Contra dance set at Port Angeles Senior Center on Wednesday

PORT ANGELES — A special community contra dance is coming up Wednesday evening, thanks to visitors from New England: Perpetual e-Motion, a fiddle-guitar duo from Maine, and George Marshall, a nationally known dance caller.

Unlike the first-Saturday monthly contra dances, this one won’t be at the Black Diamond Community Hall.

One of the organizers of those events, Elizabeth Athair, has picked another venue for what is a long-hoped-for gathering.

The dance, open to all ages, will come to the Port Angeles Senior & Community Center, 328 E. Seventh St., with admission at $10 for adults, $8 for seniors and teenagers and $5 for children.

Athair knows Marshall from many years ago, when she lived and danced in Rochester, N.Y., and he was one of her favorite callers.

“Each year, I’ve asked when he would be out here” on the West Coast, she said.

It looked like he could come in 2011, but she couldn’t find the right venue and then Marshall found a gig elsewhere.

Athair didn’t give up, though.

“Last spring, we started the conversation again, and he said his only time available would be Nov. 14. I thought since winter would be near, it might be a great pep-up to keep the winter blues away for the community,” she recalled.

“To make it easier for more folk to come, I thought it might be nice to have it in town, and the Senior Center seemed central.”

Perpetual e-Motion’s Ed Howe and John Coté have played many a time with Marshall.

The duo is “perched at the convergence of traditional and electronic dance music,” and in hot pursuit of an “enormous sound full of momentum and groove,” according to their website, www.Perpetuale-motion.com.

Caller Marshall, meantime, sums up his mission as “to share the joy of dance!”

To that end, Wednesday’s event will start with a beginners’ dance workshop at 6:30 p.m.; then the band will play and Marshall will call till 9:30 p.m.

To learn more about this and other contra dance gatherings in Port Angeles, phone 360-477-7222.

Features Editor Diane Urbani de la Paz can be reached at 360-452-2345, ext. 5062, or at diane.urbani@peninsuladailynews.com.

More in Life

ISSUES OF FAITH: Music for our ears and a song in our hearts

WHILE I LOVE blue skies, sunshine and summertime, I do very much… Continue reading

The Rev. Pam Douglas-Smith.
Speaker set at Unity in Port Townsend for weekend service

The Rev. Pam Douglas-Smith will present “Deep Peace Abides”… Continue reading

Rev. Dr. Clancy Blakemore
Weekend program scheduled for Unity in the Olympics

The Rev. Clancy Blakemore will present “Exploring Cause and… Continue reading

Heather Vickery
OUUF speaker slated for Sunday

Heather Vickery will present “Joy is the Secret of… Continue reading

ISSUES OF FAITH: Liberalism in Judaism

“If there is among you a poor person, one of your kin,… Continue reading

Thanksgiving meals slated on Peninsula

Thanksgiving meals are being offered across the Peninsula next week. PORT ANGELES… Continue reading

A GROWING CONCERN: Don those decorations like a pro

LAST WEEK, WE discussed how this is the ideal time of year… Continue reading

Some of the many dogs rescued by Fox-Bell Farm Humane Society. Be sure to visit its Facebook page. (Submitted photo)
HORSEPLAY: Robot repairs and Fox-Bell news

NO HORSING AROUND for me this month as I’ve undergone a successful… Continue reading

The Community Chorus of Port Townsend and East Jefferson County and RainShadow Chorale combine, with orchestra, to sing Handel’s “Messiah” Nov. 22 and 23. Both concerts are at 3 p.m. at Chimacum High School. (David Conklin)
Chorus set to perform Handel’s ‘Messiah’ at Chimacum venue

CHIMACUM —The Community Chorus of Port Townsend and East Jefferson County and… Continue reading

Julie Lobato
Weekend program scheduled for Unity in the Olympics

The Rev. Julie Lobato will present “Soaring in Sacred… Continue reading

Joseph Bednarik
Sunday program set for OUUF

Joseph Bednarik will present “The Room Quiets and Then…”… Continue reading

Holy Trinity farewells interim pastors

The Rev. Gail Wheatley and The Rev. Beth Orling,… Continue reading