Date:    Sun, 8 May 2005 18:32:26 -0300 
From:    Janis Kenyon <jantango@FEEDBACK.NET.AR> 
Subject: Tango brings tourism to Buenos Aires 
  
Sunday, May 8 edition of La Nacion:  The traditional rioplatense dance is 
good business.  Tourists are attracted by the tango.  Buenos Aires receives 
20% of the world-wide tanguero pie that moves $400 million dollars annually. 
Four out of ten tourists mention the tango as the reason they travelled to 
Buenos Aires.  Tango generates dividends in restaurants, fashion, 
transportation, and other areas.  Tango brings $80 million dollars annually 
to Buenos Aires. 
  
The article goes on to mention the third city-wide tango competition which 
began on Thursday and which continues to June 5.  They expect an estimated 
800 to participate this year; last year there were 600 dancers in the 
competition.  The top finalists go on to the world competition in August. 
  
There is an interview with Carlos Anaya (35), described as a renegade, since 
he has no interest in tourists or their wallets.  He watches the invasion of 
foreign tangueros with disdain because they don't respect the old codes of 
the milonga, those he learned from his parents and grandparents.  Carlos 
greets friends and invites them to a milonga which he organizes on Mondays 
in an undisclosed location, where the hat is passed for the entrada.   One 
has to be personally invited to his milonga which has no name nor any 
publicity.  Buenos Aires has 68 registered milongas in the city, and his is 
not on the list.  The Secretary of Culture estimates an attendance of 60,000 
each month in the milongas.  Carlos says, everything is good for the 
tourists. Before there were always the same people in the milongas.  They 
changed the codes to please them, and made the dance floor smaller by adding 
more tables.  The idea is to have more people and no one cares about the 
quality of the dancers.  Carlos and his business partner Patricia Ramirez 
want to preserve that in their milonga. 
  
The article mentions Ramon Monges, 45, unemployed, who earns 20 pesos an 
hour as a taxi dancer with tourists who want to dance with him.  He says, 
before I drank nothing, now they pay my drink.  I can buy a good pair of 
dance shoes (110-200 pesos).  I try to survive.  Today, people who do 
something with tango can live because of the tourists. 
  
A sidebar to the article has a diagram of how the basic step of tango is 
danced.  "The man positions his right hand on the back of the woman and she 
puts her left hand on his shoulder.  The man steps back with his right foot 
and she steps forward with her left."   The drawings show how to dance 
separated from one's partner.  The article contains a photo taken in 
Confiteria Ideal where no one has the dance position described in the 
diagram. 
  
  
Janis Kenyon 
School of the Milongueros 
Buenos Aires 
  
  
 
 
 
Date:    Mon, 9 May 2005 14:48:48 -0400 
From:    Tanguero Chino <tanguerochino@NETSCAPE.NET> 
Subject: Re: Tango brings tourism to Buenos Aires 
  
The article can be found at 
     https://www.lanacion.com.ar/702490. 
(Spanish only) 
  
Janis Kenyon <jantango@FEEDBACK.NET.AR> wrote: 
  
 >Sunday, May 8 edition of La Nacion:  The traditional rioplatense dance 
>is good business.  Tourists are attracted by the tango.  Buenos Aires 
>receives 20% of the world-wide tanguero pie that moves $400 million 
>dollars annually......... 
   
  
  
Search from anywhere on the Web and block those annoying pop-ups. 
  
  
 
    
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