The origins of the West Coast Swing are in the
Lindy Hop.
Western swing,
country boogie, and, with a smaller audience,
jump blues were popular on the West Coast throughout the 1940s and into the 1950s when they were renamed and marketed as
rock and roll in 1954. Dancers danced "a 'swingier' more smooth and subdued" form of
jitterbug to Western
swing music.
Dean Collins, a lindy hop dancer who arrived in the
Los Angeles area around 1937, was influential in developing the style of swing dance on the
West Coast of the United States as both a performer and teacher. Collins was humble about his contributions to the style. According to one of his former students, a member of his last dance troupe, Collins himself said that he had nothing to do with the West Coast Swing style. Lessons in "The New West Coast Swing" were offered at the
Arthur Murray Dance Studios in
San Bernardino and Riverside, California in December 1948. By 1954 West Coast Swing was taught from Southern California to Vancouver B.C. and from Eastern Washington to Hawaii. By 1957 the dance had reached as far east as Missouri. Laure' Haile, an
Arthur Murray Dance Studio National Dance Director, documented the unique style of swing dancing in Los Angeles in 1951 using the name "Western Swing" to describe it. Arthur Murray Dance Studios developed a syllabus for West Coast Swing from her notes. The Arthur Murray style taught Western Swing beginning from a
closed position and the possibility of dancing single, double, or triple rhythm. After "Throwout" patterns began with the woman "walking in" and the man doing a "rock step", or step together for counts one and two. Although the dance remained basically the same, the Golden State Dance Teachers Association (GSDTA) began teaching from the walk steps, counts 1 and 2. It replaced Laure Haile's
Coaster Step with an "Anchor Step" around 1961. "West Coast Swing" as a synonym for "Western swing" appears in a 1961 dance book. The name was used in an advertisement by ballroom dancer
Skippy Blair circa 1958–1962. However, the term wasn't incorporated into mainstream swing circles until the late 1960s. Blair preferred the name "West Coast Swing" because of the ambiguous meaning of "Western" (in dance, usually referring to
country and western), as distinguished from "West Coast," referring to California, where the style was actually developed. While teenagers preferred to dance freestyle through a constantly changing succession of discotheque social
dance fads during the 1960s, adults kept swing alive. In the mid-1970s, the advent of
disco music revitalized partner dancing. In California, West Coast Swing was one of the popular dances of the era. By 1978, "California Swing" had developed as a variation of West Coast Swing, with styling that Blair wrote was "considered more UP, with a more Contemporary flavor." By 1978 GSDTA had "some 200 or more patterns and variations" for West Coast Swing." In 1988, West Coast Swing was pronounced the
Official State Dance of California. When Disco fell out of favor, West Coast Swing was one of the dances done in country western bars in Los Angeles. and an instructional booklet for the dance was advertised with a heading of "Cowboy Dancing!". By the 1990s country western dancers were dancing West Coast Swing to contemporary country western songs. == Slot ==