After years of feeling excluded from the elegant Argentine dance, gay and trans partners are bringing more creativity to its traditionally male and female roles. The elegant and sensual Argentine ...
Some danced the tango with a partner, gracefully maneuvering around furniture in their living rooms and kitchens. Others danced the tango alone — embracing a pillow or a pink stuffed flamingo or ...
Call yourself a gaucho if you like, but if you really mean that, you will back it up by heading to Buena Onda at 724 East Haley Street on Thursday, August 26, for La Loca Milonga: Ruy and Camila ...
Performances in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by The pandemic was disastrous for tango. But milongas are thriving around the city now, capped by the return of Queer Tango Weekend. By Marina Harss The ...
Fancy dresses loaded with spangles and beading, as well as snappy suits, fedoras and dress shoes, were on display when more than 100 tango dancers gathered at a restaurant in Westbury recently. The ...
BUENOS AIRES — At a dance hall in the heart of Buenos Aires, 14 men in elegant dark suits sat at separate tables while across the room, 14 women in dresses and high heels waited to be asked for a ...
Tango's once-warm embrace has grown cool under Argentina's strict coronavirus quarantine, though aficionados are finding a way to circumvent social isolation with virtual classes while they wait for ...
In the bohemian district of Almagro in Buenos Aires, the wistful notes of the tango classic “Vida Mía” drift out a window of a small cultural center. Inside, on a makeshift dance floor, couples move ...
Dance is “art that moves,” says Rodney Gustafson, founding director of State Street Ballet (SSB). “Dance allows us to see music.” Dance as a performance art allows the audience to see the music as the ...
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