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Cakewalk

The cakewalk was a dance developed from the "prize walks" (dance contests with a cake awarded as the prize) held in the mid-19th century, generally at get-togethers on Black slave plantations before and after emancipation in the Southern United States. Alternative names for the original form of the dance were "chalkline-walk", and the "walk-around". It was originally a processional partner dance performed with comical formality, and may have developed as a subtle mockery of the mannered dances of white slaveholders.

Cakewalk
Five dancers perform a cakewalk, 1903
Stylistic origins
Cultural originsSouthern United States
Derivative formsRagtime
George Walker, Aida Overton Walker, and Bert Williams link arms and dance the cakewalk in the first Broadway musical to be written and performed by African Americans, In Dahomey.
Painting from 1913
1915 sheet music cover (late for cakewalk music): "Ebony Echoes: A Good Old-Fashioned Cake-Walk" by Dan Walker. New York, NY: Shapiro, Bernstein & Co.

Following an exhibition of the cakewalk at the 1876 Centennial Exposition in Philadelphia, the cakewalk was adopted by performers in minstrel shows, where it was danced exclusively by men until the 1890s. At that point, Broadway shows featuring women began to include cakewalks, and grotesque dances became very popular across the country.[3]

The fluid and graceful steps of the dance may have given rise to the colloquialism that something accomplished with ease is a "cakewalk".[4]

As a plantation dance edit

Firsthand accounts edit

The cakewalk was influenced by the ring shout, which survived from the 18th into the 20th century.[5][clarification needed]

 
Cakewalk dance, 1896

There is extensive first-person testimony from emancipated slaves about the culture and dancing they developed among themselves on the plantations, including the dances that developed into the cakewalk.[6][7] Louise Jones spoke of "Sech dancin' you never seen before. Slaves would set de flo' in turns, an' do de cakewalk mos' all night."[6] Georgia Baker said that she sang cakewalk songs as a child, and was amused that as an adult, she "would be cakewalkin' to de same song."[8] Estella Jones described nighttime parties with elaborate dress, some of which were attended by the slaveowners, who would judge the dancing and award cakes to the winners.[9]

Secondhand, oral-tradition accounts edit

James Weldon Johnson, born in 1871, recounted a cakewalk at a ball in his 1912 novel The Autobiography of an Ex-Colored Man.[10]

 
Cakewalk poster, 1896

Some secondhand accounts of the cakewalk describe it as a subtle mockery of the formal, mannered dancing practiced by slaveholding whites. The slaves would dress in handed-down finery and comically exaggerate the poised movements of minuets and waltzes.[9][11] These accounts describe any slaveowners in attendance as unaware that they were being mocked. One man recalled such a dance that his childhood nanny had described to him: "Sometimes the white folks noticed it, but they seemed to like it; I guess they thought we couldn't dance any better."[9] A 1981 article by Brooke Baldwin concludes that the cakewalk was meant "to satirize the competing culture of supposedly 'superior' whites. Slaveholders were able to dismiss its threat in their own minds by considering it as a simple performance which existed for their own pleasure".[12]

Entertainer Tom Fletcher, born in 1873,[13] wrote in 1954 that his grandparents told him about the chalk-line walk/cakewalk as a child, but had no information about its origins.[14] In their version, "there was no prancing, just a straight walk on a path made by turns and so forth, along which the dancers made their way with a pail of water on their heads. The couple that was the most erect and spilled the least water or no water at all was the winner."[15] He describes it being "revived with fancy steps by Charlie Johnson, a clever eccentric dancer" and becoming known as the "Cake Walk".[16][17]

Alternative explanations edit

It has been suggested that the cakewalk originated in Florida, with the war dances of the Seminole Tribe. Ethel L. Urlin, writing in the book Dancing, Ancient and Modern (1912), described these dances as consisting of "wild and hilarious jumping and gyrating, alternating with slow processions in which the dancers walked solemnly in couples," which he believed grew into the cakewalk style.[18] The Encyclopedia of Social Dance echoed this, stating that the dance spread from Florida to Georgia, the Carolinas, Virginia, and eventually New York, with the development of Florida into a winter tourist destination in the 1880s.[19]

The authors of Jazz Dance: The Story of American Vernacular Dance reported that an informal experiment with African dancers undertaken in the 1950s turned up "no worthy African counterpart" to the Cakewalk.[20] The same book noted eyewitness reports of dances from South Africa, Ghana, and Nigeria that bore a resemblance to the Cakewalk, with no elaboration.[21]

In his book How to Tell a Story and Other Essays originally published in 1897, Mark Twain briefly mentions the Cakewalk: [22]

Our negroes in America have several ways of entertaining themselves which are not found among the whites anywhere. Among these inventions of theirs is one which is particularly popular with them. It is a competition in elegant deportment. They hire a hall and bank the spectators' seats in rising tiers along the two sides, leaving all the middle stretch of the floor free. A cake is provided as a prize for the winner in the competition, and a bench of experts in deportment is appointed to award it. Sometimes there are as many as fifty contestants, male and female, and five hundred spectators. One at a time the contestants enter, clothed regardless of expense in what each considers the perfection of style and taste, and walk down the vacant central space and back again with that multitude of critical eyes on them (...) The negroes have a name for this grave deportment-tournament; a name taken from the prize contended for. They call it a Cake-Walk.

