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Tap Dance in America:
A Very Short History
by Constance Valis Hill
Glover and Dunn: A Contest of Beat and Feet
On the evening of the thirty-ninth annual Grammy Awards that was
broadcast on national television on February 27, 1997, Colin Dunn and
Savion Glover faced off in the fiercest tap dance challenge of their
lives. Colin Dunn, the star of Riverdance—The Musical, was challenging
Savion Glover, the choreographer and star of Bring in ‘da Noise,
Bring in ‘da Funk, to a battle of the feet that was staged to
showcase and celebrate the two hottest musicals on Broadway. But there
was nothing festive about the challenge dance for these two stars.
Not only was their reputation as dancers at stake but also the supremacy
of the percussive dance forms that each show represented--Irish step
dancing and African American jazz tap dancing.
Dunn went on first. Standing tall and straight, his back to the
audience and hands placed neatly at the waist of his slim black
pants, he spun around quickly on his introduction, and with the
stamp of his high-heeled shoe drew himself up onto the balls of
the feet and clicked out neat sets of triplets and cross-backs
in place. The camera zoomed in on the dazzling speed and precision
of Dunn’s footwork, zoomed out on the handsome symmetry of
his form, and quickly panned right to reveal the hulking presence
of Glover—who stood crouched over, peering at Dunn’s
feet. Without an introduction, Glover slapped out a succession
of flat-footed stomps that turned his black baggy pants, big baggy
shirt, and mop of deadlocks into a stuttering spitfire of beats.
Huinkering down into a deep knee bend, he repeated the slamming
rhythms with the heels, toes, and insteps of his hard-soled tap
shoes. Dunn heard the challenge. Taking his hands off his hips
and turning around to face Glover, he delivered a pair of swooping
scissor-kicks that sliced the air within inches of Glover face;
and continued to shuffle with an air of calm, the fluid monotone
of his cross-back steps bringing the volume of noise down to a
whisper. Glover interrupted Dunn’s meditation on the “ssssh” with
short and jagged hee-haw steps that mocked Dunn’s beautiful
line and forced the conversation back to the sound, not look.
They traded steps, spitting out shards of rhythmic phrases and daring
each other to pick up and one-up. Dunn’s crisp heel-clicks were
taken up by Glover with heel-and-toe clicks, which were turned by Dunn
into airy flutters, which Glover then repeated from a crouched position.
When they tired of trading politely, they proceeded to tap over each
other’s lines, interrupting each other wittily with biting sounds
that made the audience scream, applaud, and stamp its feet. When Dunn
broke his focus just for a moment to politely acknowledge the applause
with a smile, Glover seized the moment and found his edge by perching
on the tip of one toe and delivering a flick-kick with the dangling other
that brushed within inches of Dunn’s face. All movement came to
a halt. And for one long moment, the dancers just stood there, flat-footed,
glaring at each other. Though the clapping melted their stares, they
slapped hands and turned away from each other and walked off the stage
without smiling and never looking back.
Continue reading the history (pdf).
Copyright 2002
Constance Valis Hill