Amiri Baraka in
Blues People explained the strangeness of a slave dance covertly mocking white slaveholders that later was adopted by whites unaware of the mockery: "If the cakewalk is a Negro dance caricaturing certain white customs, what is that dance, when, say, a white theater company attempts to satirize it as a Negro dance? I find the idea of white minstrels in
blackface satirizing a dance satirizing themselves a remarkable kind of irony—which, I suppose, is the whole point of minstrel shows." An exhibit at the 1876 Philadelphia Centennial featured black people singing folk songs and doing an old dance called the "chalk-line walk" in a plantation-like setting. The dance was "done in the original fashion", as described by Fletcher. Thereafter it was performed in minstrel shows, exclusively by men until the 1890s.
Dora Dean and her husband Charles E. Johnson were a hit with their specialty, a cakewalk danced as partners. Their production had an African-American cast, and featured women dancing, which was revolutionary for the time. The inclusion of women "made possible all sorts of improvisations in the Walk, and the original was soon changed into a
grotesque dance" which became very popular across the country. The
Illustrated London News carried an 1897 report of a cakewalk at a barn dance in
Ashtabula, Ohio, written by an English woman traveler. This version was more of a procession and less of a dance: "Just before the ball was declared finished a long procession of couples was formed who walked in their very best manner around the room three times before the criticizing eyes of a dozen old people, who selected the best turned-out pair, and gravely presented them with a large plum cake. In July 1898, the musical comedy
Clorindy, or The Origin of the Cake Walk opened on Broadway in New York.
Will Marion Cook wrote ragtime music for the show. Black dancers mingled with white cast members for the first instance of integration on stage in New York. According to Cook, the show was a resounding success: "My chorus sang like Russians, dancing meanwhile like Negroes, and cakewalking like angels, black angels! When the last note was sounded, the audience stood and cheered for at least ten minutes. This was the finale which Witmark had said no one would listen to. It was pandemonium .... But did that audience take offense at my rags and lack of conducting polish? Not so you could notice it!" "Dusky troopers march & cake walk" was written by Will Hardy and published in 1900.
Scott Joplin mentioned the cake walk in his folk ballet
The Ragtime Dance, published in 1902. The French music hall singer and dancer
Eugénie Fougère was filmed in 1899 in the rag-time cake-walk "
Hello, Ma Baby", with which she made a sensation at the New York Theatre. She is said to have introduced the dance in
Paris (France) in 1900 in the
Théâtre Marigny after she returned from a tour in the United States. The ambiguous "cake walk" became very popular quickly and for a few months in 1903, Paris was in the grip of a veritable 'cake-walk craze' (
folie du cake-walk). Fougère appeared on the 18 October 1903 cover of
Paris qui Chante dancing to the song
Oh ! ce cake-walk. The lyrics interconnected African and American dance, monkeys and epilepsy Performances of the "Cake Walk", including a "Comedy Cake Walk" were filmed by the
American Mutoscope and Biograph Company in 1903. Prancing steps were the main steps shown in the "Cake Walk" segment, which featured two couples, and a solo dancer. All dancers were African-American. 1903 was the same year that both the cakewalk and ragtime music arrived in Buenos Aires, Argentina, which may have influenced early styles of tango. "Cakewalk King" Charles E. Johnson, who, with his wife Dora Jean, achieved fame cakewalking throughout the United States and Europe, described his kind of dance as "simple, dignified and well-dressed". File:Fougère (1899).webm|Fougère dancing the cake-walk 1899, filmed by
Frederick S. Armitage. File:Eugénie Fougère cover Paris qui chante.jpg|Eugénie Fougère on the 18 October 1903 cover of
Paris qui Chante dancing to the song "Oh! ce cake-walk" File:Adrien_Barr%C3%A8re15.jpg|A 1903 poster for the Revue des
Folies-Bergère with several parodies of popular French music-hall artists by
Adrien Barrère. ==Cakewalk as a musical form==