Cakewalk in minstrelsy, musicals, and as a popular dance edit

Amiri Baraka in Blues People explained the strangeness of a slave dance covertly mocking white slaveholders that later was adopted by whites unaware of the mockery: "If the cakewalk is a Negro dance caricaturing certain white customs, what is that dance, when, say, a white theater company attempts to satirize it as a Negro dance? I find the idea of white minstrels in blackface satirizing a dance satirizing a dance satirizing themselves a remarkable kind of irony—which, I suppose, is the whole point of minstrel shows."[23]

An exhibit at the 1876 Philadelphia Centennial featured Black people singing folk songs and doing an old dance called the "chalk-line walk" in a plantation-like setting.[24] The dance was "done in the original fashion", as described by Fletcher.[3]

In 1877, performer-showmen Harrigan and Hart produced "Walking for Dat Cake, An Exquisite Picture of Negro Life and Customs" as a feature sketch at New York's Theater Comique on lower Broadway.[25]

Thereafter it was performed in minstrel shows, exclusively by men until the 1890s.[3] In the 1893 production of The Creole Show, which ran from 1889 to 1897,[26] Dora Dean[27] and her husband Charles E. Johnson were a hit with their specialty, a cakewalk danced as partners.[28] Their production had an African-American cast, and featured women dancing, which was revolutionary for the time.[29] The inclusion of women "made possible all sorts of improvisations in the Walk, and the original was soon changed into a grotesque dance" which became very popular across the country.[3]

A Grand Cakewalk was held in Madison Square Garden, the largest commercial venue in New York City, on February 17, 1892.[30]

The Illustrated London News carried an 1897 report of a cakewalk at a barn dance in Ashtabula, Ohio, written by an English woman traveler. This version was more of a procession and less of a dance: "Just before the ball was declared finished a long procession of couples was formed who walked in their very best manner around the room three times before the criticizing eyes of a dozen old people, who selected the best turned-out pair, and gravely presented them with a large plum cake.[31]

In July 1898, the musical comedy Clorindy, or The Origin of the Cake Walk opened on Broadway in New York. Will Marion Cook wrote ragtime music for the show. Black dancers mingled with white cast members for the first instance of integration on stage in New York.[32][33] According to Cook, the show was a resounding success: "My chorus sang like Russians, dancing meanwhile like Negroes, and cakewalking like angels, black angels! When the last note was sounded, the audience stood and cheered for at least ten minutes. This was the finale which Witmark had said no one would listen to. It was pandemonium .... But did that audience take offense at my rags and lack of conducting polish? Not so you could notice it!"[34]

"Dusky troopers march & cake walk" was written by Will Hardy and published in 1900.[35][36]

Scott Joplin mentioned the cake walk in his folk ballet The Ragtime Dance, published in 1902.

Let me see you do the rag-time dance,
Turn left and do the cakewalk prance,
Turn the other way and do the slow drag
Now take your lady to the World's Fair
And do the rag-time dance.

 
Eugénie Fougère on the 18 October 1903 cover of Paris qui Chante dancing to the song 'Oh ! ce cake-walk'

The French music hall singer and dancer Eugénie Fougère was filmed in 1899 in the rag-time cake-walk "Hello, Ma Baby", with which she made a sensation at the New York Theatre.[37] She is said to have introduced the dance in Paris (France) in 1900 in the Théâtre Marigny after she returned from a tour in the United States.[38] The ambiguous "cake walk" became very popular quickly and Fougère appeared on the 18 October 1903 cover of Paris qui Chante dancing to the song Oh ! ce cake-walk.[39]

Performances of the "Cake Walk", including a "Comedy Cake Walk" were filmed by the American Mutoscope and Biograph Company in 1903. Prancing steps were the main steps shown in the "Cake Walk" segment, which featured two couples, and a solo dancer. All dancers were African-American.[40] 1903 was the same year that both the cakewalk and ragtime music arrived in Buenos Aires, Argentina, which may have influenced early styles of tango.[41]

"Cakewalk King" Charles E. Johnson, who, with his wife Dora Jean, achieved fame cakewalking throughout the United States and Europe described his kind of dance as "simple, dignified and well-dressed".[42]

