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#tango

3 posts2 participants1 post today
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
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Alex is also noting how the younger generation experienced a brief window of being able to just *be* out without necessarily even needing to *come* out because acceptance was so great.

They note that generation’s absence.

And that things are moving backwards to a world those kids never grew up having to protect themselves against.

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Alex Pacheco is talking about as a teenager being told that they and their girlfriend needed to dance together less because they’re in public, and there are children present! (And if you want to hold hands or kiss, do it in the bathroom.)

Same person organized a queer tango festival a year later. “It’s not about you; I have queer friends!” (Our gasts are collectively flabbered.)

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Barbara from Buffalo didn’t know that you couldn’t learn to lead and follow at the same time, so she just did. The workshop needs another leader? Ok, she’s leading tonight.

She says she remembers being at a milonga and seeing a man who danced beautifully who she wanted to dance with. He said that he wouldn’t dance with her because he had seen her leading.

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I just raised my hand as one who, as Karen noted, nowadays we have people who are starting in queer tango, not starting in mainstream tango then finding or forming queer tango communities.

Two years ago a TikTok friend mentioned that queer tango existed, and so I went looking for it in my city. The first time I ever saw people dancing, it was a queer tango performance.

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Around 2007, Augusto decided to create an open role tango championship, in contrast to the preexisting World Cup of Tango. He got judges from the big tango schools to give it some prestige.

It stopped after 5 years when the original changed to allow same gender couples.

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Now Rodrigo is talking about the queer tango festival in Mexico. He had lived in Italy for a while and then moved back to Mexico when Mexico got marriage equality in 2010.

He ran a festival there for 10 years where instead of organizing special events, the local milongas to *became* queer milongas for the nights of the festival, resulting in all Mexican tangueros being familiar with queer tango.

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A queer tango festival started in Germany in the early 2000s, and they caravanned from Berlin. She says it was mostly women because men’s queer tango was just getting started in Germany, and it wasn’t yet advertising to and pulling from other countries in Europe.

In 2005, she started teaching queer tango in Berlin. In 2010 she decided to start a festival in Berlin.

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Now Astrid Weiske is talking about tango in Berlin. She wasn’t comfortable going to a straight space, but then a “tango for women” class started. Role-switching wasn’t a thing yet, so as a butch, knowing the image of the typical follower, she chose to lead.

She says cabeceoing women in straight milongas was tough, but some women went along with it, and the men always left her alone, no comments.

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Augusto says there was a point where he would go to mainstream and dance with his partner, without being kicked out, but as they’d dance past the table of milongueros, they’d make snide comments like “tango is for machos!”

I’ve definitely gotten some LOOKS 👀 when leading a man past the table of professional dancers visiting from Argentina. (Because me leading, him following = breaking gender norms.)