The "Lindy Hop" was invented during a
dance marathon in Harlem in June 1928.
George "Shorty" Snowden and Mattie
Purnell, who danced regularly at the Savoy
Ballroom, were standouts due to their fast
and innovative dance steps.
At one point, Shorty decided to do a move
called a "breakaway" -- he flung Mattie
forward and improvised a few solo steps on
his own:
The effect was electrifying!
Responding to a journalist's inquiry,
Shorty spontaneously dubbed their creation
"The Lindy Hop," a reference to Charles
Lindbergh, the American aviator who had
become famous for making the first
non-stop solo transatlantic airplane
flight the year before:
“Shorty” went on to become quite famous
himself:
He found great success dancing with
partners:
as well as with his dance troupes,
performing in ballrooms, nightclubs, and
on Broadway.
In the movie "You Were Never Lovelier,"
Fred Astaire and Rita Hayworth dance a
tribute to Shorty George in this number,
co-choreographed by Astaire and Hermes
Pan:
Rita Hayworth made more than 60 movies in
her 40-year career.
Many of them were very successful.
But she always said that the two movies
she made with Fred Astaire were the only
ones that meant anything to her.
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