Log In

Username:

Password:

   Stay logged in?

Forgot Password?

User Status

 

Attention

 

Recover Password

Username or Email:

Loading...
Change Image
Enter the code in the photo at left:

Before We Continue...

Are you absolutely sure you want
to delete this message?

Premium Membership

Upgrade to
Premium Membership!

Renew Your
Premium Membership

$99
PER YEAR
$79
PER YEAR
$79
PER YEAR

Premium Membership includes the following benefits:

Don't let your Premium Membership expire, or you'll miss out on:

  • Exclusive access to over 1,620 video demonstrations of patterns in the full bronze, silver and gold levels.
  • Access to all previous variations of the week, including full video instruction of man's and lady's parts.
  • Over twice as many videos as basic membership.
  • A completely ad-free experience!

 

Sponsored Ad
Guy Howard
Posted by cdroge
3/13/2008  4:38:00 AM
Who is he and what makes him an expert?
Re: Guy Howard
Posted by paulw
3/13/2008  7:07:00 AM
The IDTA use his book for their standardised technique.

Re: Guy Howard
Posted by SocialDancer
3/13/2008  8:29:00 AM
He was a contemporary of Alex Moore and it was he and his partner Eve Kendall who danced and demonstrated the figures to be studied by a group of experts and described in the 1948 "Revised Technique".

He was very much a ballroom technician and was famous for his technical lectures.

He was injured in a car crash in 1950 which ended his competitive and demonstrating career, but he continued to lecture world-wide and train examiners for several dance societies.

The IDTA asked him to write their technique manual and this was first published in 1976.

There are several very minor differences between the IDTA and ISTD books but the most significant difference is in the foxtrot.

Guy Howard removed the overlap between figures, where the last step of one figure becomes the first step of the next. So a feather ends with the man's RF forward OP, ready for a reverse turn to commence LF.

Where this gets confusing is in the description of the three-step. Since his feather finish ends on man's RF his three-step begins (and ends) with man's LF.
The ISTD three-step begins with man's RF and also ends with the RF which is the first step of the following natural figure. This means the ISTD three-step really only consists of two steps. :)
Re: Guy Howard
Posted by cdroge
3/13/2008  9:31:00 AM
Thank You. This raises a question of timing?
Re: Guy Howard
Posted by anymouse
3/13/2008  10:24:00 AM
"This raises a question of timing?"

No. The foxtrots described are the same dancing, it's just the divisions between figures are in different places in the two books. In dancing there are no divisions between figures, so it doesn't matter.
Copyright  ©  1997-2026 BallroomDancers.com