You are currently browsing the tag archive for the 'philo hagen' tag.

9/9/09– together with hoopers around the planet celebrating hooping on this day, we Bay Area folk  (over a hundred of us) met up at San Francisco’s Civic Center–right in front of (back of?) City Hall. (Maybe Gavin was watching.) There were Santa Cruz, NY, Austin, even Canadian and French hoopers there! What a treat.  I caught the free tutorials from Nicole Wong of Cherry Hoops, Miss Rosie of Hero Hoops, Christabel of HoopGirl, Rich of isopop. I hope I caught something symbiotically from talking, hanging, and just a tiny bit of hooping with Fraulein Spiral and Brecken, too.

While on the platform in Oakland waiting for the train to SF, a woman approached me and asked about the hoop, whether I’d been to Burning Man…She–Susanne–is a photographer, and wound up coming with me to City Hall and shooting us for a bit. Turns out she collected me as a “stranger” in this cool “100 Strangers” project. Someone posted a comment on the Flickr page saying I look like a mermaid.

photo by Philo Hagen

photo by Philo Hagen

This photo here is by my wonderful friend Philo Hagen, who covered World Hoop Day beautifully here.

My tank top, by the way, is from Hoopla Berlin (“guaranteed to make your hips smile”), and arrived the day before World Hoop Day  as a surprise gift from my bestest Berlin girlfriend (bbg?) Uta. It seemed obvious I was supposed to don it for WHD. Since it’s yellow with day-glo orange, I decided to go all the way with the kawaii candy colors.

It was a nice way to go out with the hoopers of the Bay Area.

jitterandjivedancingYesterday being Father’s Day, I spent a couple extra moments talking to the photograph of my dad on my altar. In the photograph, which was taken around 1942 on O’ahu, near Pearl Harbor, he looks serene, bemused, and as though he’d rather be someplace else. That was, apparently, his general take on his time in the Navy during WWII—a subject about which it was hard to get him to talk, when I was old enough to be asking, some 40 years later. He disliked the whole fighting/killing bit (which he avoided by being a radio controller, on the island and for short stints at sea), and would rather have been…

…dancing. Because my dad, David Matthew Conrad (1922-1996), was a champion jitterbug. Get OUT!, right? But it’s true. When he was in his late teens and his twenties, my dad was cutting loose with the hot wild acrobatic jive of the day, swinging the girls upside down, kicking and flapping to the sounds of Glenn Miller and Benny Goodman, and winning prizes for it. Newspaper accounts of the time used words like frenzy, pandemonium, and ecstasy to describe the jitterbug phenomenon. One psychologist warned of the “dangerously hypnotic influence…(music) cunningly devised to a tempo faster than 72 bars to the minute – faster than the human pulse.”

image008

Thinking about that, about him, something clicked. Just the other day I was talking to Philo about how long it’s taken for me to shake off homogenizing influences of the hoopworld’s hegemony, how I still don’t really know what my own style is any more. He suggested I look back to old videos. I’ve looked, I said. I’m just chaotic, and goofy: I switch planes (from horizontal to vertical to diagonals) really fast and almost continuously… and it’s no fun to watch because it’s so jarring and jagged….

Who told you it’s no fun to watch?, he demanded, getting huffy. How I love Philo.

And so yesterday, on Father’s Day, I met up with the Bay Area Hoopers in Dolores Park, and I just abandoned myself. I flipped and swung and flapped and did crazy happy high steps; I stopped caring about elegance or flow or eye contact with any “audience.” I swayed and swerved and drooped and hopped. And I was thinking, you know, if my dad—the jitterbug dancer, radio crooner, sometimes painter, and closet writer, all those artistic personas beating like a heart under his three-piece suits on his way to work in contract law all those years he Provided for me and my mom— if my dad could see me today—me this crazy hooper, professional writer—oh, he’d be so happy, and so proud.

jitterbug1939

HOOPING! the book

The book HOOPGIRL and I wrote about hooping for wellness, fulfillment & fun is HERE! Buy your copies today at http://tiny.cc/hoopbook

Previously Spun

Watch videos at Vodpod and other videos from this collection.

 

December 2009
S M T W T F S
« Nov    
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
2728293031