Rondeliers Dance Club; Night Of Ballroom Dancing

Dancing To The Music Of Great Movies!

Time To Dance At The Movies

Clancy and Jerry Zerg provided a great program for the evening. Not only did we get to dance but dance to great movie music and have a chance to guess the song title and what it was from! Wonderful evening!


The clubhouse awaits our arrival

A Quick Overview

Rondeliers Comics May 2012 Page One
The evening gets underway

Rondeliers Comics May 2012 Page Two
Brain teasers and loads of fun!

Let The Dance Begin With A Cocktail Or Two

Let the dancing begin
The ballrrom is beautiful and overlooks the country club grounds

Did You Know? - The first publication of a bartenders' guide which included cocktail recipes was in 1862 — How to Mix Drinks; or, The Bon Vivant's Companion, by "Professor" Jerry Thomas. In addition to listings of recipes for Punches, Sours, Slings, Cobblers, Shrubs, Toddies, Flips, and a variety of other types of mixed drinks were 10 recipes for drinks referred to as "Cocktails". A key ingredient which differentiated "cocktails" from other drinks in this compendium was the use of bitters as an ingredient.

Time for a mixer at the Rondeliers
It's mixer time!

Surprise... and good evening
"Surprise! It's me!"

The dancing is underway
Warming up before dinner is served

Dinner Is Served So Who Was Here?

Table 1

Table 4

Did You Know? - A clapperboard is a device used in filmmaking and video production to assist in the synchronizing of picture and sound, and to designate and mark particular scenes and takes recorded during a production. The sharp "clap" noise that the clapperboard makes can be identified easily on the audio track, and the shutting of the clapstick can be identified easily on the separate visual track. The two tracks can then be precisely synchronised by matching the sound and movement. Other names for the clapperboard include clapper, clapboard, slate, slate board, sync slate, time slate, sticks, board, and marker.

The clapperboard or clapboard slate is the combination of the chalkboard slate that held information identifying the next scene and the clapstick which was used to align sound and picture. In the early days of film, one person would hold a slate for the camera with the scene information, while another clapped two hinged sticks together in front of the camera. The combination of the two into one unit made it possible for one person to perform both tasks.

Traditional clapperboards consisted of a wooden slate and a hinged clapstick attached to the top of the slate. Modern clapperboards generally use a pair of wooden sticks atop whiteboard or translucent acrylic glass slates which do not require additional lighting from the camera side to be legible. Some versions are also backlit. Smart slates or digislates are electronic SMPTE time code versions with LED numbers. The clapsticks traditionally have diagonally interleaved lines of black and white to ensure a clear visual of the clap in most lighting conditions. In recent years sticks with calibrated color stripes have become available. In some productions, particularly those created in the digital domain, electronically superimposed versions of a clapperboard have supplanted the real thing.

Time For Some Announcements


Bill Dean (our fearless leader) makes a few opening remarks


Tummies are full... Getting time to burn off the calories


Dancing goes along way to eliminate these pesky creatures...


About This Evenings Program


Clancy and Jerry tells us how the activity will go....

Did You Know? - A film score (also sometimes called background music or incidental music) is original music written specifically to accompany a film. The score forms part of the film's soundtrack, which also usually includes dialogue and sound effects, and comprises a number of orchestral, instrumental or choral pieces called cues which are timed to begin and end at specific points during the film in order to enhance the dramatic narrative and the emotional impact of the scene in question. Scores are written by one or more composers, under the guidance of the film's director and/or producer, and are then usually performed by an ensemble of musicians - most often comprising an orchestra or band, instrumental soloists, and choir or vocalists - and recorded by a sound engineer.

Film scores encompass an enormous variety of styles of music, depending on the nature of the films they accompany. The majority of scores are orchestral works rooted in Western classical music, but a great number of scores also draw influence from jazz, rock, pop, blues, New Age ambient music, and a wide range of ethnic and world music styles. Since the 1950s, a growing number of scores have also included electronic elements as part of the score, and many scores written today feature a hybrid of orchestral and electronic instruments.


Clancy passed out the forms containing twenty blanks.... All we had to do it fill them in!

A Sample Of The Brain Stumpers....

Dancing Cheek To Cheek

Green Eyes

Hello Young Lovers

Blues In The Night Make Believe

Secret Love


We danced, scratched out heads and danced some more


OK... we are about to start! Get your brains in gear...


Are the instructions clear???


Wyatt was amazing as usual.... Twenty songs from great movies!


Clancy makes the rounds


The music continues until the wee hours.... That's 11:00 for folks!


Dottie and Bruce take center stage.... It helps to dance to the music and then run back to the table and fill in the blanks!


Angel was delighting the entire room!


The answers are about to be read


The crowd scores their sheets hoping for the Oscar of the evening


Many of us felt just like this!


"We have a winner"


Drum roll please

Did You Know? - A drum roll (or roll for short) is a technique the percussionist employs to produce a sustained sound on a percussion instrument. Rolls are used by composers to sustain the sound and create other effects, the most common of which is using a roll to build anticipation.


The band is introduced... Amazing talent


Clancy had the key.... 71 was the top score (our of a possible 140 )


She had some "hubby-help!"

Back To The Dance


Waltz the night away....


We slipped out from behind the camera


Angel was still giggling....


A great evening!

Thank You
Thanks to our Dance Directors - Clancy and Jerry


Armed with our dance shoes....

[an error occurred while processing this directive]