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Folklore: Grinning Highland Dancers

28 Aug 11 - 03:07 PM (#3214090)
Subject: Folklore: Grinning Highland Dancers
From: meself

Yesterday I found myself (there I was!) watching a bit of a Highland Dance competition, for the first time in about forty years. Nothing much had changed, as far as I could see - except that, when the girls - they were all girls - would do their stylized bow at the beginning and end of a dance, they would suddenly force a big ear-to-ear grin - before reverting to the default countenance of sobriety if not gloom that one has grown to know and love.

Question: Has this become the norm? Has someone been telling these somber innocents that the judges award points for idiot grins - and do the judges now do so?


28 Aug 11 - 03:43 PM (#3214109)
Subject: RE: Folklore: Grinning Highland Dancers
From: greg stephens

I blame the Americans.


28 Aug 11 - 04:52 PM (#3214137)
Subject: RE: Folklore: Grinning Highland Dancers
From: GUEST,Ebor_Fiddler

Indeed, why not?


28 Aug 11 - 04:59 PM (#3214144)
Subject: RE: Folklore: Grinning Highland Dancers
From: Jack Campin

There is a dance instructor in Edinburgh who gets her proteges to do that. Not being Scottish I don't think she's ever got the meaning of the word "glaikit".


28 Aug 11 - 10:15 PM (#3214281)
Subject: RE: Folklore: Grinning Highland Dancers
From: GUEST,leeneia

18 years ago, my niece, who was only 7 years old, was dancing at an Irish step dance competition. She lost her place, knew it, and 'looked crestfallen.' Or so her mother told me. And she added, "The judges take off for that."

I consider that neurotic behavior.

It seemed that in all the competititions, the girls were supposed to smile, smile, smile. Yuck.


28 Aug 11 - 11:46 PM (#3214306)
Subject: RE: Folklore: Grinning Highland Dancers
From: MorwenEdhelwen1

As I have mild cerebral palsy and a) have never wanted to be a dancer as I wouldn't want to practice enough and would find it much more difficult than the average amateur dancer of any form of dance to reach competition/recital/professional/semi-professional standard and b)don't know much about Irish/Scottish dancing, can someone tell me why smiling dancers are considered unusual?


29 Aug 11 - 12:29 AM (#3214318)
Subject: RE: Folklore: Grinning Highland Dancers
From: meself

To me, simply because they are unusual, in my rather limited experience - and I'm talking only about what's known as Highland Dancing. I saw a lot of it when I was a kid - my sister along with many girls in the neighbourhood spent a few years at it. And these girls rarely if ever smiled in the course of a performance, and no one expected or asked them to.


29 Aug 11 - 02:57 PM (#3214669)
Subject: RE: Folklore: Grinning Highland Dancers
From: McGrath of Harlow

Almost as bad as waving the arms around in the air...


29 Aug 11 - 03:02 PM (#3214676)
Subject: RE: Folklore: Grinning Highland Dancers
From: Megan L

Ach McGrath yer jist jealous ma loon ye ken fine theres nivir bin wan o thon Irish dancers whit kid haud a canle tae the Scottish sword dancer :)


29 Aug 11 - 03:06 PM (#3214680)
Subject: RE: Folklore: Grinning Highland Dancers
From: GUEST,Eliza

Have just watched the Edinburgh Tattoo on TV, the Highland dancers all grinned maniacally throughout their dances (in the pouring rain) It did look a bit weird. I can't remember the smiles when I lived up there in the sixties and seventies, and I watched many Highland dancing events.