> What makes you think they didn't? Because, as Keith said: "great teachers were not available".
The only historical evidence I've seen or heard of professional teachers of social tango to natives of that time is of dance schools that served a minority who had no family or friends to learn from and so had instead to pay for lessons. As Sergio recently recounted on this list, though these schools made a lot of money (especially from distance teaching based on graphics and descriptions), the result was: very few, would learn from this type of studio but generally speaking those were the worst dancers and they had the characteristic of dancing the same way. Not much has changed, eh? If anyone has any historical evidence of any teachers - great or otherwise - of social tango prior to the (re)invention of Tango As A Foreign Language classes in the 1980s, I'd love to hear it. -- Chris _______________________________________________ Tango-L mailing list [email protected] http://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/tango-l
