|
In fact we we partnered up according to the numbers on our bibs but there was no close dancing (not enforced anyway) just freestyle whatever, just so long as we kept our feet moving. And so we kept going with interludes of demos, dance steps, poetry, projections and games plus the occasional elimination (for not moving) rest periods and a few gin and tonics for good measure. The roller-skated referee made sure that the rules were obeyed but even if you were eliminated (and only a few were) you could keep on dancing or just watch everyone else. Eventually though, the mass were whittled down to six couples and then the real competition began with one couple eventually victorious. But by then, no-one really cared who won or lost (except maybe them)
It was well-managed by Bluemouth Inc. who are a Canadian-based company specialising in immersive events where the performers and participants are indistiguishable