Cakewalk as a musical form edit

 
The basic habanera rhythm.[43] Play

Most cakewalk music is notated in 2
4
time signature with two alternate heavy beats per bar, giving it an oompah rhythm.[44] The music was adopted into the works of various composers, including Robert Russell Bennett, John Philip Sousa, Claude Debussy and Louis Moreau Gottschalk. Debussy wrote "Golliwogg's Cake-walk" as the final movement of his Children's Corner suite for piano (published 1908),[45] and The Little Nigar, subtitled A Cakewalk, for a piano method in 1909. The Cake Walk dance originated from the two-step, a dance which was itself spawned by the popularity of Sousa's marches.[46] Although it featured more improvisation than the two-step, it was still very formal compared to later African-American dances such as the Charleston, Black Bottom and Lindy Hop.[47]

Cakewalk music incorporated polyrhythm,[11] syncopation, and the habanera rhythm into the regular march rhythm.[48][49]

Modern times edit

The American English term "cakewalk" was used as early as 1863 to indicate something that is very easy or effortless,[50] although this metaphor may refer to the carnival game of the same name in referring to the fact that the latter's winners obtain their prize by doing no more than walking around in a circle. Though the dance itself could be physically demanding, it was generally considered a fun, recreational pastime, covertly mocking slaveholder dance parties. The phrase "takes the cake" also comes from this practice,[51][52] as could "piece of cake."[50]

One version of the cakewalk is sometimes taught, performed included in competitions within the Scottish-inspired Highland dance community, especially in the southern United States.[53] In 2021, the Royal Scottish Official Board of Highland Dancing ruled to remove the dance from competition on the basis that it was derogatory to persons of color.[54]

A version of the cakewalk seen in vintage film clips from the early 1900s is kept alive in the Lindy hop community through performances by the Hot Shots and through cakewalk classes held in conjunction with Lindy Hop classes and workshops.

Judy Garland and Margaret O'Brien perform a cakewalk in the 1944 MGM musical Meet Me in St. Louis.

Fairground ride edit

The original cakewalk dance inspired a fairground ride. The ride consists of two sides, customers walk along one side, around the end and back down the other. Each side has a central bridge mounted on cranks which give it an up and down motion as well as to and fro. On each end of the bridge section is a gangway and sliding platform.[55] The British rides were often given an American name such as "Old Tyme Brooklyn Cakewalk" or "American Cakewalk" or variations thereon.[56]

