"Twisting" as a dance move, dates back to the 1890s, says Laurie, and in parts of West Africa even before then. Chubby Checker topped the charts in 1960 with his version of The Twist.
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Wikipedia lists many hit Twist songs, including Sam Cooke's "Twisting the Night Away" and the Beatles 1964 song "Twist and Shout."
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My old twist on the twisting theme is the following true story about how this dance affected my life and raised my confidence when it badly needed reinforcing.
Mom, this one's for you. I wish you were still with us.
COME ON, LET'S TWIST AGAIN,
LIKE WE DID LAST WINTER!
© Kay Davies |
When we were young, and hanging out at the local hockey rink with all the rest of the kids every winter, our mother got a job in the arena concession stand (probably, I’ve just figured out at my age, to keep an eye on her offspring).
As the building with the largest (but not most comfortable) seating capacity in town, the arena was the place where lots of things happened besides public skating, figure skating classes and minor hockey games.
Performers performed there. Exciting ideas found homes there and, in the early 1960s, someone had the idea to have a Twist contest there.
I don’t remember whose records they used for the dancing besides Chubby Checker’s, but there was plenty of music. And I—little me—I was in the contest.
I probably weighed a hundred pounds, soaking wet, or maybe one-oh-four, and I was slim, slim, slim with a figure best described as boyish.
Nevertheless, I was determined to enter. I couldn’t sing, I couldn’t play an instrument, I couldn’t hula-hoop, I couldn’t play sports, I couldn’t even "slow dance" because I always stepped on my partner’s feet and tripped over my own, but for some reason I could do The Twist.
I had found my niche.
“I’m going to enter the contest, Mom,” I declared.
“Okay, I’m working that night, I’ll give you a ride. What are you going to wear?”
Well, if there’s anything a clumsy girl does not need in public, it is clothing that will get in her way. No skirts, no shoes with heels. I had a soft sweater I liked a lot, but I didn’t know what to wear with it. I knew I needed pants that fit. Really fit.
I had an old pair of corduroy pants lined with plaid flannel, but they were so worn out, there were holes in the seat of them. They were also too short, but that could be remedied by rolling them up to just above my knees (a daring length at the time) and the lining thus exposed by the rolling gave me an idea.
It was a great idea, too, another one ahead of its time. I carefully cut a piece out of the lining from the top of the inside thigh part, and just as carefully sewed it over the holes in the back.
On my feet, I wore cute, comfy little tennis shoes and perky white socks. Add a little scarf of the sort we used to call a “neckerchief” and a bouncy little pony tail, and I was all set.
The Memorial Arena in Kelowna, British Columbia, was not American Bandstand, to be sure, but for that one night I was a hit. No, I didn’t win the contest, not even second or third or tenth, but it was the next best thing, thanks to what my mother heard.
The judges watched the dancers until their own eyes were twisting, then went to get coffee at the concession (temporarily closed to the public while the judges were there) and serving the coffee was none other than Mother Davies. Of course, the judges talked, discussing the dancers amongst themselves.
One judge admitted himself to being far from making a decision. “I don’t know what to think,” he said, “because that little red backside with the plaid patch on it had me hypnotized.”
Well, now—hypnotized, was he?—what more could a young teenager want?
(Mom and Dad told me not to let it go to my head, so of course I've been suitably humble ever since. Of course.)
12 comments:
What a wonderful memory Kay, it sounds like you had a great time. I was like you, I was not a dancer but I could do the twist. Maybe that's why it was such a popular dance.
Your outfit for the evening sounds so cute.
I loved your twisting tale of a patched backside! LOL Thank you!
What a lovely memory - one to make you smile and keep you warm for ever.
What a lovely story! You have a great narrative style, and recreate the past without sentiment.
Thanks for responding to the Real Toads challenge
What a wonderful story, Kay. I do think your mother had the perfect job for a mother of teen-agers! And good for you for entering the contest. I never would have done this at that age! And how clever you were to think of a good solution to the HOLE!
What a nice story !! I loved dancing the twist and I think I still could ! "Come on let's twist again ..."
Kay- I'm so glad the prompt took you on a trip down memory lane. Patching the seat of your pants was perfect for recognition with the judges. Sounds like fun times!
Awwww what a wonderful story! You are a very talented writer, my friend.
Dancing is always fun.
Greetings,
Filip
What a great memory, I love it. The Twist...I remember my sisters and myself driving my Dad crazy with us twisting all around the house
Cool story, Kay, and what do you know? I danced in the Memorial Arena too, did the neckerchief thing, the twist - all of that - could we possibly have been growing up there at the same time? Your name sounds familiar to me. Back then, I was known as Sherry Baker and was a cub reporter on the Daily Courier through my teens from age fourteen on. I remember Richie Valens came there once and we danced to his songs.
What was your last name then? What school did you go to? KSS? (I went to Immaculata). And in THAT school, when you knelt down, your skirt had to be below your knees, not Revealed, hee hee. When the miniskirt came out, they hiked my dress up in the newsroom and photographed me from behind to demonstrate the new fad and my grandma recognized me from the back and was mortified.
I so enjoyed this story. If you have been back to Kelowna recently, you wont recognize it. It's gone pretty Uptown and townhouses grow in the apple orchards of my youth!
@ Sherry —
I can imagine your grandmother being mortified. LOL
Yes, almost all of the orchards are gone, or moved up to benchland on the hills.
— K
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