In refereence to John's comment about hairy, sweaty wrists in MWSD, it has
been an unwritten rule, or at least a courtesy, that men wear long sleeve
shirts to avoid such hairy, sweaty, contact.  Long sleeves are still the
norm in MWSD.
Rich Sbardella
On Wed, Oct 19, 2016 at 5:40 AM, John Sweeney via Callers <
callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
  Thanks to all those who contributed.  Here is a
summary of the key points
 that were made.  It is clear that the wrist lock star is indeed the
 standard
 across the USA, with only a few areas using hands across.
 Summary
 Names: Wrist Star, Box Star, Wrist-Grip Star, Wrist-Lock Star, Pack-saddle
 Star, Wagon-Wheel (Star), Basket Handhold
 Also, but these can mean Hands Across: Millstone Star, Mill, Windmill,
 Moulinet, Old Mill
 Alternative Star Holds:
         Hands Across (that term goes back to at least 1650!)
         Palm Star (MWSD only)
         Lump (Bunch of Bananas, Limp Lettuce) - to be avoided at all costs
 Etymology of Mill references:
 Alan Winston: Go back far enough (1700s) and you get "moulinet" in French
 sources, "mill" in some English sources, for what I'm pretty sure are
 hands-across stars.
 Colin Hume: In the Netherlands it's called "molen" which means
"windmill".
 John Sweeney: The early 19th century Quadrilles and dances like The Lancers
 used the term Moulinet for Star. As far as we know it was always a Hands
 Across Star.  Moulinet means turnstile, crank or propeller.  Whether it
 independently became known as a Windmill/Mill or whether it was badly
 translated as Moulin = Windmill is unclear.
 Wagon-Wheel: in the Appalachians it was a shoulder star - see 2 minutes in
 at 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ht9kjeKcOsg.
 There is a general view that the term Wrist-Grip should be avoided, and
 that
 it should be emphasised that you don't grip (keep your thumb up top with
 your fingers!).
 I like the term "Wrist Lock" since it makes it clear that we are using
 wrists, and since the shape you make looks like the Lock that sword and
 rapper dancers make when they interlink them all and raise them high.  I
 also love that wrist-locks work perfectly for three or five dancers in a
 star (I call lots of different styles).  But I am sure that although the
 move may become even more ubiquitous, the terminology will retains its
 local
 flavour.
 Any ideas on when it started?
 Dan Pearl: Sylvia Miskoe, in rec.folk-dancing on March 4, 1999 said: "Wrist
 grip stars became popular after the appearance at New England Folk Festival
 (NEFFA) of the Lithuanian Dance Group doing their dances and they all used
 wrist grips.  The square dancers thought it was a neat idea and adopted
 it."
 Any idea when that festival was?
 1964 in Northern Vermont shows wrist-lock stars:
 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pZubTju7g_s
 1981 Ted Sanella's "Balance & Swing" defines a star in New England as
 "grasp
 the wrist of the dancer ahead".
 1983 Larry Jennings' "Zesty Contras" refers you to Ted's book.
 Exceptions:
         When choreography dictates, e.g. "men drop out, ladies chain" works
 better with hands across
         One night stands
 Dave Casserley:
 
https://www.swarthmore.edu/sites/default/files/assets/
 documents/linguistics/
 2007_kaufman_jeff.pdf
 This shows that ten years ago wrist-stars were common everywhere in the US
 except in some parts of the South.
 Amy Wimmer (Seattle):
 The wrist lock is the common star formation in the Northwest, with a hands
 across being the exception.
 Tim Klein (TN):
 I call for dances in Knoxville, TN and occasionally in the surrounding area
 (Jonesboro, Chattanooga). I've been dancing here for 30 years. I recall
 hands across stars in Knoxville, Atlanta, Brasstown, Asheville and points
 between, but wrist grip stars in Lexington, Louisville and Nashville.
 Chet Gray (KY):
 I tend to consider my home dance, Louisville, KY, and nearby Lexington, as
 two of the last bastions of hands-across-by-default. Wrist-grip seems to be
 the default even in relatively nearby cities: Indianapolis, Bloomington,
 IN,
 Nashville, Cincinnati. Not sure about Berea and Somerset, KY, also nearby.
 Jerome Grisanti (Midwest):
 I agree with Chet that Louisville's default star is hands-across, although
 weekend festivals in nearby cities tend toward the millstone star. The
 Midwest where I dance/call now is pretty solidly wrist-star territory (St.
 Louis, Columbia MO, Kansas City, Lawrence).
 BUT...
