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Dance> Church
of Tango
The Church of
Tango
By Cherie Magnus
Published July 2001
It was known as La Catédral. Not easy to
find in Buenos Aires' dark side streets
at three in the morning--no signs, no cars,
no people in front. But once I climbed the
stairs to the second floor of the old warehouse,
I could hear the siren call of music.
It was eerie and scary, mounting those stairs
alone, but I was helpless to do otherwise,
a pilgrim drawn to the altar of Tango.
The room was huge, like the inside of a
barn, all wood. It was barely lit by large
candelabra with most of the candles melted
into pools of silky wax, some votive flames,
and a few strings of fairy lights. It smelled
of cat piss and dusky marijuana. A bar ran
the width of the room in back, with gigantic
paintings hanging over it all the way to
the rafters. Shadowy figures were sitting
around the room on the lumpy funky old couches
and broken chairs, their conversations punctuated
by the smoldering ends of their cigarettes
moving in the dark.
At first I could only see the silhouettes
of dancers through the smoke. Three or four
couples on the warped, uneven wooden dance
floor, moved, not to Pugliese or Tanturi,
but to Louis Armstrong's "Kiss of Fire."
A tall figure approached out of the gloom.
"Quieres bailar?" He was young,
muscular, handsome, with black rimmed glasses
framing eyes that sparkled with cocaine
excitement. He was so tall I had to reach
up very high to wrap my left arm around
his neck. He held me tight and led me with
brute machismo, so unlike the subtle leads
of the old milongeuros I had danced with
at Club Almagro earlier that night. When
I leaned against him in the traditional
tango pose of female trust, he dragged me
across the floor, lifted me back on my feet,
turned and twisted me, giving me no opportunity
to embellish or decorate his steps. I simply
obeyed the movements his body ordered. It
was different, exhilarating, exhausting.
"You don't really need to work out
at the gym, do you?" I asked during
a break in the music. "No, I eat red
Argentine beef full of blood! Blood! To
make me strong!"
His eyes glittered, muscles rippled under
his tight tee shirt, testosterone energy
creating an almost visible aura around him.
Breathless, I had to sit out the next set
and recover on an old velvet sofa. I watched
people arriving and leaving in the candlelight,
with their high heeled tango shoes and backpacks.
The informality of the setting and the dancers'
attire and attitude clashed with the formal
tango they danced so seriously. It was like
watching a play: pure mesmerizing theatre.
Armed with two years of tango experience
in Los Angeles, New York and Amsterdam,
and with knowledge gleaned from a trip to
Argentina last year, I had flown off to
Buenos Aires alone. I had no plans to connect
with a group or to take any lessons. I simply
went to dance tango.
I rented a room in the middle-class neighborhood
of Caballito. Three other rooms in the apartment
were rented to dancers, and the vivacious
landlady, Maria Teresa, was a tanguera too.
So whenever we met up with each other in
the kitchen or the lone bathroom, we had
plenty to talk about.
You can dance in Buenos Aires from after
lunch until five in the morning. In the
afternoon, the tables in the Confiteria
Ideal--an elegant Belle Epoque ballroom
of marble and mirrors--are littered with
the cell phones of businessmen and housewives,
also frosty ice buckets with bottles of
sparkling sidra, the Argentine apple-cider
champagne. Evenings you can go to practicas
or take lessons until midnight. Then everyone
hits the tango halls until the sun comes
up. Repeatedly I went to bed with birds
chirping and sunlight brightening the curtains
of my room.
Every day, my friends and I discussed who
danced where and with whom as if tango were
the most important subject on earth. If
I lived in Argentina, I would never work.
I surmised that the dancers of Buenos Aires
don't keep a 9-5 schedule. Either that or
they never sleep.
One night Maria Teresa drove us to Sin Rumbo.
The historic milonga is far out of town,
but famous as the "birthplace of tango."
Maria Teresa called it the "church
of tango," the genuine tango cathedral.
It was very different from La Catédral
The harsh overhead florescent lighting illuminated
a dozen people seated at tables and a few
couples on the small, black and white checkered
floor. The dancing style was more open,
less crowded than in the packed town clubs.
One couple caught my eye: a middle-aged
pair a foot apart performing complicated
figures with bored faces. "Married
too long," observed Maria Teresa, whose
day job was as a psychologist.
Torquato Tasso was another small, cramped,
inelegant tango hall, yet famous nevertheless.
