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About Just out. (Portland, OR) 1983-2013 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 20, 1996)
ju st out ▼ sop tom b or 20, 1996 ▼ 21 H omo H oe D own Continued from page 19 led her to country. “I saw Club Dance on [The Nashville Network] and thought the dancing was neat. I wanted to learn to do it. I was going through a change in my relationship, so I was looking to meet people.” Sue heard about the Eastside, a new bar that opened late in 1991. It was at their Sunday after noon two-step lessons, taught by Don Minnerly, that Sue learned the basics. Later, Tuesday night line dancing lessons were added. “The first couple weeks the teacher was a guy named Mark, but it really became popular under Crystal,” Sue remem bers. “Crystal used to pack the place on Tuesday nights.” Sue met Delmar at the first line dance class at the Eastside. “We were learning the traveling cha- cha. Delmar and I didn’t have a partner, and we learned the dance together. We followed that up with the horseshoe shuffle, and kept dancing to gether. We learned any structured step that had a partner.” The lessons together paid off when Sue was asked to start teaching Thursday night lessons at the Eastside after about a year. Sue asked Delmar to help her. “She asked me if I wanted to be her partner, and I said ‘I do,’ ” Delmar laughs. When the Eastside closed, they moved to Slaughters, where they’ve been teaching lessons ever since. “We’ve been a team for about five years,” says Sue, “dancing together as a team and teaching.” Sue eventually did meet a partner while coun try dancing. Teri Pemberton “used to come in and watch, and dance a little bit. We got introduced and became friends, and eventually, partners. I was teaching, and got her more into two-step and line dancing. Now, we both enjoy country and dancing. She’s very supportive.” Sue and Teri have been together for three years. Delmar Gordy, Sue’s teaching partner, grew up in rural Illinois on a farm replete with cows and horses. “We used to go to the grange halls and go square dancing,” he recalls. “My mother was into country music, the Grand Ole Opry and Nash “We paired up, and it’s been good times and good dancing ever since,” he says. To leam new dances, Sue and Delmar some times go to straight bars like The Drum and Rock ’N’ Rodeo, or the Oasis when it was open. Delmar has also danced at San Francisco’s Rawhide II, and Seattle’s famous Timberline. Interestingly enough, most of the gay dance bars taught partner dances, while straight bars were heavy on line dances. One line dance they didn’t teach at straight bars was “the circle jerk,” an invention of the gay country dancers. Early on, Sue’s favorite dance was the boot scoot boogie, while now she favors “Elvis Interestingly enough, most of the gay dance bars taught partner dances, while straight bars were heavy on line dances. One line dance they didn 't teach at straight bars was uthe circle jerk, an invention of the gay country dancers. ” ville.” Delmar left the farm for the big city, but never stopped listening to country. Returning from Hawaii in the early ’80s, Delmar went to the Rawhide in Los Angeles. “I saw these guys dancing the two-step and fell in love with it immediately. 1 wanted to be a part of it, but could never get myself out on the dance floor.” It took him almost 10 years. Although he later longed to dance at Portland’s Slaughters in the early ’90s, Delmar never danced until he started taking lessons at the Eastside, where he met Sue. rocks" and the Cheyenne. Delmar prefers the oil can slide, the tush push, a partner dance called the horseshoe shuffle, and the traveling cha-cha. “I’m not bored with any of the dances,” Delmar notes, grinning. Sue and Delmar teach country dance lessons every Wednesday night at Slaughters, from 8 to 9 pm. Each lesson varies, presenting from one to six dances, with a heavy emphasis on line dancing and reviews of dances learned in the previous weeks. “We’ve always filled up the evening with as many dances as we can,” says Sue. “The more people who bring their friends, the better the en ergy. It’s kind of infectious. Groups of people are drawing their friends in. It’s fun, it’s safe, it’s good exercise, it’s a good way to meet people and have a good time.” And what about newcomers? “The biggest thing people have is the fear that they don’t know how to dance,” says Sue. “Every one was a beginner at one time. Once you leam one dance, the next one becomes easier. Come when there’s a class at first, and you won’t be as intimi dated, because people are on the floor learning. We like to see new people and take the time to teach them, because we were there once.” Delmar agrees with Sue when it comes to newcomers: “Don’t be afraid. Come out on the dance floor. The courage to come out on the dance floor is one of the favorite gifts I’ve given myself.” M eanwhile, across the river at Choices, Crystal Encinas is still teaching country dances and spinning western CDs. Crys tal grew up in Arizona, but although her grandpar ents had a country ranch, she didn’t want any part of the culture. “I hated country music until I started dancing,” she says. That changed in 1991, when she went to C.C. Slaughters with a friend named Annette. “I en joyed the partner dancing, and when I saw the line dancing I picked it up very quickly. I really en joyed it and started going every weekend and doing line dances, two-stepping and swinging.” There weren’t any lessons in Portland when Crystal started, but she picked the dances up so Continued on page 23