Festival invites folk-dancing fans
- Share via
Elia Powers
Longtime resident Allan Beek will groove to the music like everyone
else attending this weekend’s 35th Annual Laguna Folkdancers
Festival, held Friday through Sunday in the Ensign Intermediate
School gymnasium.
He’ll just dress a little differently than most.
Beek isn’t one to wear puffy pants or exotic hats -- a look that
best describes the computer-generated characters that sit atop the
festival flier.
“I wear a necktie and a business shirt,” Beek said. “I guess I’m a
traditionalist.”
Still, Beek enjoys seeing the assortment of historical Baltic
region regalia that is sold and worn by many of the participants.
The three-day event, which continues at 9:30 a.m. today with a
morning dance workshop and concludes Sunday at 5:30 p.m., is a
celebration of folk dancing, an art form that had its heyday in the
mid-20th century.
The festival is running simultaneously with an annual National
Folk Organization meeting in Newport Beach.
Beek’s wife, Jean, convinced him to sign the couple up for folk
dancing lessons more than 15 years ago.
“I was a beginner then, and I’m still a beginner now,” he said. “A
lot of other participants have visited the Balkans and are very
serious about [folk dancing].”
For Beek, it is a hobby. He said he knows more than 50 types of
dances and will learn another handful this weekend.
He particularly enjoys line dances, when he has the opportunity to
direct his friends through the tunes.
“Everyone follows the leader, and even if he is wrong, he is still
right,” said Beek, who is hosting a Saturday evening dinner for
festival volunteers and special guests.
That includes the festivals’ three instructors: Michael Ginsburg,
Lee Otterholt and Michele Simon.
Each instructor has a regional specialty and rotates teaching
dances to attendees during the weekend. Beek said at least five hours
over the three days is dedicated to instruction.
Otterholt, a Laguna Beach resident, who lived 27 years in Norway,
primarily teaches dances with origins in Albania, Romania and Greece.
In all of the dances, Otterholt said the focus is on participation
“There’s a good sense of community,” he said. “You don’t need a
partner, and most of the time you’re dancing in a group. It’s a
sociable event. You get to know people quickly.”
Otterholt, who has taught classes all over the world, said many
festival-goers have formed groups that travel the world to
international dance events.
Attendees at this festival spend most of the weekend on their
feet. They get a break on Sunday afternoon, as ethnic groups from
throughout Southern California treat attendees to a cultural dance
show.
“Live music is how it’s supposed to be done,” Otterholt said.
“Most of the time we’re dancing to a cassette.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.