The first cakewalk ride is believed to have been built by Plimson and Taylor in 1895.[56] Traditional cakewalks had an organ attached and on some of them if the organ sped up the walk also sped up.[55] Cakewalks, or to be precise the "dancing" customers, were considered to be good spectacles, which drew in more potential customers.[55]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Philip M. Peek, Kwesi Yankah, African Folklore: An Encyclopedia, 2003, p. 33. ISBN 0-203-49314-1.
  2. ^ . Archived from the original on 2015-04-19. Retrieved 2014-01-31.
  3. ^ a b c d Fletcher 1984, p. 103.
  4. ^ Gandhi, Lakshmi (December 23, 2013). "The Extraordinary Story Of Why A 'Cakewalk' Wasn't Always Easy". NPR. Retrieved 2019-07-23.
  5. ^ "jazz dance | Definition, History, Characteristics, Types, & Facts". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 2021-05-26.
  6. ^ a b Baldwin 1981, p. 207.
  7. ^ Baldwin 1981, p. 209.
  8. ^ Baldwin 1981, pp. 207, 208.
  9. ^ a b c Baldwin 1981, p. 208.
  10. ^ James Weldon Johnson: The Autobiography of an Ex-Colored Man, 1912, Chapter 5, p. 50
  11. ^ a b "Cakewalk King", Ebony, February 1953. Vol. 8, p. 100.
  12. ^ Baldwin, p. 211.
  13. ^ Fletcher 1984, p. 5.
  14. ^ Fletcher 1984, p. 108.
  15. ^ Jacqui Malone, Steppin' on the Blues, University of Illinois Press, 1996, p. 19. ISBN 0-252-02211-4.
  16. ^ Fletcher 1984, p. 41.
  17. ^ Lynne Fauley Emery, Black Dance in the United States from 1619 to 1970, California: National Press Books, 1972, p. 207. ISBN 0-87484-203-4.
  18. ^ "page 13 text available at this url". Archive.org. Retrieved 2011-05-19.
  19. ^ Albert and Josephine Butler, Encyclopedia of Social Dance, 1971 and 1975. Albert Butler Ballroom Dance Service. New York, NY, p. 309 in 1975 edition. no ISBN or other ID.
  20. ^ Stearns & Stearns 1994, p. 11.
  21. ^ Stearns & Stearns 1994, p. 13.
  22. ^ https://archive.org/details/howtotellastory00twairich/page/n25/mode/1up
  23. ^ Jones 1999, p. 86.
  24. ^ Baldwin 1981, p. 212.
  25. ^ DON’T GIVE THE NAME A BAD PLACE, New World Records 80265 Types and Stereotypes in American Musical Theater 1870-1900. Richard M. Sudhalter. (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-03-20. Retrieved 2011-05-19.
  26. ^ "Free to Dance Timeline @". Pbs.org. Retrieved 2011-05-19.
  27. ^ "Don't you think you'd like to fondle me / words and music by Hughie Cannon". Lcweb2.loc.gov. Retrieved 2011-05-19.
  28. ^ Bernard L. Peterson, A Century of Musicals in Black and White: An Encyclopedia of Musical Stage Works By, About, Or Involving African Americans, Greenwood Publishing Group, 1993. p. 92. ISBN 0-313-26657-3, ISBN 978-0-313-26657-7.
  29. ^ Stearns & Stearns 1994, p. 118.
  30. ^ Lynn Abbott, Doug Seroff, Out of Sight: The Rise of African American Popular Music, 1889-1895, University Press of Mississippi, 2002, pp. 205, 206. Retrieved 2011-05-19.
  31. ^ Giles Oakley, The Devil's Music: A History of the Blues, Da Capo Press, 1997, p. 31. ISBN 0-306-80743-2, ISBN 978-0-306-80743-5.
  32. ^ African American Dance
  33. ^ "Black Broadway web site". Theatredance.com. Retrieved 2011-05-19.
  34. ^ Will Marion Cook, "Clorindy, the Origin of the Cakewalk" (1944). Printed in Theatre Arts (September 1947), pp. 61–65. Excerpt via Homepage.mac.com, 2008-04-10. Retrieved 2011-05-19.
  35. ^ "Dusky troopers march & cake walk (b0319) - Historic American Sheet Music - Duke Libraries". Library.duke.edu. 2010-03-16. Retrieved 2011-05-19.
  36. ^ Sheet music covers for more cake walks can be viewed here:
    • . Library.duke.edu. Archived from the original on 2012-03-14. Retrieved 2011-05-19.
    • [1]
  37. ^ A performance of Eugénie Fougère, the famous Parisian chantuese in the rag-time cake-walk "Hello, Ma Baby," with which she made such a sensation at the New York Theatre from the U.S. Library of Congress.
  38. ^ See Le Journal, 20 January 1903 and Le Figaro, 13 February 1903.
  39. ^ Gordon, Dances With Darwin, p. 177
  40. ^ America Dances! 1897-1948, DanceTime Publications, 2003, segments of the same name. DVD.
  41. ^ Robert Farris Thompson, Tango The Art History of Love, Pantheon Books, 2005, pp. 8, 89, 108. ISBN 0-375-40931-9.
  42. ^ "Cakewalk King", Ebony, February 1953, p. 106.
  43. ^ Orovio, Helio. 1981. Diccionario de la Música Cubana, Havana: Editorial Letras Cubanas, p. 237. ISBN 959-10-0048-0.
  44. ^ The Smithsonian Collection of Classic Jazz. Revised edition, 1987. Smithsonian Institution Press, pp. 14, 15.
  45. ^ Crawford, Richard (2000). An Introduction to America's Music. New York City: W. W. Norton & Co.
  46. ^ Haskins, James; Haskins, Jim; Benson, Kathleen (1978). Scott Joplin. Doubleday. ISBN 978-0-385-11155-3.
  47. ^ James Haskins with Kathleen Benson, Scott Joplin the Man Who Made Ragtime, Doubleday and Company, 1978, p. 74 ISBN 0-385-11155-X.
  48. ^ Baldwin 1981, p. 210.
  49. ^ . Replay.web.archive.org. 2007-04-03. Archived from the original on April 3, 2007. Retrieved 2011-05-19.
  50. ^ a b Harper, Douglas. "cakewalk". Online Etymology Dictionary. Retrieved 11 September 2012.
  51. ^ "Cakewalk Dance". Streetswing Dance History Archive. Retrieved 2007-04-01.
  52. ^ Elijah Wald, How the Beatles Destroyed Rock 'n' Roll: An Alternative History of American Popular Music, Oxford University Press, 2009, p. 30. ISBN 978-0-19-534154-6.
  53. ^ Kirsty Duncan PhD. "Introduction to Highland Dancing". Electric Scotland. Retrieved 2007-04-05.
  54. ^ "Scottish Dance Teachers Alliance December 2020". Dance SDTA Alliance: News – Dance matters. Scottish Dance Teachers' Alliance. December 2020. p. 24. Retrieved 25 March 2021.[permanent dead link]
  55. ^ a b c National Fairground and Circus Archive (2020). "History of Fairground Rides". The University of Sheffield. Retrieved 23 October 2020.
  56. ^ a b Carousel Roundabouts (10 November 2009). "American Cakewalk". Carousel Roundabouts. Retrieved 23 October 2020.

