Tango without gender-defined roles. Women who dance with women. Men who are led by women. The queer milonga was introduced in Argentina at the beginning of the 2000s to break with the stereotypes set ...
Standing under multicolored lights in a Columbia Heights studio, the tango instructor told her students to find a partner and practice the dance’s basic position, an intimate embrace between leader ...
Tango without gender-defined roles. Women who dance with women. Men who are led by women. The queer milonga was introduced in Argentina at the beginning of the 2000s to break with the stereotypes set ...
Following is an interview with Travis Widrick who runs/teaches Intro To Tango dance classes and organizes Argentine Milonga dance parties. In the past, we’ve covered a number of tango related events ...
After years of feeling excluded from the elegant Argentine dance, gay and trans partners are bringing more creativity to its traditionally male and female roles. The elegant and sensual Argentine ...
Performances in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by The pandemic was disastrous for tango. But milongas are thriving around the city now, capped by the return of Queer Tango Weekend. By Marina Harss The ...
Couples twist across a wood floor to the melancholy sounds of tango music, swaying and swivelling in a dance that comes from far away. The hours-long dance session, known as a milonga, is not in ...