“Do It Big, Do It Right, and Do It with Style” When You Dance

Who would know better than Fred Astaire?  Get acquainted with some books on dance in the collection featuring people whose movements engage our attention.

Hoop dancing, one of the most familiar forms of Native American dance, is now showcased in annual competitions such as the one at the Heard Museum in Phoenix, Arizona, featuring some 80  contestants. The solo performer needs great skill  to stamp time to the drum beat while twirling, throwing, and spinning hoops around the body.   Its origins cannot be precisely pinpointed, but hoops were used in many Native American tribal healing rituals to restore cosmic balance. “Cangleska wakan”–Lakota for sacred circle—symbolizes the  Sioux concept of the universal interrelation of all created things as they grow and develop in the past, present and future.

Jacqueline Left Hand Bull’s picture book Lakota Hoop Dancer (1999) introduced children to Kevin Locke (1954-2022), also a master of the Native American indigenous flute. Descended from a distinguished Sioux family, Locke was widely honored for his work as an educator who passed on traditions through the performance of indigenous song and dance.

Lakota Hoop Dancer. New York: Dutton Children’s Books, c1999. (Cotsen 91771)

Locke learned the hoop dance from Arlo Good Bear, a Manan Hidatsa Indian, at a point when its survival was at risk.  Suzanne Haldane’s photography captures his easy demeanor which belies the athleticism necessary to execute the dance’s complicated moves. Performing against a backdrop covered by a patchwork quilt, Locke forms shapes with a handful of hoops to represent creatures in the story he is telling simultaneously.  Informally dressed in red, the color of the sun, and blue, that of the moon, his regalia is worn from the waist down.   In the second dance Haldane recorded, Locke’s splendid regalia almost overshadows the deft manipulation of more hoops into wonderfully complex forms.  To better appreciate this dance form, watch this video of Locke at the 2016 Smithsonian Folklife Festival, where he demonstrates “the hard part” and places the performance of the hoop dance in the context of his culture and its relevance to the lives of non-indigenous people.

The leap from dance as an expression of the sacred to  a reflection of contemporary mores here is a breath taking shift in tone.  This post was inspired by the discovery of an image of social dancing, which was removed from a 1930s reissue of satirical lithographs mercilessly sending up the fashionable folies of the “right sort” in the famous periodical Le bon genre. The impeccably dressed dancing master plays the kit violin on tiny beautifully shod feet while his pupils in sheer white Empire gowns work without partners to master new steps.  One works on leg lifts to strengthen her quadriceps and another practices what she hopes will be irresistible airs in front of a mirror.

When British satirists saw Le bon genre, they immediately grasped its potential for mischief across the Channel.  Gillray found it unnecessary to add much in the way of damning details in the French artist’s depiction of two couples waltzing.  Far less dainty  than the previous print, the spectator’s eye is drawn not to the grace of the handsome, fashionably young couples twirling in the closed position as much as their obvious physicality.  Sexual desire and the heat of exertion seems to rise from the bodies of the pair to the right; the man’s fleshy thighs and his partner’s exaggerated shoulder blades so noticeable in the other pair are slightly repellent.  It is a good explanation as any of why the waltz’s introduction caused a scandal in 1813.

Mourka: the Autobiography of a Cat. New York: Stein & Day, 1964. (Cotsen 67863)

The energy of dancers is channeled through the execution of patterns or choreography; bears, dogs and some other animals can be trained to do this. Before concluding that pigs will fly sooner than cats pirouette, look at Mourka: The Autobiography of a Cat (1964) whose subject was George Balanchine’s pet.  It is probably best categorized as a children’s book for adults illustrated with shots of cats in motion by the great photographer of dancers, Martha Swope.  Suspended in midair, Mourka and partner look as if they were destined for the stage of the New York City Ballet.

The delightful book has a heartbreaking backstory.  The text was written by Tanaquil Le Clerq, the fourth Mrs. Balanchine and one of his muses. Recognized as perhaps the most promising dancers of her generation, choreographers of the stature of Jerome Robbins and Merce Cunningham created roles for Le Clerq.   Her career was cut cruelly short when she caught polio during the company’s European tour in 1956.  At age 27, she was paralyzed from the waist down, eventually recovering the use of her torso and legs. During the 1960s, she spent a great deal of time in the couple’s apartment, with only the cat for company when Balanchine could not be with her.  While she avoided speaking about ballet, it was inescapable because of her husband’s running the company. Perhaps watching Mourka’s balletic leaps became a kind of therapy which reignited her need for self-expression through movement—first by writing this book, then by coaching others in her famous roles, and finally by teaching at the Dance Theatre of Harlem.  Her students report how inspiring they found her eloquent demonstrations with arms and body.

