Foxtrot

By Christine Trask
Staff Author
Photo by Jay Kuntz
A poem of dance history and approach

 Harry Fox, an African American Vaudeville dancer, introduced the “Foxtrot” when he performed with the Ziegfeld Follies in 1910.  

Vernon and Irene Castle, husband and wife ballroom dance sweethearts, appeared on Irving Berlin’s Broadway show in 1914, “Watch Your Step.” They popularized the Foxtrot.

Women were finding greater freedom to participate in dance.

James Reese Europe’s 125-piece orchestra created music for Vernon and Irene. The “Castle Doggy-Fox Trot” was named after the couple.

 

Smooth syncopated rhythms

Brassy bluesy tones

Bright, high-pitched sound of Mandolins

Bass sound from bandores

Harp guitars

Bass

Wide range of pitches and tones from strings

 

Irene, a fashion trend setter

Tossing the cruel corsets  

Long soft flowing sun colored chiffon gown lavished with crystals

Tight bodice

Soft low-heeled slippers

Bobbed dark hair style decorated with a band of pearls

Pancake makeup achieves “pale look”

Pots of carmine color used for lips, cheeks

Pots of grey, brown and lemon colored paste applied slightly to lids

 

Vernon, a World War I pilot

Dark black hair

Black dress shoes smooth split sole  

Black dress pants

Tailored white shirt

Bow tie

Black narrowed waist length shouldered jacket with coat tails

 

Closed position man and lady face each other slightly offset

Hold an upper hand clasp

4/4 time with first and third beats of each measure accented

Tempo 29 to 34 measures per minute  

Follow the graceful motion and lightness of the footfall

Leader: step forward with left foot (slow) then step forward with right foot (slow) walking steps forward heel-toe foot placement

Quick-quick: step to left side with left foot (quick) then close the right foot to the left (quick)

Follower: step backward with right foot (slow), then step backward with the left foot (slow) these are two walking steps backward maintaining a toe heel placement

Quick-quick: step to the right side with the right foot (quick) then close the left foot to the right (quick)

Weight shift: transfer weight fully with each step

Footwork: roll through your feet using heel-to-toe or toe-to-heel movements

Keep shoulders relaxed, core engaged

Promenade (slow slow quick quick) keep knees soft as you walk forward, swing through with your sidestep, close your feet together while still being offset to the left, turn your head and look into the direction you are traveling, rotate your hips a little bit as your feet turn  

Hear the beat of the music

Smooth, glamourous, controlled elegant movements

 

“Shall We Dance? The True Story of the Couple Who Taught the World to Dance” by Douglas Thompson shares the final stored love letter from Vernon to Irene in 1918 during WWI. In February 1918 Vernon died when training a student at the Royal Air force.

Irene,

“When you get this letter. I shall be gone out of your sweet life.

My only thought, darling, is for you. I don’t want you to be unhappy. You may be sure that I died with your sweet name on my lips, and my only wish for your future is happiness. You are the sweetest thing God ever made, dear.”

 

When dancing the Foxtrot, don’t forget what Harry Fox, the Castles, and James Reese Europe’s orchestra did for the world of dance. 

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