References edit

External links edit

  • Extraordinary Story Of Why A 'Cakewalk' Wasn't Always Easy at NPR
  • Cakewalks in the Ragtime Era
  • Britannica Brief article on the cakewalk
  • Online Cake Walk Sheet Music
  • Cake Walk Victorian Fairground Ride on YouTube

cakewalk, other, uses, disambiguation, cakewalk, dance, developed, from, prize, walks, dance, contests, with, cake, awarded, prize, held, 19th, century, generally, togethers, black, slave, plantations, before, after, emancipation, southern, united, states, alt. For other uses see Cakewalk disambiguation The cakewalk was a dance developed from the prize walks dance contests with a cake awarded as the prize held in the mid 19th century generally at get togethers on Black slave plantations before and after emancipation in the Southern United States Alternative names for the original form of the dance were chalkline walk and the walk around It was originally a processional partner dance performed with comical formality and may have developed as a subtle mockery of the mannered dances of white slaveholders CakewalkFive dancers perform a cakewalk 1903Stylistic originsAfrican American musicJigReel 1 2 Cultural originsSouthern United StatesDerivative formsRagtimeGeorge Walker Aida Overton Walker and Bert Williams link arms and dance the cakewalk in the first Broadway musical to be written and performed by African Americans In Dahomey Painting from 19131915 sheet music cover late for cakewalk music Ebony Echoes A Good Old Fashioned Cake Walk by Dan Walker New York NY Shapiro Bernstein amp Co Following an exhibition of the cakewalk at the 1876 Centennial Exposition in Philadelphia the cakewalk was adopted by performers in minstrel shows where it was danced exclusively by men until the 1890s At that point Broadway shows featuring women began to include cakewalks and grotesque dances became very popular across the country 3 The fluid and graceful steps of the dance may have given rise to the colloquialism that something accomplished with ease is a cakewalk 4 Contents 1 As a plantation dance 1 1 Firsthand accounts 1 2 Secondhand oral tradition accounts 2 Alternative explanations 3 Cakewalk in minstrelsy musicals and as a popular dance 4 Cakewalk as a musical form 5 Modern times 6 Fairground ride 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksAs a plantation dance editFirsthand accounts editThe cakewalk was influenced by the ring shout which survived from the 18th into the 20th century 5 clarification needed nbsp Cakewalk dance 1896There is extensive first person testimony from emancipated slaves about the culture and dancing they developed among themselves on the plantations including the dances that developed into the cakewalk 6 7 Louise Jones spoke of Sech dancin you never seen before Slaves would set de flo in turns an do de cakewalk mos all night 6 Georgia Baker said that she sang cakewalk songs as a child and was amused that as an adult she would be cakewalkin to de same song 8 Estella Jones described nighttime parties with elaborate dress some of which were attended by the slaveowners who would judge the dancing and award cakes to the winners 9 Secondhand oral tradition accounts edit James Weldon Johnson born in 1871 recounted a cakewalk at a ball in his 1912 novel The Autobiography of an Ex Colored Man 10 nbsp Cakewalk poster 1896Some secondhand accounts of the cakewalk describe it as a subtle mockery of the formal mannered dancing practiced by slaveholding whites The slaves would dress in handed down finery and comically exaggerate the poised movements of minuets and waltzes 9 11 These accounts describe any slaveowners in attendance as unaware that they were being mocked One man recalled such a dance that his childhood nanny had described to him Sometimes the white folks noticed it but they seemed to like it I guess they thought we couldn t dance any better 9 A 1981 article by Brooke Baldwin concludes that the cakewalk was meant to satirize the competing culture of supposedly superior whites Slaveholders were able to dismiss its threat in their own minds by considering it as a simple performance which existed for their own pleasure 12 Entertainer Tom Fletcher born in 1873 13 wrote in 1954 that his grandparents told him about the chalk line walk cakewalk as a child but had no information about its origins 14 In their version there was no prancing just a straight walk on a path made by turns and so forth along which the dancers made their way with a pail of water on their heads The couple that was the most erect and spilled the least water or no water at all was the winner 15 He describes it being revived with fancy steps by Charlie Johnson a clever eccentric dancer and becoming known as the Cake Walk 16 17 Alternative explanations editIt has been suggested that the cakewalk originated in Florida with the war dances of the Seminole Tribe Ethel L Urlin writing in the book Dancing Ancient and Modern 1912 described these dances as consisting of wild and hilarious jumping and gyrating alternating with slow processions in which the dancers walked solemnly in couples which he