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#tango

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On Saturday, the organizers of Conexión #QueerTango Festival said they wanted to give the Filipeli twins a challenge this year. They danced with a third man, Leonardo Sardella.

For context, the twins took third place in the 2019 Tango World Championship, the highest two men have ever placed; trying to give them a challenge is justified!

In the first song that had all three, they danced as though jealously fighting over each other.

#TangoQueer #tango #queer #tangoArgentino #ArgentineTango #queerDance #queerJoy #MiamiBeach

I stayed an extra day in Miami to go to Tan Lunes, which is a milonga run by Germán Filipeli & Rocio Leguizamon, after it was mentioned at Conexión. Some of the performers and others in town for the festival were planning to go and continue the party (including a performance).

I had lots of role-switching fun, and for the last tanda, I invited an older woman. She said I’m the first woman she’s ever danced with!

I got so many compliments today on my dancing from people I met here a year ago 🫶🏻

A year ago, I took a private lesson with one of the professionals who performed here because my leading was super unclear. We danced tonight. I started out following but stole the lead from him. We swapped 2–3 times per song. It was so fun! He’s super playful. And the look of shock on his face when I led him for a calesita, and the compliments from him after, made me SO proud!

Two years ago, a TikTok buddy mentioned the existence of queer tango. I didn’t realize I could explore partner dancing—especially such an intimate partner dance—in a safe space. He is the reason I dance tango now.

We finally met in person for the first time this weekend! We’re even sharing a hotel room, and we’ve danced together a few times now. So cool! We went to drag brunch at The Palace today too.

#friends #internetFriends #offline #dance #tango #queerTango #drag #MiamiBeach #queerJoy
Continued thread

Karen is lifting up the mentions of food/baking, community organizing and adding that in a bunch of queer tango local WhatsApp groups there’s birthday wishes, food talk, and “the protest is at 1 o clock.”

She also highlighted the queer tango Discord server.

Continued thread

Ray, about the word queer: “I love that that sour milk has become the most beautiful embrace in our beautiful dance.”

He says, “you don’t need queer tango” is the same as “why don’t we have straight pride?”

“Name 68 countries where it’s illegal to be straight.”

Continued thread

Mikael expresses the same feeling I have about dancing in a queer space: embracing someone of the same gender when you’re both queer…that’s its own feeling. It’s not the same feeling same-gender dancing with a bunch of straight people.

Emily says she asks straight people to pay more. Karen called it the Straight Tax.

Continued thread

Karen once heard someone answer “if we’re all equal, why do you need straight tango? Why aren’t you all coming to our events?”

Karen sums it up as “if you try hard enough to assimilate and are capable of passing, you can come to our event.” But in our events we have our own culture.

Continued thread

Ray asks how exactly she responds.

She says: I see it a different way. We have our own particular needs. It’s not just the women’s tango classes. And it’s about owning our own events, owning our own community, not about having us dissolve into the rest of the tango community.

She uses the term “queer washing”.

Continued thread

A professor says “there are open role spaces—“ and Ray says “that’s not the same thing, though. There’s overlap, but—“

She says she agrees, and that’s why her class continues to use the word “queer”.

Astrid says the “gay friendly” organizers who say this have been a sort of taboo subject for a while. They mean well but don’t understand our needs.

Continued thread

Ray wants to return to the topic mentioned yesterday: how to respond to straight organizers who say “well, you’re welcome here, so you don’t need queer tango spaces and are actually the ones being discriminatory by making your own spaces.”

Continued thread

Salem suggests symbiotic relationships with local bars to handle the economic pressures. She says we should be more rooted in our local communities and bring more people into the dance.

She also talked about experiencing ableism here as a cane user.

Continued thread

Andrés says we should work on creating space for conversation in the smaller scale of our local queer tango communities, not just at these big events.

He says tango is not just a dance: it’s a social event. (He has complaints about how at at many mainstream tango events, there are people who only dance and don’t socialize.)

Continued thread

Ray notes that these discussions at queer tango events are important for moving forward our thinking and motivation. That’s why we *don’t* only have the evening dance party.

(We do indeed talk a lot in queer tango events. Here last year was my first one. New York’s marathon had several group discussions too.)