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HISTORY
OF Tap Dance
several websites relate to the history of Tap dancing:
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Tap
Dance, style
of American theatrical dance, distinguished by percussive footwork,
that marks out precise rhythmic patterns on the floor. Some descriptive
step names are brush, flap, shuffle, ball change, and cramp roll.
The
sources of tap dancing include the Irish solo step dance, the English
clog
dance, and African dance movements. Among the slaves in the
southern United States, these merged by the early 19th century into
folk styles, the modern descendants of which include buck-and-wing
dancing and southern United States clogging (both done in leather-sole
shoes). The slave dances were adapted theatrically in 1828 in the
first blackface minstrel show, in the dancing of Thomas "Daddy"
Rice. In late 19th-century minstrel shows and showboat routines,
two techniques were popularized: a fast style in wooden-sole shoes,
also called buck-and-wing, exemplified by the duo of Jimmy Doyle
and Harland Dixon; and soft-shoe, a smooth, leather-sole style made
famous by George Primrose. These styles gradually coalesced, and
by the 1920s metal plates, or taps, had been added to leather-soled
shoes. In the 1920s and 1930s black dancers contributed to the development
of new styles of tap dance, and black dance teams became popular
for their acrobatic, often satirical acts. John Bubbles popularized
a slower, more syncopated style of tap dance. Prominent dance teams
of the era included Slap and Happy (Harold Daniels and Leslie Irvin)
and Stump and Stumpy (James Cross and Harold Cromer). Jazz provided
further rhythmic complexity, and Bill "Bojangles" Robinson
became America's most famous tap dancer. The style was further expanded
in the 1930s and 1940s, when dancers such as Fred
Astaire, Paul Draper, Ray Bolger, and, in the late 1950s, Gene
Kelly added movements from ballet and modern dance. In the late
1970s and early 1980s interest in tap dance underwent a resurgence.
"Tap Dance," Online Encyclopedia 2000
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