believed grew into the cakewalk style 18 The Encyclopedia of Social Dance echoed this stating that the dance spread from Florida to Georgia the Carolinas Virginia and eventually New York with the development of Florida into a winter tourist destination in the 1880s 19 The authors of Jazz Dance The Story of American Vernacular Dance reported that an informal experiment with African dancers undertaken in the 1950s turned up no worthy African counterpart to the Cakewalk 20 The same book noted eyewitness reports of dances from South Africa Ghana and Nigeria that bore a resemblance to the Cakewalk with no elaboration 21 In his book How to Tell a Story and Other Essays originally published in 1897 Mark Twain briefly mentions the Cakewalk 22 Our negroes in America have several ways of entertaining themselves which are not found among the whites anywhere Among these inventions of theirs is one which is particularly popular with them It is a competition in elegant deportment They hire a hall and bank the spectators seats in rising tiers along the two sides leaving all the middle stretch of the floor free A cake is provided as a prize for the winner in the competition and a bench of experts in deportment is appointed to award it Sometimes there are as many as fifty contestants male and female and five hundred spectators One at a time the contestants enter clothed regardless of expense in what each considers the perfection of style and taste and walk down the vacant central space and back again with that multitude of critical eyes on them The negroes have a name for this grave deportment tournament a name taken from the prize contended for They call it a Cake Walk Cakewalk in minstrelsy musicals and as a popular dance editAmiri Baraka in Blues People explained the strangeness of a slave dance covertly mocking white slaveholders that later was adopted by whites unaware of the mockery If the cakewalk is a Negro dance caricaturing certain white customs what is that dance when say a white theater company attempts to satirize it as a Negro dance I find the idea of white minstrels in blackface satirizing a dance satirizing a dance satirizing themselves a remarkable kind of irony which I suppose is the whole point of minstrel shows 23 An exhibit at the 1876 Philadelphia Centennial featured Black people singing folk songs and doing an old dance called the chalk line walk in a plantation like setting 24 The dance was done in the original fashion as described by Fletcher 3 In 1877 performer showmen Harrigan and Hart produced Walking for Dat Cake An Exquisite Picture of Negro Life and Customs as a feature sketch at New York s Theater Comique on lower Broadway 25 Thereafter it was performed in minstrel shows exclusively by men until the 1890s 3 In the 1893 production of The Creole Show which ran from 1889 to 1897 26 Dora Dean 27 and her husband Charles E Johnson were a hit with their specialty a cakewalk danced as partners 28 Their production had an African American cast and featured women dancing which was revolutionary for the time 29 The inclusion of women made possible all sorts of improvisations in the Walk and the original was soon changed into a grotesque dance which became very popular across the country 3 A Grand Cakewalk was held in Madison Square Garden the largest commercial venue in New York City on February 17 1892 30 The Illustrated London News carried an 1897 report of a cakewalk at a barn dance in Ashtabula Ohio written by an English woman traveler This version was more of a procession and less of a dance Just before the ball was declared finished a long procession of couples was formed who walked in their very best manner around the room three times before the criticizing eyes of a dozen old people who selected the best turned out pair and gravely presented them with a large plum cake 31 In July 1898 the musical comedy Clorindy or The Origin of the Cake Walk opened on Broadway in New York Will Marion Cook wrote ragtime music for the show Black dancers mingled with white cast members for the first instance of integration on stage in New York 32 33 According to Cook the show was a resounding success My chorus sang like Russians dancing meanwhile like Negroes and cakewalking like angels black angels When the last note was sounded the audience stood and cheered for at least ten minutes This was the finale which Witmark had said no one would listen to It was pandemonium But did that audience take offense at my rags and lack of conducting polish Not so you could notice it 34 Dusky troopers march amp cake walk was written by Will Hardy and published in 1900 35 36 Scott Joplin mentioned the cake walk in his folk ballet The Ragtime Dance published in 1902 Let me see you do the rag time dance Turn left and do the cakewalk prance Turn the other way and do the slow drag Now take your lady to the World s Fair And do the rag time dance nbsp Eugenie Fougere on the 18 October 1903 cover of Paris qui Chante dancing to the song Oh ce cake walk The French music hall singer and dancer Eugenie Fougere was filmed in 1899 in the rag time cake walk Hello Ma Baby with