Handhold (dance)
A handhold is a manner the dancers hold each other's hands during the dance. A hold is the way one partner holds another one with hands. Hold and handhold are important components of connection in dance.
Couple dances
- Waist-hand hold
- Shoulder-waist hold
- Shoulder blade hold
- Ballroom hold
- Banjo hold
- Barn dance hold
- Butterfly hold: in face-to-face dance position, the arms are extended sideways palm to palm, elbows slightly bent[1]
- Shoulder hold (varsouvienne hold)
- Cross-back hold
- Promenade hold
- Short-arm hold
- Skaters hold
- Back skaters hold: partners side-by-side, same hands joined, man right arm around lady's waist with right hands on the lady's right hip, left hands joined in front, man's hand palm up [1]
- Front skaters hold
- V hold
- Hammerlock hold
- Sweetheart hold
- Cuddle hold
Line/circle dances
When danced in line or circle formation, the handholds usually connect a dancer with the two immediate neighbors, sometimes with the two second next neighbors. Exceptions are free hands of the first and last persons in the line formation.
A number of these holds may be used in couple dances (a couple is a line of just two).
- Shoulder hold
- Chain hold
- Basket hold
- Belt hold: Each dancer holds the belts of the neighbors[1]
- Escort hold: one arm slightly rounded with arm at waist level, the neighbor from this side place the opposite hand on the forearm through the space formed by founded arm[1]
References
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 6/30/2014. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.