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Folk Dance Federation of California, South, Inc.

National Folk Organization:
Why, Where, and How

By Mary Bee Jensen, 1993

Mary Bee Jensen and Vyts Beliajus, 1993

Mary Bee Jensen and Vyts Beliajus          

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What would make a person even dream of founding a National Folk Organization of the USA?

An organization would be established that could answer the questions I had had over the years in developing a successful program (the BYU International Folk Dancers). My experiences went full circle, from beginning folk dance classes to performance, from national tours to international tours, and during this process future teachers were being trained so they could carry on with the same type of programs.

The National Folk Organization is the tool to network information and answers for the following questions to make folk dance a more popular and enjoyable field, whether educationally, recreationally or as performance companies.

Where do we get the educational information to feed into making a successful program of internatioal folk dance? Where do we find recognized authorities with answers to our questions? Where do we locate folk dances and music covering beginning, recreational, intermediate, advanced and performing arts material; textbooks and dance descriptions; folk dance camps; choreographies; costuming; American folk dance research materials; USA and international contacts; international folk dance festivals; scheduling tours, travel programming, educational classes for countries/states visited; proper dress and protocol; cultural programs of the countries?

Are you sure the hands are on the waist? Are the fingers forward or backward? Is that kick supposed to be high or low? Is that sash tied on the right or left side? Simple questions, but they all had to have an answer! Why should we not offer all this background educational material upon request?

There are many people in the USA working with recreational groups, educational programs and, of course, the performing aspects of folk dancing. The National Folk Organization has the ability to be a source network that can make life easier for the dance leaders with answers that to us, now, seem simple, but at one time seemed insurmountable.

The National Folk Organization's first advisory committee, under the capable leadership of Vyts F. Beliajus as chairman, included leaders whose fields of accomplishments acknowledged the success of the folk dance area in the USA: Randal Boothe, Dr. Clinton Border, Carol Campbell, Ethel Capps, Betty Casey, Enid Cooke, Elsie Dunin, Alexander P. Durtka, Jr., Festival of Nations, JoAnn Gibbs, Margie R. Hanson, Mary Ann and Michael Herman, the International Institute of Minnesota, Clayne Jensen, Nicholas Jordanoff, Walter Kolar, Jack Kukuk, Beresford Menagh, Harry W. Morgan, Scott Nagel, Dick Oakes, Delynne Peay, Anthony Shay, Virginia Topitzes, and Clark and Elaine Weismann.

We need this leadership as consultants in an organization that can service the needs of the individual and organization. With the changing world of today we need to take our place in the NFO to enhance the educational tools to promote the folk dance of the United States as well as develop and better understand the ethnic talents of our immigrants.

It is the purpose of this organization, National Folk Organization, to promote the exchange of information and resources as a national clearinghouse for the folk arts within the USA, and to promote the exhange of international, national and local performing and recreational groups.


Excerpted from Mary Bee's article in Viltis, A Magazine of Folklore and Folk Dance, Vol. 52, No. 2, June-August, 1993.
The National Folk Organization was formed in 1986 by Mary Bee Jensen, Vytautas F. Beliajus, George Frandsen, and L. DeWayne Young.