"There was dancing now on the canvas in the garden; old men pushing young girls backward in eternal graceless circles, superior couples holding each other tortuously, fashionably, and keeping in the corners—and a great number of single girls dancing individualistically or relieving the orchestra for a moment of the burden of the banjo or the traps. By midnight the hilarity had increased"
The Great Gatsby
A quick disclaimer: I will be focusing on how fox trotters of all ages danced to the wild "Hot Jazz" rhythms of the Jazz Age. I won't be talking here about the frantic, more athletic dances favored by the young 'uns. I will however, make the observation that the Fox Trot, defined as unstructured walking-dance with close contact, was pervasive. Most of the faddish dances had this as a foundation, with the dancers then breaking off to do their Charleston, their Collegiate Stomp, their Shag moves etc. and then going back into the Foxtrot embrace for a while - or not even breaking the embrace, but letting their feet go wild while their bodies remained in contact. All of these could be looked upon as Foxtrot variations. Foxtrot was the sea in which all Jazz Age dances swam.
The Jazz Age fast Fox Trot/One Step was a direct descendant of the One-Step of the turn of the 20th Century, when they hit on the revolutionary innovation of tossing out complex steps and just walking to any sort of music.
Some dance books of the day defined a One-Step as a walking dance where you stepped once on every beat, while a Fox Trot was a walking dance where you stepped on alternate beats or mixed your "quicks" and "slows". Outside the dancing school though, the term One-Step was seldom used, and the all-encompassing term Foxtrot was applied promiscuously.
This dance, as it has evolved to the present day, is now called the "Quickstep" though at the time that term seems to have been in use primarily in Britain, and since competitive ballroom dance originated there the term has thus found its way into our current dance vocabulary. I have even found (so far) one use of the term "Blue Trot" to refer to a piece that was not slow and sultry, as the term "Blues" would tend to suggest today, but rather bouncy and jazzy. In the '20s, "blues" usually meant an uptempo jazzy tune. By he '30s the term had come to signify a slow and perhaps sensuous musical feeling
Dancers of our current time often identify this up tempo Foxtrot style as the "Peabody". There certainly was a dance or class of dances called "Peabody", going back as far as 1915, but it was not the all-encompassing term that one encounters today.
Folks in the 20s and 30s frequently called various flavors of the Jazzy Foxtrots by the name of some specific faddish signature variations that happened between the walking bits. The well known Charleston was frequently danced as a Foxtrot variation, either keeping the embrace and using more restrained steps, or separating from time to time to kick in all directions, do the bee's knees etc. and then returning to the closed Foxtrot The underlying model of walk for a while, do a variation, then walk some more was the same for jazzy dances as it was for the smooth Foxtrot. The difference was one of spirit. With a jazzy tune, you step lively, put some bounce in your step and if you're really feelin' it, wiggle your your shoulders and shake your hips. The slow Foxtrot is smooth, gentle, perhaps a bit sentimental while the fast one is joyful, exuberant and unrestrained. They differ in mood but not in structure.
In these exuberant dances there were numerous exuberant solutions devised to the question of what to do when stuck in one place when the music was really fast. You were stationary on the floor but the Jazz was telling your feet to move! The Charleston "swizzle step" was one way, the "Shag" and "Balboa" were others, and there were many other fast-footed combinations learned or improvised. Some of these can be seen in the videos below.
The dance position in an uptempo dance could be exactly the same as in a slow Foxtrot (first photo), or it could be the "Collegiate" hold (second photo) where the partners kept their heads together (often cheek to cheek) but hunched over to pull their bodies a little apart and give their feet room to fly in all directions.
The Two Step
This optional step-pattern variation can be done at any speed, but it is quite useful in up-tempo Foxtrots. It is simply thus (for the man): (1) step left, (2) bring the right up next to the left, (3) step left (4) bring right up by left but don't shift weight (5) step right (6) bring left up by right (7) step right (8) bring left up by right.
It's often stated as step-together-step-AND-step-together-step. If you already know the Polka step, this is it - just without the hop bounce.
This step is done in quick time, which is to say a step on every beat or slow time (step on every other beat) If the music is REALLY fast, "slow time" can still be quite fast. It can be done as a traveling step with a shade left, shade right pattern, as a time step in place or as a polka-like spin (think smooth polka, without the hop).
It can be danced with the feet forward or with them turned out (each gives a different flavor) or with a slight kick on the second step.
The timing is also the foundation of a lot of other steps which are, essentially, left-left right-right (e.g. Charleston swizzle step).
The overall effect of close contact with the upper bodies still while the feet move at high speed is, of course, very evocative of the Balboa and Shag, and their roots in the Jazz Foxtrot are clear to see.
It's also indicative of the fact that the distinction between a Jazzy Foxtrot and the youth dances is not a clear bright line. Dancers moved seamlessly from Foxtrot to Charleston or to Shag or Balboa and back again as the mood struck them. They were not constrained by the nomenclature, rigid definitions or structured routines that we so often focus on today. They were just dancing and making it up as they went along.
The Videos