 Susan McElroy-Marcus:
 Just a bit of Louisville dance community history on this subject-when my
 husband started dancing there in the late '70s and I came in 1982, the
 Monday night dance was a mix of English and contra.  The default contra
 dance star grip was the "wrist lock" not hands across as in English.  We
 called it a basket handhold or wrist grip.  Our influence came from New
 England because our friend, Norb Spencer, who started the group along with
 Marie and Frank (Cassidy?) and who called much of the time-learned in New
 England.  We then taught it that way when we moved to Cincinnati and
 started
 that group.  Louisville only became a "bastion of hands-across-by-default"
 sometime in the late 1990s or early 2000s during my calling hiatus.  When I
 re-entered the calling scene 6-7 years ago, I was surprised and bemused
 upon
 calling in Louisville to learn of the high regard held for their
 'traditional' hands-across star style.
 Andrea Nettleton:
 Somewhere south of Asheville and leading west possibly into the lower
 Midwest, is the land of hands across stars.  They are standard in Atlanta,
 the heart of hands-across-land.
 George Mercer:
 The wrist lock dominates everywhere I've danced over the years
 Meg Dedolph (Chicago):
 Checking in from Chicago, where wrist-grip stars are the norm and
 hands-across stars need to be specified. When I started dancing, 14 or 15
 years ago, in Michigan, many dancers reached for a hands-across star first,
 though I don't see that so much anymore.
 Jane Thickstun (Michigan)
 When I was dancing in Michigan, I found it to be a mess, with maybe half
 doing wrist grip and half hands-across, and everyone just throwing their
 hands in the middle without doing either.  I wish callers would specify for
 each dance which kind of star they recommend, to avoid this kind of thing.
 Angela DeCarlis (Florida):
 Where I've called recently, in the Northeast and in New England, wrist-grip
 is definitely the default, and I wasn't aware that parts of the south
 default to hands-across. Neat!
 Here to comment that Florida, where I'm from originally, holds true to its
 role as the Exception to the Rule: despite being in the South, they
 definitely default to wrist-grip there, as well.
 Jacob Bloom:
 When I attended the Berea Christmas Dance School forty years ago, and put
 my
 hand on the wrist in front of me during a walk through, someone complained,
 saying, "He said a star, not a mill!"
 Don Veino:
 "lay it on the wrist of the person in front of you, like a pack saddle on a
 horse" [Thanks! I could never work out why it was called a pack saddle! JS]
 And yes, very much the default star form from my experience.
 Louise Siddons (Stillwater, OK):
 Here in Oklahoma I call it a wagon-wheel grip, but I think I picked up that
 term in either Michigan or California when I was starting to dance contra
 circa 2008. Wagon-wheel stars are the default in OK/TX/KS/MO local dances,
 and also seem standard in the SF Bay Area.
 Neal Schlein:
 Whatever you call it, today a wrist star is the US standard for most of the
 country.
 Joy Greenwolfe (Durham, NC):
 Central North Carolina here. In this region, wrist-grip or wagon-wheel
 stars
 are the default. Some dances specify hands-across if the choreography asks
 for it.
 John Sweeney (itinerant):
 I have danced in Florida, San Diego, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Asheville,
 Phoenix and festivals such as Berea Christmas Dance School, LEAF, Flurry
 and
 don't remember ever seeing anyone do Hands Across in a regular contra
 dance.
 Chet questioned the relevance of dance weekends, but my point was that when
 people from different area get together, in my experience, they tend to use
 wrist-lock stars, which, to me, does seem to be an indicator that it is
 accepted as the default.  Of course, as Chet says, some of those dancers
 may
 well use their regional style at their home dances.
 Rich Sbardella referenced MWSD: In MWSD, hands are often just put into the
 center, sometimes raised as in a contra allemande, sometimes just straight
 forward from the shoulder.
 From CallerLab: "Palm Star: Place all hands together with fingers pointing
 up and thumbs closed gently over the back of the adjacent dancer's hand to
 provide a degree of stabilization. Arms should be bent slightly so that the
 height of the handgrip will be at an average eye level.. Men's outside arms
 in natural dance position, women's outside hands work skirt. Some areas
 dance any stars containing men with a Box Star/Pack-saddle Star: Four men
 with palms down take the wrist of the man ahead and link up to form a box."
 Neal Schlein:
 The Palm Star was the standard style around Colorado in the 1930s when
 Lloyd
 Shaw got started, and for many years after.  Pretty much, you'll only find
 it among square dancers, people who danced with Calico and Boots in
 Boulder,
 Colorado, or folks with an exaggerated respect for history.  Guess I
 qualify
 as all three.
 John Sweeney:
 I have heard that ladies don't join in wrist-stars in MWSD because of the
 hairy, sweaty men's wrists in the south!
 Happy dancing,
 John
 John Sweeney, Dancer, England john(a)modernjive.com 01233 625 362
 
http://www.contrafusion.co.uk for Dancing in Kent
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