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The dance world and sexual harassment — 15 Comments

  1. I know nothing at all about ballet but enjoyed reading your analysis very, very much.

    Learned quite a lot about dance, dancers and human nature.

    Brilliant post.

  2. Someone who did music for a dance company and was sexually involved with one of the dancers was a good friend of mine for a few years. I confess I never liked dancers much — all that anorexia and constant posing in front of a mirror, with nothing going on in their heads — and I’ve never been moved by watching them dance. I’ve tried. And I’ve seen Twyla Tharp and others of like fame.

  3. Fascinating read. The inner game of dancers. Except for the iron discipline required, dancers are not so different than more normal humans. Raging hormones, romantic games, power trips, and all that.

  4. miklos:

    I guarantee that some dancers have a lot going on in their heads. (Some have too much, perhaps.)

    I’m not a Tharp fan, by the way. Some of it is entertaining, but that’s about it

  5. Where does “The Red Shoes” fit in?
    I found the story rather repulsive when I saw the film, having been lured in by the dancing milieu.

  6. All that Jazz movie dealt with issues of dancers, sex, and getting some work in return.

    I think that might have been the secondary or co- drama of the movie.

  7. I guess I should say, it dealt with those issues as part of Bob Fosse’s life, not per say In documentary style.

  8. I was an accomplished ballroom and swing dancer for many years precisely because it was full of nubile young women who enjoyed being touched. Had a great time I tell you what. Now non-dancing SJWs are observing this scene and demanding new rules of etiquette intended to kill any dance passion. A good dance leader know exactly what women respond to and doesn’t need instruction from feminist clods who can’t even stay on beat.

    As for modern dance it is pretentious and boring. True dance beauty comes from pattern and synchronization which modern dance hates and labels as uninteresting. Perhaps because modern dance exalts the ego whereas traditional dance are just about having fun with the opposite sex.

  9. The question, it seems to me, comes down to the word “harassment”, its definition and its application. Harassment now means “unwanted”, which is quite a morph from its ‘formal’ definition. We live on shifting sands, rather like standing on the crest of a dune in the Sahara.

    “Gay” used to mean something quite different, too, and being labelled “discriminating” was high praise of good taste, in my lifetime. Rogers Peet, a high-end men’s conservative clothier in NYC, used to advertise itself as being for men of discriminating taste.

  10. “Gay” used to mean something quite different

    It still does. Happy, joyful, and merry.

    The alternate usage should be transgender (transgender spectrum or transgender spectrum disorder) or deviation from the masculine and feminine gender (i.e. physical and mental traits) closely correlated with the male and female sex, respectively. The modern, progressive (i.e. monotonic), or liberal (i.e. divergent) usage refers to males who exhibit a feminine or alternating feminine/masculine sexual orientation.

    That said, humans are defined by a constellation of physical and mental traits, not limited to sexual orientation.

  11. No one that beautiful has any business being that smart, and vice versa. It’s just not fair. Diana Moon Glampers would not be at all pleased.

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