Dance is one of man’s oldest forms of art and storytelling, with cave painting depictions going back 30,000 years. Dances occur around the world, in every culture. Some were used for storytelling. Others were used for religious purposes. Some cultures had dances for healing, for appeasing Gods, for weather control, for courting, for festivals and celebrations, and entertaining royalty. Dances were used to teach, as social commentary and rebellion, and sometimes as just plain exercise. Dances can be as low key as the Hokey Pokey, or as tightly regulated and choreographed as grand ballet, or worse, synchronized swimming dances.
Physically, dancing is wonderful for the body.
- It burns calories
- It improves coordination
- It promotes muscle strength and flexibility
- It’s a weight-bearing exercise, so it’s good for improving joint function and staving off bone loss.
- It’s fantastic as an aerobic exercise to improve cardiovascular function, circulation, and endurance. Tap dance for just 10 minutes. Try it.
- As an exercise, it can help improve mood and increase endorphin levels in the body, making you happier.
- There is no age limit on dancing – whether you’re one or one hundred, you can do it!
- Disability isn’t an deterrent – many forms of dance can be adapted for people who cannot walk.
And dancing isn’t just for women! Plenty of men have been famous dancers – Rudolf Nuryev, Mikhail Baryshnikov, Fred Astaire, Gene Kelley, Michael Jackson, Gregory Hines, Sammy Davis Jr., John Travolta, Bill “Bojangles” Robinson, Michael Flatley, and “Gangnam Style’s” Psy, to name just a few. Dance takes tremendous strength and physical training. Football players take ballet to improve coordination and movement. HipHop is a male-dominated dance field. In ethnic dances around the world, men predominate, from Russian squat dancing to the New Zealand Haka and the Northern Plains Indian Grass Dance, to the Aduma dance of the Masai warriors in
Kenya. Dancing, by far, is as much a man’s sport as a woman’s.
If you have to be stuck inside in the winter, why not dance! Throw some fast music on and shake out those winter blues! Throw in a ballet DVD and leap (move the furniture out of the way first!). Or join us for some New England Country Dancing at the library later this month! Don’t feel like moving? Grab a blanket and a cup of tea and check out some of these great books and movies filled with dance!
Saturday Night Fever A Chorus Line Dirty Dancing
The Nutcracker All That Jazz Billy Elliot
Step Up West Side Story Oliver!
An American In Paris La La Land Fiddler on the Roof
Swing Time Dancer A Time to Dance
Russian Winter Out Loud Life in Motion
The Girls at 17 Swann Street Dance in America: A Reader’s Anthology