The Designing Woman

The Designing Woman ~ Redesigned The Designing Woman

The Designing Woman is an English Country Dance. It was devised by Gary Roodman (website) in 1996 and published in Sum Further Calculated Figures. It is a proper Duple Minor dance. The minor set lasts 38 bars. It is in the key: G minor. Someone thought this dance was Hard.

The tune, Vivace, was composed by A. Vivaldi and performed by MGM and Reunion (Barbara Greenburn, Daniel Beerbohm, Gene Murrow, Margaret Ann Martin, and Mary Lea) on the album New Friends.

The animation plays at 110 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 (no music plays during this slow set). 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: hand turn (allemande), turn single, circle, cast, lead, hey, mirror hey, interwoven hey, hey for three, hey for four, lead and cast, siding (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=TheDesigningWoman

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The dance is copyright © 1996 by Gary Roodman. My visualization of this dance is copyright © 2020 by George W. Williams V and is released under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

This website is copyright © 2021,2022,2023,2024 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.