Ted's Tempest

La Tempete ~ Reilley La Tempète ~ Whale#1 La Tempète ~ Whale#2 La Tempête ~ Hillgrove La Tempete Originale ~ Hofer Tempete ~ Carpenter The Original Tampete ~ Burnton The Tempest ~ Howe The Tempest ~ Washburn/Modern The Tempest ~ Squire The Tempest ~ Washburn Tom Pete ~ Howe Ted's Tempest The Tempest ~ Holden (Sicilian#1) The Tempest ~ Holden #1 Tempête ~ Liller Hart's Tempẽte Dance La Tempête ~ Bohn La Tempete ~ Henderson#1 Tempete Dance ~ Chivers The Tempest ~ Thompson Tom Pate La Tempête ~ Lowe (Original) La Tempete ~ Skinner La Tempête ~ RSCDS La Tempête ~ RSCDS 2x2

Ted's Tempest is a New England Contra Dance. It was devised by Ted Sannella in about 1983 and published in Zesty Contras. It is a Tempest dance. The minor set lasts 32 bars.

The Contrafusion site says the dance was originally European. The earliest version I've found of this actually comes from Germany (I'd have guessed France, given the name). It was published by Johann Heinrich Kattfuß in Leipzig in 1802 Choregraphie Oder Vollständige Und Leicht Falssiche under the title of "Der Tempẽte".

According to The Regency Dance site Joseph Binns Hart published "Hart's 2nd Set of Quadrilles" sometime between 1818 and 1820. In this work he has a dance called Hart's Tempete Dance which was a dance with two couples facing two other couples (a rare formation for cotillions, but not unknown), however unlike cotilions (or quadrilles) Hart's dance progresses.

In his Hart's Second Set of Quadrilles, Hart writes:

Form a line of 4, the 2 Ladies on the 2 Gentlemens right, 4 more opposite to the first 4, form lines of 4 behind the 2d. line as many as intend to dance.
FIGURE
The first 2 lines right and left, chassez across to the right and left with your partner, dechassez, in returning you go behind the 2d. Couple The Center 4 hands round, the outside couple's turn and back all 8 Set quite round to the right re set to your places, the top four lead through the 2d. line and begin the same figure with the 3d. line & so on to the bottom of the dance.

In The Dancing Master in Miniature, ~1825, G.M.S. Chivers writes his version:

Right and Left lead outsides, the couple at left passing in front — back again, the other couple passing in front — the centre four hands across, and back, while outsides turn with both hands set in lines, and lead through
-- Courtesy of Werner Josten Performing Arts Library, Smith College

The earliest US source I can lay my hands on is from New York in 1851, Mr. Whale & Daughter published La Tempète, as danced at the Queen's Last Ball

This popular Dance is danced by any number of double couples standing as above at commencement. All begin together, — Advance and retire twice, — Partners together gallop across eight steps each way, — Advance and retire twice, — Hand four round in the centre, (as above) Sides the same turning with both hands, — Hands across, (as above) Sides the same, — Advance and retire once, — Go forward to dance with next vis a vis.

Shortly after that Washburn's The Ball Room Manual, 1855 (printed in Boston, distributed in Maine) contains:

[In taking places for this dance the dancers form in two lines, facing each other, the lady on the same side as her partner at his right. There should be an even number of couples on each side.]

The first and second couple (the couple directly opposite) down the middle four abreast, and break to the right and left; the first couple right and left with the third, and the second couple the same with the fourth; first and third ladies chain, and second and fourth the same; then the first and second couple balance to each other, swing four. The same four dance together down the whole set

Washburn is the first (that I know of) to use what we now call "tempest formation" (the earlier examples are all standard four face four dances).

Then in 1858 Howe published a slightly different version in his Howe's Complete Ball-Room Hand Book. He continued to publish this, word for word (though sometimes with slightly different punctuation) in various other works at least until 1869.

Form in two lines of six or eight couples on a side.
First two couples down the centre (one couple from each line) four abreast, couples part at the foot and up abreast and each turn around opposite the next couple that was below them on starting — four on each side right and left — ladies chain with the same couple — balance, four hands round (on each side) same four down the centre, &c.

In 1896, in New York, E. H. Kopp's The American Prompter and Guide to Etiquette there are two versions of the dance, one called "Tempest" in the New England tradition (lines on the sides), and one called "Tempete" in the New York (lines facing up and down). His version of "Tempest" is the first where the head couples simply wheel around rather than casting outside:

(Formation — An even number of couples facing each other up and down the room.)
(Give the first call when the music begins.) Head two couples down the center and back (one couple from each line four abreast) [8]; balance with (the) second couple [4]; four hands around [4]; ladies' chain [8]; right and left [8]; balance four [4]; down the center and back [8]; balance to the third couple[4].
(Repeat until all couples have gone through.)

Note that in the New York tradition (which used a normal four face four format), all minor sets start at once as in a modern contra, but in the New England tradition (using the tempest formation), only the top minor set starts — as was normal in those days. In this version from 1956 everyone starts at once, though it otherwise follows the New England version.

To get people into the formation for the dance have everyone line up as if for a four face four contra, and then have the couples facing up move out to the nearest side.

The progression requires the side couples to move up further than they expect to do in a normal contra dance (otherwise the set drifts down and everyone is crushed together at the bottom of the hall.

When side couples reach the top they come together in a line facing down, when head couples reach the bottom they spread out to the sides facing in.

The animation plays at 120 counts per minute normally, but the first time through the set the dance will often be slowed down so people can learn the moves more readily. Men are drawn as rectangles, women as ellipses. Each couple is drawn in its own color, however the border of each dancer indicates what role they currently play so the border color may change each time through the minor set.

The dance contains the following figures: circle, rights and lefts, swing, grand chain (and probably others).

If you find what you believe to be a mistake in this animation, please leave a comment on youtube explaining what you believe to be wrong. If I agree with you I shall do my best to fix it.

If you wish to link to this animation please see my comments on the perils of youtube. You may freely link to this page, of course, and that should have no problems, but use one of my redirects when linking to the youtube video itself:
https://www.upadouble.info/redirect.php?id=TedsTempest

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The dance is copyright © ~1983 by Ted Sannella. My visualization of this dance is copyright © 2024 by George W. Williams V and is released under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

This website is copyright © 2021-2025 by George W. Williams V
Creative Commons License My work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. Most of the dances have more restrictive licensing, see my notes on copyright, the individual dance pages should mention when some rights are waived.