CAKEWALK

MINI-LESSON

Cakewalk

A couple dance that became a popular stage act for virtuoso dancers as well as a craze in fashionable ballrooms around 1900. Couples formed a square with the men on the inside and, stepping high to a lively tune, strutted around the square. The couples were eliminated one by one by several judges, who considered the elegant bearing of the men, the grace of the women, and the inventiveness of the dancers; the last remaining pair was presented with a highly decorated cake.

The cakewalk originated earlier among American black slaves who, often in the presence of their masters, used the dance as a subtle satire on the elegance of white ballroom dances. It contributed to the evolution of subsequent American and European dances based on jazz rhythms, and its music influenced the growth of ragtime.
 

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The idea of the Cakewalk was that of a couple promenading in a dignified manner, high stepping and kicking, mimicking "whitey's" high society. Some of the better plantation owners would bake a cake on Sundays and invite the neighbors over and have a contest of the slaves.  Different prizes were given but originally it was a cake and whichever slave won, would get the cake... thus the term "That Takes The Cake!" (Plus others such as 'It's a Cakewalk' = very easy) and the name "Cakewalk" was now set.

Created and maintained by Vicky V. Johnson