Balboa is a form of swing dance that started as early as 1915 and gained in popularity in the 1930s and 1940s. It is danced primarily in close embrace, and is led with a full body connection. The art of Balboa is the subtle communication between the lead and follow, like weight shifts, that most viewers cannot see. As a result, Balboa is considered more of a "dancer's dance" than a "spectator's dance".
Balboa is danced to a wide variety of tempos. Because the basic is so small, Balboa can be danced to fast music (over 300 beats per minute). Balboa is also danced to slow music (under 100 beats per minute), which allows more time for intricate footwork and variations.The Balboa is a form of the Swing dance family.
The original Balboa is a hybrid of the Charleston, Jig Trot, Swing
and appropriated steps from the 1920's
Collegiate Shag which later Arthur Murray would try to refine
the in the mid 1930's thru his studio chain (I know swingers
don't like to hear Arthur Murray, but that's the way it goes)
but his version called the
'Arthur Murray Shag' became stale and way to boring.
Later, many dancers
started experimenting and started to add steps and twist and kicks
back into the dances using the Shag as a model in and near
Balboa Island in Newport Beach, California (Balboa Pier),
namely the Balboa Pavilion with a new Balboa dance being born out of
this former
Shag, Jig Trot/Walks,
Charleston and Swing mixture, which originally was called the
Bal-Hop and Balboa Shuffle. It was used as well for very tight dance
spaces and a chance to catch your breath (Jockeying) while
dancing to fast Jitterbug music. It had finally come full circle and
was getting very popular with the swing dancers in Southern
California.
The Newport Beach "island clubs" in Southern
California, such as the Rendezvous
Ballroom
(1928-1966) which was directly across from Balboa Island (island
established in 1905,) and the older
Balboa
Pavilion
started having 'swing dance night's' (meaning music style rather
than dance) in the early 1930's that continued well into the
mid 1980's, however originally, the older
Pavilion
did not allow
Jitterbug
dancing due to structural problems which indirectly lead to a
popularity of the Balboa. Over the years the dancers who did
Collegiate or the
Murray shag,
Charleston, Jig Walks,
Foxtrot, and
Lindy merged the dance into a more energetic style. Most of the
Balboa dancers were of today's older
West Coast Swing crowd, with a few newer Lindy
dancers finding the beauty of this dance as well today.
Examples:
At The Hop and
Sing Sing Sing
After a while the newer swing
dancers coming on to the scene, not aware of the Balboa, would refer
to the Balboa as "The Shag" since most of
the swing dancers that knew how to do the Shag also went to "Balboa
Island - Swing Nights," and these swing dancers would be called
uniformly "Balboa dancers." The Balboa became a dance of the Swing
dance family and was reported many times as a new dance. Basically
the dance evolved thru crowded dance floors and high tempos. A
dancer getting tired would pull his partner close and do Balboa to
catch their breath, then swing out again or it was just plain to
crowded to dance and they did or had to do the Balboa all night.
Balboa is mainly a closed position swing form, that
uses very little break-away's, only a few turns, and usually fast
footwork. Most written articles of the time report that the Balboa
was replacing the
Fox-Trot
in swing circles. Most of the larger Ballrooms were so crowded that
they had signs posted "No Breakaways" which meant No
Jitterbug dancing (such as the
Paramount in L.A.) and the Balboa worked real well for
overly crowded dance floors such as the paramount.
There were a few different styles of Balboa such as
the:
1) "Swing-Bal." (Has some swing steps / Breakaways thrown in,
uses swing timing, to be clear not shag timing, but does have some
converted shag patterns).
2) Slow Balboa (similar to Rumba), that is very, very
smooth!.
3) and "Fast Balboa" that is any style you happen to know, done real
fast ... LOL :).
4) Bal-Hop or the Balboa Hop was the original name, which originally
was more similar to Collegiate Shag.
5) Plus there is Single Bal, Double Bal and Triple Bal (Swing
Rhythm) to mix.
The origin of the Balboa (not the Shag) can be
said to be The "Rendezvous
Ballroom" across from Balboa Island in Newport
Beach, CA. around 1934/5 to about 1941. The basic rhythm for the
dance is a Double Shuffle Swing Rhythm. Some original music was
Dorsey's "Melancholy Baby" or Artie Shaw's "Begine
The Beguine" (as reported by an early Photo Play magazine
article.) Jackie Cooper and Bonita Granville were also avid
Balboa dancers.