which she made a sensation at the New York Theatre 37 She is said to have introduced the dance in Paris France in 1900 in the Theatre Marigny after she returned from a tour in the United States 38 The ambiguous cake walk became very popular quickly and Fougere appeared on the 18 October 1903 cover of Paris qui Chante dancing to the song Oh ce cake walk 39 Performances of the Cake Walk including a Comedy Cake Walk were filmed by the American Mutoscope and Biograph Company in 1903 Prancing steps were the main steps shown in the Cake Walk segment which featured two couples and a solo dancer All dancers were African American 40 1903 was the same year that both the cakewalk and ragtime music arrived in Buenos Aires Argentina which may have influenced early styles of tango 41 Cakewalk King Charles E Johnson who with his wife Dora Jean achieved fame cakewalking throughout the United States and Europe described his kind of dance as simple dignified and well dressed 42 Cakewalk as a musical form edit nbsp The basic habanera rhythm 43 Play Most cakewalk music is notated in 24 time signature with two alternate heavy beats per bar giving it an oompah rhythm 44 The music was adopted into the works of various composers including Robert Russell Bennett John Philip Sousa Claude Debussy and Louis Moreau Gottschalk Debussy wrote Golliwogg s Cake walk as the final movement of his Children s Corner suite for piano published 1908 45 and The Little Nigar subtitled A Cakewalk for a piano method in 1909 The Cake Walk dance originated from the two step a dance which was itself spawned by the popularity of Sousa s marches 46 Although it featured more improvisation than the two step it was still very formal compared to later African American dances such as the Charleston Black Bottom and Lindy Hop 47 Cakewalk music incorporated polyrhythm 11 syncopation and the habanera rhythm into the regular march rhythm 48 49 Modern times editThe American English term cakewalk was used as early as 1863 to indicate something that is very easy or effortless 50 although this metaphor may refer to the carnival game of the same name in referring to the fact that the latter s winners obtain their prize by doing no more than walking around in a circle Though the dance itself could be physically demanding it was generally considered a fun recreational pastime covertly mocking slaveholder dance parties The phrase takes the cake also comes from this practice 51 52 as could piece of cake 50 One version of the cakewalk is sometimes taught performed included in competitions within the Scottish inspired Highland dance community especially in the southern United States 53 In 2021 the Royal Scottish Official Board of Highland Dancing ruled to remove the dance from competition on the basis that it was derogatory to persons of color 54 A version of the cakewalk seen in vintage film clips from the early 1900s is kept alive in the Lindy hop community through performances by the Hot Shots and through cakewalk classes held in conjunction with Lindy Hop classes and workshops Judy Garland and Margaret O Brien perform a cakewalk in the 1944 MGM musical Meet Me in St Louis Fairground ride editThe original cakewalk dance inspired a fairground ride The ride consists of two sides customers walk along one side around the end and back down the other Each side has a central bridge mounted on cranks which give it an up and down motion as well as to and fro On each end of the bridge section is a gangway and sliding platform 55 The British rides were often given an American name such as Old Tyme Brooklyn Cakewalk or American Cakewalk or variations thereon 56 The first cakewalk ride is believed to have been built by Plimson and Taylor in 1895 56 Traditional cakewalks had an organ attached and on some of them if the organ sped up the walk also sped up 55 Cakewalks or to be precise the dancing customers were considered to be good spectacles which drew in more potential customers 55 Notes edit Philip M Peek Kwesi Yankah African Folklore An Encyclopedia 2003 p 33 ISBN 0 203 49314 1 Basinstreet com Your Online Source for Historical Jazz Archived from the original on 2015 04 19 Retrieved 2014 01 31 a b c d Fletcher 1984 p 103 Gandhi Lakshmi December 23 2013 The Extraordinary Story Of Why A Cakewalk Wasn t Always Easy NPR Retrieved 2019 07 23 jazz dance Definition History Characteristics Types amp Facts Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 2021 05 26 a b Baldwin 1981 p 207 Baldwin 1981 p 209 Baldwin 1981 pp 207 208 a b c Baldwin 1981 p 208 James Weldon Johnson The Autobiography of an Ex Colored Man 1912 Chapter 5 p 50 a b Cakewalk King Ebony February 1953 Vol 8 p 100 Baldwin p 211 Fletcher 1984 p 5 Fletcher 1984 p 108 Jacqui Malone Steppin on the Blues University of Illinois Press 1996 p 19 ISBN 0 252 02211 4 Fletcher 1984 p 41 Lynne Fauley Emery Black Dance in the United States from 1619 to 1970 California National Press Books 1972 p 207 ISBN 0 87484 203 4 page 13 text available at this url Archive org Retrieved 2011 05 19 Albert and Josephine Butler Encyclopedia of Social Dance 1971 and 1975 Albert