‘you live as long as you dance.’ – rudolf nureyev 

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Elaine’s Unfortunate Dancing on ‘Seinfeld’ Was Inspired By a Television Legend

The epic dance floor meltdown had roots in real life, with a big name in late night TV suffering from the same lack of rhythm. “Like a full body dry heave” is how George Costanza described Elaine Benes’s awkward dance moves during a work function in “The Little Kicks,” a 1996 episode of Seinfeld. The sequence, which horrifies spectators, is a marvel of physical comedy thanks to Julia Louis-Dreyfus. Elaine, oblivious to her total lack of rhythm, seizes and gyrates like a gangster being shot down in a 1940s B movie.

That nugget of an idea—a person completely unselfconscious about their frenzied dancing—actually originated with a real person who worked for NBC: Lorne Michaels, storied creator of the long-running Saturday Night Live.

According to Seinfeld writer Spike Feresten, who penned “The Little Kicks,” the idea for the segment came when he was working as a receptionist on SNL. Speaking with author Jennifer Keishin Armstrong for Seinfeldia: How a Show About Nothing Changed Everything, Feresten related that he observed Michaels dancing at an SNL after-party one night and was mesmerized at how bad Michaels was.

Michaels, Armstrong wrote, “was dancing as if he’d never seen another human dance before.” He “heaved and gyrated” to a beat “only he could feel.”

The idea made it through the gauntlet at Seinfeld, a production famous for being rather discriminating when it came to plotting episodes. And while Feresten said he demonstrated some of Michael’s moves for Louis-Dreyfus, the actress worked on them at length herself, even demonstrating them for her family. When they were deemed sufficiently terrible, she performed them during filming.

The dance has since taken on cult status. Each year, the minor league Brooklyn Cyclones host an Elaine Dance Contest in which spectators are invited to give it their best and the winner receives a trophy.

i personally love to dance, and am not ‘good’ at it

but i am an enthusiastic dancer.

 i expect this is the same way lorne michaels or elaine benes

would describe their approach to dancing.

-me, on national dance day

‘opportunity dances with those already on the dance floor.

-h. jackson brown, jr.

 

source credits: jake rosen, image, nbc tv


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78 responses »

  1. I miss dancing. I never have the opportunity anymore. With nightclub days long behind me and weddings few and far between, the only dancing that happens is a rare independent urge in the kitchen. Ah but it was fun when I was young.

    Liked by 1 person

  2. Love the background story Beth. Of course, now you have to record video of you dancing, so we can see how you compare to Elaine or even to the Brooklyn Cyclones contestants. Ha, ha, just kidding. I’m pretty bad myself . . . I love your description though. An enthusiastic dancer. I’ll have to use that next time someone teases me about my white man shuffle. Ha, ha.

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  3. Such an interesting revelation of the story-behind-the-story, beth. I used to think I was a good dancer–and then wondered if I looked more like Elaine than I thought. And then said to myself: What the hell? I’m having fun! Julia-Louis Dreyfus is a wonderful comic actress who is comfortable making fun of herself.

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  4. We love to dance and went a lot in the younger days. :) It had been a while until last summer when we danced at my nephew’s wedding. It was so much fun! I missed that episode, but to dance ‘like no one’s watching’ takes courage. To not worry about what others think…great post, Beth! 🎶

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