At first I couldn't see why. Jetlagged and
tired, I wanted to leave by two a.m. But
when twelve white-haired portly men in tuxedos
took the small stage, I hung around. Luckily
for me, because they were the original members
of the famous D'Arienzo Orchestra. With
five bandoneons (Argentine accordions),
a piano, violins, and double bass, they
recreated the fabulous music of the 40's
and 50's that all tango aficionados cherish.
I asked Maria Teresa, "Do you agree
that the bandoneon is the sexiest instrument
a man can play?" "Ooh yes!"she
laughed. "Just look where they hold
it!"
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Tuesday and Thursday afternoons I went
to Pavadita on Avenida Corrientes. It
too was upstairs, and after parting
the velvet draperies at the top, I smelled
the incense, burning to mask the musky
stale odors of the windowless hall.
At Pavadita, the men sit on a kind of
stage at little tables, and the women
sit in front of the bar and scattered
around the room. Each time the music
begins, men and women stare at each
other across the empty dance floor.
The women select the men they want as
partners, and the men respond--or not--with
raised eyebrows and inquisitive looks.
After a woman nods affirmatively, the
man gets up, crosses the room, and,
when he's close to her, she stands up
and meets him ready to dance. These
negotiations are invisible to all but
the participants, and serve to prevent
the embarrassment of public refusal.
It's a heady thing for us female tango
tourists who are not used to it. |
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We catch the eye of a man who has just lit
a cigarette and crossed his legs in a pose
of relaxation...but suddenly he stubs it
out and arrives in front of us to dance
just because we looked at him.
I had already learned the infamous Code
of Tango, and so I knew what was expected
of me and how to behave. It's all about
invitation, wanting, rejection, needing,
appearance, sensuality, attitude, sex.
I saw that young women are always invited
to dance, no matter their skill levels,
and old women hardly ever receive invitations,
unless it is as favors from a friend or
husband. And all the men wishing to dance,
no matter their age, looks, or status, can
tango as much as they liked.
Men wanted good-looking women; women cared
more about the tango skills of their partner.
That's unfair, but it is a man's world on
the tango floor, always.
It is difficult to sit at a table with a
man you like while he's searching the room
for prospective dance partners. Too, if
you sit with a man, other dancers will ignore
you, not wanting to infiltrate another guy's
"territory." But the fellow at
your table can catch the eye of any woman
in the room and leave you to dance with
her. That's the Code.
The milongueros (tango hall habitues) of
Buenos Aires are not young. They have had
many years to perfect their art, are always
formally dressed in wool suits and ties
no matter the weather, and invariably smell
of soap and French cologne. I love dancing
in their traditional close embrace. For
the milongueros there is only the milonguero
style.
On my first trip I was absolutely petrified
every time I was asked to dance. This year
Carlos Gavito, Omar Vega, and other tango
superstars approached me as if they were
just anybody--or I was really someone.
At Club Gricel, I was afraid to look at
Gavito for fear that he would think me too
aggressive. I had taken a few lessons from
him in Los Angeles when he was on tour with
"Forever Tango," so we knew each
other a little. At the milongas, Gavito
only danced with the best and the youngest
women. Yet, from the corner of my eye, I
saw him stand up, button his jacket, and
walk around the dance floor to my table.
Oh my gosh, I thought, glancing behind me
in vain for the woman who was the object
of his invitation. When he returned me to
my table ten minutes later, the local women
sitting with me were astonished. I could
just hear the buzz: "Who is she?"
On my last day in Buenos Aires I danced
an impromptu demonstration in the park with
Antonio, a handsome milonguero who owned
only the elegant suit of clothes on his
back. We tangoed beneath a huge fig tree
to music from a boombox tied to the bicycle
of a grizzled old man. Elderly couples,
young children, even a woman in a wheelchair,
all cheered and threw money and candy at
us while we danced. It was a miracle that
I could glide so gracefully over the rough
bricks in backless high wedgies with rubber
soles.
Thank goodness I had prayed at La Catédral.
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About
this author: With degrees in English,
Dance, and Library Science from UCLA,
Cherie has published many articles in
professional journals and magazines.
Her solo travels to Europe and Latin
America have inspired several pieces
published in Skirt!, PassionFruit, Moxie,
JourneyWoman, Dancing USA, GoNomad,
Open Spaces, Porthole, The Cusco Weekly,
the-vu, and various online magazines.
She was the dance critic for the Cerritos
News in Orange County, California before
moving to San Miguel de Allende, Mexico.
She is currently at work on a novel
situated in France, when she's not out
dancing. |
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| Cherie Magnus
and Carlos Gavito, star of "Forever
Tango." |
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