Butler Ballroom Dance Service New York NY p 309 in 1975 edition no ISBN or other ID Stearns amp Stearns 1994 p 11 Stearns amp Stearns 1994 p 13 https archive org details howtotellastory00twairich page n25 mode 1up Jones 1999 p 86 Baldwin 1981 p 212 DON T GIVE THE NAME A BAD PLACE New World Records 80265 Types and Stereotypes in American Musical Theater 1870 1900 Richard M Sudhalter Don t Give the Name a Bad Place New World Records 80265 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2012 03 20 Retrieved 2011 05 19 Free to Dance Timeline Pbs org Retrieved 2011 05 19 Don t you think you d like to fondle me words and music by Hughie Cannon Lcweb2 loc gov Retrieved 2011 05 19 Bernard L Peterson A Century of Musicals in Black and White An Encyclopedia of Musical Stage Works By About Or Involving African Americans Greenwood Publishing Group 1993 p 92 ISBN 0 313 26657 3 ISBN 978 0 313 26657 7 Stearns amp Stearns 1994 p 118 Lynn Abbott Doug Seroff Out of Sight The Rise of African American Popular Music 1889 1895 University Press of Mississippi 2002 pp 205 206 Retrieved 2011 05 19 Giles Oakley The Devil s Music A History of the Blues Da Capo Press 1997 p 31 ISBN 0 306 80743 2 ISBN 978 0 306 80743 5 African American Dance Black Broadway web site Theatredance com Retrieved 2011 05 19 Will Marion Cook Clorindy the Origin of the Cakewalk 1944 Printed in Theatre Arts September 1947 pp 61 65 Excerpt via Homepage mac com 2008 04 10 Retrieved 2011 05 19 Dusky troopers march amp cake walk b0319 Historic American Sheet Music Duke Libraries Library duke edu 2010 03 16 Retrieved 2011 05 19 Sheet music covers for more cake walks can be viewed here Historic American Sheet Music Library duke edu Archived from the original on 2012 03 14 Retrieved 2011 05 19 1 A performance of Eugenie Fougere the famous Parisian chantuese in the rag time cake walk Hello Ma Baby with which she made such a sensation at the New York Theatre from the U S Library of Congress See Le Journal 20 January 1903 and Le Figaro 13 February 1903 Gordon Dances With Darwin p 177 America Dances 1897 1948 DanceTime Publications 2003 segments of the same name DVD Robert Farris Thompson Tango The Art History of Love Pantheon Books 2005 pp 8 89 108 ISBN 0 375 40931 9 Cakewalk King Ebony February 1953 p 106 Orovio Helio 1981 Diccionario de la Musica Cubana Havana Editorial Letras Cubanas p 237 ISBN 959 10 0048 0 The Smithsonian Collection of Classic Jazz Revised edition 1987 Smithsonian Institution Press pp 14 15 Crawford Richard 2000 An Introduction to America s Music New York City W W Norton amp Co Haskins James Haskins Jim Benson Kathleen 1978 Scott Joplin Doubleday ISBN 978 0 385 11155 3 James Haskins with Kathleen Benson Scott Joplin the Man Who Made Ragtime Doubleday and Company 1978 p 74 ISBN 0 385 11155 X Baldwin 1981 p 210 Cakewalks Early Syncopation Replay web archive org 2007 04 03 Archived from the original on April 3 2007 Retrieved 2011 05 19 a b Harper Douglas cakewalk Online Etymology Dictionary Retrieved 11 September 2012 Cakewalk Dance Streetswing Dance History Archive Retrieved 2007 04 01 Elijah Wald How the Beatles Destroyed Rock n Roll An Alternative History of American Popular Music Oxford University Press 2009 p 30 ISBN 978 0 19 534154 6 Kirsty Duncan PhD Introduction to Highland Dancing Electric Scotland Retrieved 2007 04 05 Scottish Dance Teachers Alliance December 2020 Dance SDTA Alliance News Dance matters Scottish Dance Teachers Alliance December 2020 p 24 Retrieved 25 March 2021 permanent dead link a b c National Fairground and Circus Archive 2020 History of Fairground Rides The University of Sheffield Retrieved 23 October 2020 a b Carousel Roundabouts 10 November 2009 American Cakewalk Carousel Roundabouts Retrieved 23 October 2020 References editBaldwin Brooke 1981 The Cakewalk A Study in Stereotype and Reality Journal of Social History Oxford University Press 15 2 205 218 doi 10 1353 jsh 15 2 205 ISSN 0022 4529 JSTOR 3787107 Fletcher Tom 1984 1954 One Hundred Years of the Negro in Show Business Da Capo Press ISBN 0306762196 OL 10325447M Gordon Rae Beth 2009 Dances With Darwin 1875 1910 Vernacular Modernity in France Farnham Ashgate Publishing ISBN 978 0 7546 5243 4 Stearns Marshall Winslow Stearns Jean 1994 1968 Jazz Dance The Story of American Vernacular Dance With a foreword and afterword by Brenda Bufalino Da Capo Press ISBN 0 306 80553 7 LCCN 93040957 Jones LeRoi 1999 1963 Blues People Negro Music in White America Harper Perennial ISBN 0 688 18474 X External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Cake walk nbsp Look up cakewalk in Wiktionary the free dictionary Extraordinary Story Of Why A Cakewalk Wasn t Always Easy at NPR Cakewalks in the Ragtime Era Britannica Brief article on the cakewalk Online Cake Walk Sheet Music article on Cakewalk at BasinStreet com Cakewalk and Ragtime composer Arthur Pryor at BasinStreet com Cake Walk Victorian Fairground Ride on YouTube Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cakewalk amp oldid 1193463643, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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