- Slaves picked up the steps, altering the arms to
be much looser, and combining them with their own
rhythms
- Slaves danced for themselves as well as for the
entertainment of their masters and guests
- In New York City in the 1830s, different
immigrant groups got together to show off their
varied styles. These included African Americans,
Irish, Scottish,and English. This allowed a
blending of characteristics.
5Early Tap
- Tap continued to develop in the theatre,
beginning with the minstrel shows of the early
1800s.
- Master Juba was the most famous dancer in black
minstrel shows in the 1840s he emphasized rhythm
and percussion in his steps
- At this time, dancers did not wear taps on their
shoes---those were not invented until 1910
Master Juba (1825-1852)
6Bill Bojangles Robinson
- Vaudeville (late 1800s-early 1900s) also
showcased tap dance
- Bill Bojangles Robinson was the most famous tap
dancer of this era
- The first of many African-Americans who
popularized tap one of first to have regular
work in mostly white theatres
- Danced in Shirley Temple films in the 1930s
7The Nicholas Brothers
- Another tap act of the 1930s and later were the
Nicholas Brothers, Fayard and Harold
- They were known for their elegance---they always
wore suits when they performed
- The brothers were show stoppers at the Cotton
Club, the hottest nightclub in New York
- They also appeared in movies including Down
Argentine Way (1940) and Stormy Weather (1943)
- They had amazing acrobatic abilities, which
including jumping over each others heads in the
splits, so were known as a flash act
8Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers
- Astaire and Rogers were a team who popularized
tap within musical theatre
- They added the element of ballroom dance to the
mix used balletic elements including graceful
arms as part of their style
- Top Hat (1935) was one of their more famous movies
9Ann Miller
- Ann Miller was one of Americas top female
dancing stars in the 1930s-1950s
- Anns claim to fame was her speed she was
listed in Ripleys Believe It or Not as the
worlds fastest tap dancer. A speedometer
attached to her feet recorded 598 taps/minute in
1942! - She danced in many movies including Kiss Me Kate
(1953), and did Easter Parade with Fred Astaire
10Contemporary Tap
Gregory Hines and Brenda Bufalino are two famous
tap artists who became prominent at the end of t
he 20th century. Gregory Hines starred in White
Nights with Baryshnikov in 1985, as well as many
other films. He passed away in 2003.
Brenda Bufalino has her own tap dance company, A
merican Tap Dance Orchestra, and a school in New
York City.
11Savion Glover
- The best-known contemporary tap star is Savion
Glover, who choreographed the Broadway show Bring
in da Noise, Bring in da Funk, which won a Tony
award in 1996 - He made his Broadway debut at age 12 in the show
The Tap Dance Kid
- Critic Marcia Siegel calls him one of the great
dancers of the time, saying
hes a noticeably into-the-ground dancer. His
steps seem to go down and down, hardly ever up,
except when he hitches himself from the shoulders
or hauls out of the floor from the hips and back.
His legs compose tremendous volumes of taps,
stamps, swipes, kicks, hops, skids, and
vibrations, and as the surprises roll out, you
also notice that he doesnt do anything stylish
to emphasize them. His arms just rappel off what
his feet are doing, nothing pretty or
picturesque. ( Boston Phoenix, 5/13/2005)
12Tap continues to be very popular
people of all ages around the world
study and perform it. George Bush, sr.
created a law declaring May 25 National
Tap Day in the US. The date was chosen because it
was Bill Bojangles birthday. Every city around
the country (and some in other countries)
prepares a celebration featuring large numbers of
tap dancers such as the ones seen here.
13Resources
- http//www.theatredance.com/tap/juba.jpgimgrefurl
- http//www.loisgreenfield.com/images/galleries/dan
ce/02_1_AmericanTapDance.jpg
- http//www.tapatoe.de/images/startbild.jpg
- http//www.websters-online-dictionary.com/coreimag
es/historical/LOC cph/3c04001t.gifimgrefurl
- http//www.websters-online-dictionary.com/ta/tap.h
tmlh
- Learning about Dance, Nora Ambrosio, Dubuque, IA
Kendall Hunt, 2003
- Tap!, Rusty Frank, New York, NY Da Capo Press,
1994
- Tap Dance in Dance and Culture, Then and Now,
American Press (in press)
- http//www.theatredance.com/tap/
- Dance Magazine, May, 1999.
14Resources, continued
http//www.culturevulture.net/Television/bojangles
2a.gif
http//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/8/86/Nich
olasBrothers.jpg
http//i.cnn.net/cnn/2004/SHOWBIZ/Movies/01/22/obi
t.miller.ap/story.ann.miller.1.ap.jpg
http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tap_dance
http//www.savethegunks.com/images/brendadancing2.
jpg
www.nypl.org/permissions/full/ps_the_cd71_1099.jpg
imgrefurl
www.artsjournal.com/ tobias/archives20050101.shtml
http//www.brookvale-p.schools.nsw.edu.au/EVENTS/2
001/Talent/Pic2.jpg
http//www.bu.edu/bridge/archive/2005/02-11/photos
/arts02.jpg
http//www.chicagotap.com/images/people/timesteppe
rscaption.jpg
http//www.loriart.com/burr/tap_dance_iv_tn.jpg
http//www.orc.ru/konstan/photos/rreed.gif
http//www.meg-tap.com/2005nationaltapday.jpg