Come One, Come All!
It’s May Day morning -
Help us dance up the sun!


(the Morris community’s answer
to "dancing 'till dawn")

Morris Dancer
Original image likely by Roberta Wackett
reproduced courtesy of EFDSS

SORRY - DUE TO THREE RECENT FAMILY DEATHS WITHIN THE LAST MONTH AND A MOTHER BEING RUSHED TO HOSPITAL DUE TO HEART FAILURE, THERE HAS BEEN NO TIME TO REACH OUT AND COLLECT 2024 DETAILS FROM THE OVER 200 TEAMS ON OUR CONTACT LIST.  (notice as of 2024-04-19).

You can look at the 2023 page to get last year's info and contact any teams and ask about their plans for this year.

We apologize for the inconvenience.

Morris dancers throughout North America and England will gather together with their sticks, ribbons, bells, hankies, and baldrics, for music and dance in our annual May Day celebrations (this year Wednesday, May 1st, 2024).  We dance to wake up the Sun and keep it coming back up for a whole year!  Besides being a great deal of fun, does this show dedication or what?!  You may have noticed that it works, too.

Be a part of it. Show up while it’s dark and watch the Sun make its grand entrance.  See the spectacle!  Watch the magic!  Cheer the dancers!   Join in the celebration!  Wonder why you’re up at this hour!  Wear whatever you want, but bring layers - it may be cold this early in the morning.


What IS Morris Dancing?

Morris dancing is a living tradition of English celebratory and ritual dance with live music, and origins shrouded in mystery and the mists of time.   Shakespeare used it in his plays and it was old then.  The dancers usually wear bells at their knees and often wave hankies (to attract and welcome benevolent spring and summer spirits) or clash sticks (symbolizing the eternal battle between winter and summer), and the dances have traditionally been performed around the time of major celebration or seasonal cross points in the calendar.  Indeed, dances of comparable form and dancers in similar costumes are found elsewhere in Europe and around the world, and may be thought to be part of the universal urge to influence and honor the unknowable forces which govern our lives.

One of the most colourful descriptions of morris was provided in the 15th century, by Edmund, Duke of Edinburgh, the Black Adder who said, "Morris dancing is the most fatuous, tenth-rate entertainment ever devised by man.  Fourty effeminate blacksmiths waving bits of cloth they've just wiped their noses on.  How it's still going on in this day and age I'll never know."

Modern morris includes several different types of dance, all from different regions of England; Cotswold Morris from the south, Border Morris from the west, Molly Dancing from the southeast, and Northwest Morris from (yes, you guessed it!) the northwest. Other dance styles such as Longsword, Rapper (sword), Clog, and Garland are often included in the term "morris".

There are lots of ways to get more detail about Morris dancing, but the absolutely best way is to find a morris dancer, take them to a pub, offer them refreshment, and ask for the real story.  It's guaranteed good luck, too!

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Last update April 19, 2024
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