1 00:00:00,439 --> 00:00:02,423 This is the Bop. 2 00:00:03,301 --> 00:00:05,815 The Bop is a type of social dance. 3 00:00:09,268 --> 00:00:11,180 Dance is a language 4 00:00:11,180 --> 00:00:14,815 and social dance is an expression that emerges from a community. 5 00:00:15,381 --> 00:00:18,683 A social dance isn't choreographed by any one person. 6 00:00:18,683 --> 00:00:21,409 It can't be traced to any one moment. 7 00:00:21,409 --> 00:00:24,496 Each dance has steps that everyone can agree on, 8 00:00:24,496 --> 00:00:28,062 but it's about the individual and their creative identity. 9 00:00:29,884 --> 00:00:31,062 Because of that, 10 00:00:31,062 --> 00:00:32,599 social dances bubble up, 11 00:00:32,599 --> 00:00:33,558 they change 12 00:00:33,558 --> 00:00:35,333 and they spread like wildfire. 13 00:00:37,240 --> 00:00:39,956 They are as old as our remembered history. 14 00:00:41,747 --> 00:00:44,011 In African-American social dances, 15 00:00:44,011 --> 00:00:45,782 we see over 200 years 16 00:00:45,782 --> 00:00:50,360 of how African and African-American traditions influenced our history. 17 00:00:52,464 --> 00:00:55,637 The present always contains the past, 18 00:00:55,637 --> 00:00:59,525 and the past shapes who we are and who we will be. 19 00:00:59,525 --> 00:01:01,868 (Clapping) 20 00:01:03,534 --> 00:01:07,950 The Juba dance was born from enslaved Africans' experience on the plantation. 21 00:01:08,471 --> 00:01:09,679 Brought to the Americas, 22 00:01:09,679 --> 00:01:12,105 stripped of a common spoken language, 23 00:01:12,105 --> 00:01:15,744 this dance was a way for enslaved Africans to remember where they're from. 24 00:01:16,220 --> 00:01:18,737 It may have looked something like this. 25 00:01:24,811 --> 00:01:26,001 Slapping thighs, 26 00:01:26,001 --> 00:01:27,321 shuffling feet 27 00:01:27,321 --> 00:01:29,144 and patting hands: 28 00:01:29,144 --> 00:01:33,109 this was how they got around the slave owners' ban on drumming, 29 00:01:33,109 --> 00:01:35,321 improvising complex rhythms 30 00:01:35,321 --> 00:01:38,219 just like ancestors did with drums in Haiti, 31 00:01:38,219 --> 00:01:41,092 or in the Yoruba communities of West Africa. 32 00:01:45,075 --> 00:01:48,215 It was about keeping cultural traditions alive 33 00:01:48,215 --> 00:01:51,685 and retaining a sense of inner freedom under captivity. 34 00:01:53,627 --> 00:01:58,429 It was the same subversive spirit that created this dance: 35 00:01:58,429 --> 00:01:59,657 the Cakewalk. 36 00:01:59,657 --> 00:02:03,496 A dance that parodied the mannerisms of Southern high society -- 37 00:02:03,496 --> 00:02:06,698 a way for enslaved to [...] at the masters. 38 00:02:07,104 --> 00:02:08,999 The crazy thing about this dance 39 00:02:08,999 --> 00:02:12,097 is that the Cakewalk was performed for the masters, 40 00:02:12,097 --> 00:02:15,237 who never suspected they were being make fun of. 41 00:02:17,339 --> 00:02:19,757 Now you might recognize this one. 42 00:02:20,044 --> 00:02:21,237 1920s -- 43 00:02:21,237 --> 00:02:23,044 the Charleston. 44 00:02:26,017 --> 00:02:29,705 The Charleston was all about improvisation and musicality, 45 00:02:29,705 --> 00:02:31,907 making its way into Lindy Hop, 46 00:02:31,907 --> 00:02:32,890 swing dancing 47 00:02:32,890 --> 00:02:34,282 and even the Kid n Play, 48 00:02:34,282 --> 00:02:37,193 originally called the Funky Charleston. 49 00:02:41,287 --> 00:02:45,651 Started by a tight-knit Black community near Charleston, South Carolina, 50 00:02:45,651 --> 00:02:47,666 the Charleston permeated dance halls 51 00:02:47,666 --> 00:02:50,718 where young women suddenly had the freedom to kick their heels 52 00:02:50,718 --> 00:02:52,455 and move their legs. 53 00:02:57,567 --> 00:03:01,324 Now social dance is about community and connection; 54 00:03:01,324 --> 00:03:02,701 if you knew the steps 55 00:03:02,701 --> 00:03:04,553 it meant you belonged to a group. 56 00:03:04,553 --> 00:03:07,480 But what if it becomes a worldwide craze? 57 00:03:07,480 --> 00:03:09,218 Enter the Twist. 58 00:03:09,218 --> 00:03:13,548 It's no surprise that the Twist can be traced back to the 19th century, 59 00:03:13,548 --> 00:03:16,746 brought to America from the Congo during slavery. 60 00:03:17,126 --> 00:03:18,366 But in the late '50s, 61 00:03:18,366 --> 00:03:20,625 right before the Civil Rights Movement, 62 00:03:20,625 --> 00:03:23,875 the Twist is popularized by Chubby Checker and Dick Clark. 63 00:03:24,145 --> 00:03:26,820 Suddenly, everybody's doing the Twist: 64 00:03:26,820 --> 00:03:28,036 white teenagers, 65 00:03:28,036 --> 00:03:29,646 kids in Latin America, 66 00:03:29,646 --> 00:03:32,307 making its way into songs and movies. 67 00:03:32,307 --> 00:03:33,713 Through social dance, 68 00:03:33,713 --> 00:03:36,595 the boundaries between groups become blurred. 69 00:03:39,689 --> 00:03:42,716 The story continues in the 1980s and '90s. 70 00:03:42,962 --> 00:03:45,451 Along with the emergence of Hip-Hop, 71 00:03:45,451 --> 00:03:49,338 African-American social dance took on even more visibility, 72 00:03:49,338 --> 00:03:51,705 borrowing from its long past, 73 00:03:51,705 --> 00:03:54,316 shaping culture and being shaped by it. 74 00:04:02,722 --> 00:04:07,369 Today these dances continue to evolve, grow and spread. 75 00:04:08,219 --> 00:04:09,718 Why do we dance? 76 00:04:09,718 --> 00:04:10,849 To move, 77 00:04:10,849 --> 00:04:12,189 to let loose, 78 00:04:12,189 --> 00:04:13,579 to express. 79 00:04:13,579 --> 00:04:15,468 Why do we dance together? 80 00:04:15,468 --> 00:04:16,468 To heal, 81 00:04:16,468 --> 00:04:17,741 to remember, 82 00:04:17,741 --> 00:04:20,351 to say, "We speak a common language, 83 00:04:20,351 --> 00:04:22,852 we exist and we are free."