Dancing is a performing art. In every field of the arts there are the hall-of-famers, the role models from last generation, and the
current movers-and-shakers. There is also a massive community of performers who are up-and-coming, and then there are those
that are just content-to-be-performing, and those that are dance instructors but don't compete or perform. Swing dancing is a
unique performing art because it is SO accessible, one does not have to compete, perform, or teach in order to enjoy the art. Social
Dancing is the dominant activity in the WCS community.
Because West Coast Swing originated in the first half of this century,
very few dancers who were around to witness its birth are still alive. The recorded history of WCS is mostly over the past 50 years.
Here we provide a short (and by no means complete) list of who's who. These are the most common names you will hear in the community,
so you know who people are referring to when they mention them.
Dance Events will hire the biggest-name professionals they can
afford, in order to attract more dancers to attend their event. Most events will invite a mix of "old-school" and "new-school" to
relate to every style and generation. Depending on their specialty, these invited professionals will do a mix of teaching workshops,
judging contests, and performing or competing.
In any local dance community, there are lots of studios and dance instructors
where you can take lessons. But if you're lucky, you may have access to one of the following top-name professionals close to
where you live.
Hall of Famers
the late Dean Collins (whose Swing style evolved into WCS)
Skippy Blair (one of the first WCS dancers, has documented the development of WCS, was partly responsible
for the name change from Western Swing)
Annie Hirsh & Jack Carey (who now run the World Swing
Dance Council)
Role Models from the 1990's
Barry Jones
Current Movers & Shakers - forerunners in the field of choreography and instruction
Multiple
US Open Classic Division Champions, young, trendy, and cutting-edge.
Multiple US Open Classic
Division Champions, known for their speed and innovation
Lifetime dancers,
US Open Showcase finalists
Superior entertainers, known for classic/latin style WCS
and amazing acrobatics, as seen on So You Think You Can Dance
Excellent teachers and US
Open Classic Division finalists with formal training
Well-rounded US Open and
Country Western Dance Champions
Canadian Champions, US Open Showcase award winners, known
for creativity & technique