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Roy Damron

Swing Jam at the Rendezvous – 1938

I recently looked through some of my photo files, and found a cool photo I hadn’t shown you!
This photo comes from the 1938 LOOK Magazine spread about the Rendezvous Ballroom (posted here), and it shows a dance jam. Roy Damron is the guy in the middle doing the splits, and a couple of his friends are in the crowd. And do you recognize the couple dancing in the upper right (white jacket, white dress)? That’s none other than Hal & Betty Takier! Oh, what I’d give for a little video footage of this jam. 🙂
Photo from LOOK Magazine – August 30, 1938

“I’m Just A Jitterbug”

I’ve fallen off posting about dancing much in the last couple months, but a recent Facebook conversation reminded me that I’ve been meaning to post this article originally published in a 1939 Look Magazine. It shows some “behind the scenes” shots of LA swing dancers who were filmed as inspiration for the Walter Lantz cartoon short “I’m Just a Jitterbug”.


The footage of dancing was rotoscoped for the cartoon (basically traced), which seems to be looked down on by animators, but it’s fun for us dancers, because it’s so true to life. Only 2 couples are shown in the Look article, but from watching the footage we know that Ray Hirsch and Patti Lacey were part of this project too, because we see their signature moves in it!

As was unfortunately common in this era, there are racist and derogatory images included in the article and cartoon. I have included them in this entry because I feel strongly that it is inappropriate to cut them and not recognize the bigotry present.
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Human Jitterbugs Are Models…
For Dancing Insects In an Animated Cartoon

Nobody ever knows what a jitterbug will do next. Even those masters of miracles, the Hollywood animated cartoonists, who cam make pigs dance and ducks talk, couldn’t figure out the jitterbugs.

“When the jitterbug craze hit the country,” says Cartoon Producer Walter Lantz, “we started out to make a jitterbug cartoon. But after making many hundreds of drawings, we realized it was impossible to follow the intricate steps conceived by these dizzy dancers unless we could work from actual jitterbugs in action.”

So Lantz rounded up jitterbug teams, turned them loose in front of a camera, then had animators study them on the movie screen. Even then, the timing problem was too difficult. Finally, each frame of action was projected and a tracing was made of it. Animators then drew the cartoon bugs over the tracings of the dancing teams.

Some of the human models and the cartoon scenes they inspired for “I’m Just a Jitterbug” are shown here. The cartoon required 12,000 individual drawings, but it takes only seven minutes to show it on the screen.


Grandpa and Grandma Bug act as silly as human beings.
(Dancers are Roy Damron and Snookie Bishop)


The Bugs Get a Lesson in swing from Mary Herron and Jack Conlogue.

Snookie” Bishop and Roy Damron demonstrate for the bug cartoonists.

This is the Way the bugs do it after Roy and “Snookie” have shown them how.

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And here’s the final version of the cartoon! 
Funny thing is, I don’t see any of the images from the magazine in the cartoon.
“I’m Just a Jitterbug” (1939)

Because I like to see the unedited version myself, I’ve included the complete magazine pages below.


Roy Damron & Mitzi Mayfair

Do you remember Roy Damron from my post about the Rendezvous Ballroom? I came across a photo of him from The Milwaukee Journal, March 10, 1944. (Google News Archive is my new toy! 🙂 

Roy Damron with Mitzi Mayfair, one of the stars of Four Jills in a Jeep (1944)
I haven’t seen Four Jills in a Jeep in several years (our copy is VHS, and we don’t have a player anymore!), but I checked on YouTube and there’s a clip of them dancing together! So far as I know, no one has attributed this clip to Roy previously — it’s not on his IMDB profile. Does anyone know how to add it?
Enjoy!

6 A.M. Swing Party – Rendezvous Ballroom

In honor of last week’s post about the Balboa Rendezvous, I thought I’d share a 1938 Look Magazine article with you about some of the incredible dancing that used to take place there! The Rendezvous Ballroom was huge, roughly 1 city block wide and 1 city block long – but I think 5,000 kids in there would still have been crowded! No wonder they could only dance chest to chest. 🙂
5,000 Young Californians Rise at Dawn for a… 
6 A.M. SWING PARTY

On June 18 in Balboa, Cal., the amazing swing music fad in the U.S. hit a new high. On that day some 5,000 “cats” and “alligators” rose at dawn to “cut rugs” and “kick out” at 6 o’clock in the morning. The occasion was a “jam session” or “swingaree” staged by radio station KEHE to celebrate the end of the school year.
The night before the party, “ickies” and “jitterbugs” started arriving. Many came in parties composed of members of local swing clubs. Most of them came by car, some by foot. One young man drove 396 miles from Tonopah, Nev. One came on crutches.
From 6 to 8 in the morning, the ballroom of the Balboa Rendezvous shook with their dancing of the Big Apple, the Varsity, the Suzie-Q while the orchestra and a phonograph “gave out” with “licks” and “solid senders.”
Those shirts! Those ties! So terrible, and so AWESOME!
Dancing in a hat and gloves…but no stockings. Those wild jitterbugs!
This photo has been one of my personal favorites since I was 16 years old – 
I wanted to be her SO badly.
Still do. 🙂