Dictionary Definition
hoofer n : a professional dancer [syn: stepper]
Extensive Definition
- '"Hoofer" redirects here. For Wisconsin outdoor clubs, see Wisconsin Hoofers''
Another aspect of tap dancing is improvisation. This can
either be done with music
and follow the beats provided or without musical accompaniment,
otherwise known as a capella dancing.
Hoofers are tap dancers who dance only with their
feet, making a louder, more grounded sound. This kind of tap
dancing is also called "rhythm tap". Fred Astaire
provided a more ballroom
look to tap dancing, while Gene Kelly
used his extensive ballet
training to make tap dancing incorporate all the parts of the
ballet.
Tap was formed from other types of dancing, such
as ballet,jazz and contemporary clogging.
Steps
Unfortunately, there is no universally agreed-upon terminology for tap techniques and steps.A simple step is the f-lap, which involves
striking the ball of the foot on the floor and releasing it
immediately, using an ankle movement. The same can be done with the
heel (a heel f-lap), which involves striking the heel of the foot
on the floor and releasing it immediately.
A step involves placing the ball of the foot on
the floor with a change of weight. A touch is the same thing
without change of weight. Both can also be done with the heel,
keeping the ball off the floor (heel dig).
Another step is the Beautiful. This starts when
one does a sugar in a
circular motion, making sure to keep the hips gyrating. When the
tapper adds the hands, moving in a sort of "kneading" motion above
the head, chin up, it is called a "high beautiful", and when one
does the hand motion below the knees, in a somewhat bent over
position, it is called a "low beautiful".
Another step is the heel drop, which starts by
standing on the balls of one or both feet and then "dropping" the
heel on the floor, with or without a change of weight; it can also
be done with the ball (ball drop).
Steps and heel drops can be combined to make a
cramp roll which produces a rolling sound like a horse gallop or a drum roll. It is
performed by doing two steps (right then left or vice versa),
followed by two heel drops (right then left or vice versa),
releasing the first heel immediately upon completion. In other
words, it is performed as "ball (R) ball (L) heel (R) heel (L)" and
is often counted as "1 and a 2." It may be preceded by a brush
(counted as "& 1 & a 2" and known as a flap cramp roll or
5-cramp roll) or done double time, known as a "bite cramproll" and
counted as "a & a 1."
Another step in tap dancing is the brush.
Standing on one leg (i.e. the left), the other foot is "brushed
out" by striking the ball of the foot (i.e. the right) on the floor
in a sweeping motion forward or backward.
The brush may be turned into a shuffle by
combining two brushes, one forward and one backward. A faster
shuffle can be achieved by making smaller movements that are closer
to the body. There are actually many different ways to perform a
shuffle. Broadway-style shuffles use knee movement to swing the
foot into a shuffle. Hoofers perform shuffles in 2 different ways.
The more common shuffle comes from movement in the upper leg and
hip. The first sound of the shuffle is almost like a drop, while
the second sound is the foot being pulled up. The other type of
Hoofer shuffle is from the ankle. This is used in more impressive,
fast tap dancing. The difference in the sounds of the two brushes
is almost none; this shuffle is more of a "double tap".
Another, more complicated tap step is the flap.
The flap involves a brush forward and a step (which is striking the
ball of the foot on the floor with a change of weight; similar to a
walking step, only done on the ball of the foot--the heel does not
touch the floor). The flap is often counted as "& 1." It is
similar to the shuffle, but instead of brushing the ball back after
the brush forward, the dancer steps (i.e. brush step instead of
brush brush, as in a shuffle). Both the shuffle and the flap make
two sounds.
All tap dancing steps are a combination of simple
movements that build upon each other. Most movements, simple and
complex, include "taps," "brushes," "drops," "brushes" (including
shuffles and flaps), and "steps." For example, "shuffle ball
change" is a shuffle followed by a ball change.
A ball change is a combination of two "steps" (right then left),
with an accent done on the second step (and must be done on the
balls of the feet, as steps are only done on the balls). Tap
dancing steps may be learned and mastered by children and adults
alike and are a good way to express/learn rhythm, dance, and
percussion.
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
ambulator, artist, artiste, backpacker, ballerina, ballet dancer,
ballet girl, ballroom dancer, belly dancer, burlesque queen, choral
dancer, chorine, chorus
boy, chorus girl, clog dancer, conjurer, coryphee, dancer, dancing girl, danseur, danseur noble, danseuse, ecdysiast, entertainer, exotic dancer,
female impersonator, figurant, figurante, foot passenger,
foot soldier, foot traveler, footslogger, geisha, geisha girl, guisard, guiser, heel-and-toe dancer,
hiker, hitchhiker, hula girl,
impersonator,
infantryman,
jaywalker, magician, marcher, mountebank, mummer, musician, nautch girl, paddlefoot, pedestrian, peeler, performer, peripatetic, prestidigitator, public
entertainer, show girl, singer, square-dancer, stripper, stripteaser, stripteuse, terpsichorean, trailsman, tramper, vaudevillian, vaudevillist, walker, walkist