None of these dancers are remotely alike, and yet they make Astaire’s observation about the power of authentic movement fresh again.

Thoroughly Modern Ogres

Gustave Dore’s rendering of the ogre’s discovery of little Thumb and his brothers.

The Oxford English Dictionary succinctly defines an ogre as “a man-eating monster, usually represented as a hideous giant” in folklore and mythology.  It comes from the French via Perrault’s fairy tales (its mate is an “ogress” and their offspring an “ogrichon” according to Mme d’ Aulnoy).   No ogre is welcome when scouring the countryside for its next meal, whether it happens to be a good supply of baby belly buttons, which by oni, the ogres of Japan, relish, or a brace of fat boys rolled in bread crumbs and fried in butter, the favorite dish of the giant Snap-‘em up in Uncle David’s nonsensical story from Catherine Sinclair’s Holiday House (1839).  The ogres I’ve found in picture books from the last ten years seem to belong to an altogether different subspecies.The title of Michael Morpurgo’s The Ogre Who Wasn’t (2023) gives fair warning.  A somewhat forced reinvention of Grimms’ The Frog Prince is odd place to invoke the presence of a monster.  Motherless Princess Clara discovers a teeny tiny ogre in the garden and stows him under the bed in a hot pink character shoe.  Because her father is away most of the time, the disagreeable servants try to constrain her but she defies them by keeping  an extensive  menagerie in her room and running wild barefoot in the garden in dirty shorts with uncombed hair. One evening she confides her pain to her best friend the loyal little ogre, who reveals that he is really the Toad King and has magical powers, which can be put at her service.  He grants her wishes to scrap the help and give her a stay-at-home dad with a nice new wife.  There is nothing more for the new racially blended family to do in this sweetly vapid story but live happily ever after.The creature in Peter McCarty’s 2009 picture book Jeremy Draws a Monster is quite satisfying–big, blue, and bulky with multiple horny protrusions, pinpoint eyes, big nostrils and bare earholes (funny preparatory drawings turn up on the endpapers).  But things go awry almost immediately.  It wants a sandwich, when it ought to threaten Jeremy, a much more substantial mouthful.  It wants consumer goods to help pass the time, including a television so it can watch the game.  Wearing a dandy red hat, it goes out on the town and hogs the single bed when it gets back very late. That is the last straw.  Jeremy draws a suitcase and one-way bus ticket and escorts the big blue pest to the station in the morning.  Then he joins the neighborhood kids in games for the first time.  Obviously the ogre is a projection of Jeremy’s imagination, which probably explains why his creation won’t eat him and goes without putting up a fight.  If it isn’t real and only looks dangerous, then the story deflates without any conflict between the two unequal characters. Even if the point were that monsters are all in your head, of which I’m unconvinced, the imagination demands the possibility of them being real.Leave it to David Sedaris to think up Pretty Ugly (2024), a typically weird story, the last to be illustrated by the late Ian Falconer.  Dedicated to Tiffany, Sedaris’s sister who committed suicide, he also pays tribute to the ability of sister Amy to make ghastly faces. Whenever the adorable little ogrichon Anna is awful, she is so good that her parents and grandmother coo that she really is “something.”  Her bad habit of making dreadful faces–adoring gran starts at the fuzzy bunny gran–prompts her mother to warns her quite correctly that if she doesn’t stop it, she’s going to be sorry.  Anna dismisses her concern, until the features of her most horrible face of all (shown to the left) cannot be reversed.  Even a medical intervention fails to restore her face to its original loveliness. While her loving family can live with their little monstrosity in a new guise, her peer group has no problem reminding how her how hideous she is now.  After secluding herself in the wood shed for a miserable three days, Anna remembers her grandmother’s consoling words about true inner beauty and sticks her hand down her throat to turn herself inside out, which solves the problem (below).  There is nothing traditional about this ogre story, but if they ever start creating picture books about family life, they could do worse than take Sedaris as their literary model. I’m not sure why authors and illustrators who have been busy reinventing Western folklore’s traditional baddies have smoothed off most of their rough edges. As monsters go, an ogre is terrifying, but otherwise uncomplicated. It stomps around, uses brute force to capture people, and devours them, sometimes with guests. Maybe it tosses the bones into a large, grisly, untidy heap outside its dwelling place. Still, a  brave and quick-thinking child like Little Thumb  has a shot at defeating one.  But perhaps the classic stand-off between big and small compares unfavorably with old and modern stories about Japanese yokai and requires big injections of horror and violence to hold its own in today’s media environment.  Time to clap if you believe in ogres?