More than a song and dance
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Jimmy Stroup
Dancers from the Southern California Indian Center Inc. gave
fairgoers a little song and dance to enjoy at the Orange County Fair.
It just wasn’t the kind of song and dance they might be used to.
Dressed in traditional Native American clothing from several
different time periods, eight performers on Friday danced a variety
of culturally significant dances to drum music and native song. Phil
Hale, the center’s education program director, spoke to the crowd
explaining the dances and costumes, then performed the singing and
drum rhythm.
“It’s pretty much how Indian people express themselves,” he said.
Native American dance sometimes tells a story that gets passed
through the generations, Hale said. Native cultures relied on oral
history as a way of maintaining traditions and passing along
spiritually significant legends, he said.
The dances were performed by children, teenagers and young adults
of Native American descent who have gone through courses at the
center that teach the cultural meaning and proper movement of the
dances. The dances help the young people stay in touch -- or
sometimes discover -- their native heritage, Hale said.
“It’s good to learn the non-Indian ways, but still, in your heart,
keep your traditions alive,” he said.
The 10 dances performed in the hour-long show included a mix of
traditional female and male dances, as well as a demonstration of the
“Women’s Jingle Dance,” the “Women’s Shawl Dance” and four
performances of the “Men’s Fancy Feather Dance.”
The jingle dance was performed by Starr Robideau and historically
comes from the Chippewa people, a Great Plains tribe that once made
dancing dresses decorated with elk bone that created a jingling sound
when the dancer moved.
The sound from Robideau’s dress was made from the rolled up
chewing tobacco lids that are tied to it, Hale said, giving some
background into the hows and whys of the dress and the dance.
“These people are the original people from this continent,” said
Paige Newcomb, an Alpine, Calif., resident who decided to go in late
to work so she could catch the show. “I think they should be
supported. It was great. I think they should do this three times a
day.”
Near the end of the performance, Hale invited audience members to
come onto the stage for the “Round Dance” with the performers.
Irvine residents Laura Elbaum and her friend Holly Vickery, both
9, danced in the social while Laura’s father, Rich, watched from the
audience.
“I thought it was terrific,” he said. “I enjoyed seeing lots of
different cultures represented.”
In all, eight tribes from the United States and Canada were
represented in the lineages of the dancers on stage, including
Navajo, (South) Dakota Sioux, Chippewa, Southern Cheyenne, Chumash,
Kickapoo, Apache and Paiute.
The center’s dancers perform more than 20 times a year at various
events around Southern California, including the center’s annual
powwow, which this year is at the Orange County Fairgrounds from Aug.
27 to 29.
“We do a lot of these performances at schools, community
organizations, fairs -- anywhere we can go to educate people about a
little part of the Indian culture,” Hale said.
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