Dance HistoryAmerican SmoothAmerican Peabody

American Peabody

Also known as: Peabody

OriginUnited States
Era18901920
Rhythm4/4 time
Tempo240-248 BPM
CharacterFast, exhilarating, gliding, ragtime, American

History & Cultural Context

Peabody emerged in the United States in the early 20th century as a fast-paced one-step danced to ragtime music. Often described as a faster version of the Quickstep, the Peabody is danced at approximately 60-62 measures per minute in 4/4 time (240-248 BPM), making it one of the fastest ballroom dances. Because of the high speed, dancers frequently pass their feet rather than closing them, creating a distinctive fast, gliding motion. The dance is part of the American Smooth competition syllabus and maintains a dedicated following among advanced dancers who enjoy its exhilarating tempo.

Cultural Significance

Peabody is one of the fastest and most exhilarating ballroom dances, danced to ragtime music at tempos exceeding Quickstep. The dance emerged during the ragtime era and represents the American love of speed and energy on the dance floor.

Characteristic Movement & Technique

American Peabody is characterized by smooth, traveling movement emphasizing extended lines and controlled frame action in closed position. The dance features long, reaching steps with pronounced sway action creating an elegant, flowing aesthetic. Dancers maintain strong frame connection while executing traveling patterns that traverse the dance floor with grace and control. The movement is characterized by fluidity and extension, with dancers demonstrating clean lines and precise weight placement. The dance emphasizes the smooth American ballroom aesthetic while incorporating specific footwork patterns adapted from historical sources.

Partnering Dynamics

American Peabody partnerships maintain strong frame connection and clear lead-follow dynamics characteristic of American Smooth ballroom dancing. The leader initiates all movement through frame and body signals, guiding the follower through traveling patterns. The follower responds with matching timing and movement quality while maintaining the extended lines and smooth aesthetic. Partnership quality is evident in the connection and the follower's responsiveness to frame signals. Both partners execute their parts of patterns with synchronization and shared understanding of tempo and musicality. The dance demands partners well-trained in ballroom frame work and connection.

Competitive Context

American Peabody appears in American Smooth competitions at amateur and professional levels. Competitive American Peabody emphasizes frame control, smooth traveling action, footwork precision, and musicality. Judges evaluate the dancers' ability to execute the specific Peabody patterns with clarity and control while maintaining the smooth American ballroom aesthetic. The dance appeals to ballroom competitors interested in exploring American Smooth variations and historical ballroom traditions.

Regional Variations

American Peabody represents an American ballroom tradition with codified technique through syllabus publications. Standardization exists across regions due to ballroom syllabus codification and the role of instructors in teaching specific patterns and techniques. Some regional variation exists in styling choices and the specific variations selected for competitive performances. Modern competitive American Peabody incorporates innovations in frame work and styling while maintaining fundamental technique.

Common Misconceptions

Many dancers mistakenly believe American Peabody and International Waltz are interchangeable, when American Peabody is specifically an American Smooth variation with distinct footwork patterns and frame work. Another misconception is that American Peabody is outdated or rarely danced; the dance remains an important part of American Smooth syllabi and competition. Some assume the dance requires less skill than other American Smooth dances; executing high-quality American Peabody demands considerable technical sophistication. Others believe American Peabody is purely a historical dance; contemporary American Peabody evolves while respecting traditional technique.

Peak Popularity

1920s
70% estimated global awareness

Signature Figures

  • Basic Walk
  • Lock Step
  • Running Steps
  • Quarter Turn
  • Passing Steps

Notable Codifiers

  • American ballroom tradition
  • DVIDA (Dance Vision International Dance Association)
  • NDCA (National Dance Council of America)
  • Arthur Murray International
  • Fred Astaire Dance Studios

Dance Lineage

Track Your American Peabody Progress

Practice American Peabody figures between lessons with Figure Focus — step-by-step breakdowns, floor diagrams, and progress tracking. Free to use.

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What to Wear

Attire guidance for American Peabody and other American Smooth dances. Each card below is sized to the moment — class, practice, social, or competition — because the wardrobe shifts as the stakes do.

Reading the cards

Class — group instruction; comfort first.
Practice — rehearsal; dress like the dance.
Social — public dance floor; smart casual to formal.
Competition — judged events; rule-bound costume.

In Class

Comfortable, unrestricted clothing. Women: practice skirts or stretchy pants with a fitted top. Men: trousers and a tucked shirt or fitted T-shirt.

Social Dancing

Semi-formal to formal. Women: flowing dresses or gowns that allow open movement and turns. Men: dress shirt and slacks, or a stretch sport coat. Avoid stiff off-the-rack suit jackets — they restrict shoulder movement and spoil your frame.

Competition

Women: elegant ballgowns with float — the skirt must move beautifully during open work, spins, and shadow positions. Unlike International Standard gowns, Smooth dresses never have wings (fabric panels attached at the wrists/arms), because wings interfere with tandem work, side-by-side choreography, and turns. Men: custom "smooth suits" — suit jackets with stretch fabric, specifically tailored for dance movement. Do not wear a normal suit or tuxedo: off-the-rack formalwear is cut for standing, not dancing, and will bunch at the shoulders and restrict your frame. A proper smooth suit jacket moves with you.

Shoes

Women: closed-toe or open-toe court shoes with 2–2.5" heels, suede soles. Men: Standard ballroom shoes with a low (1") heel. Smooth sole for gliding.

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In Practice

Practice skirt that mimics gown weight (so followers learn to manage float during open work), fitted top, low court heel for women. Leaders in stretch trousers and a tucked shirt — Smooth practice should rehearse in something close to the line a smooth-suit jacket creates.

By Role

Leaders

Class: Fitted shirt tucked into stretch trousers. A practice vest can stand in for the smooth suit jacket when working on frame.

Competition: Custom smooth suit — a dance jacket cut from stretch fabric, more contemporary than a tailsuit, often without tails. Some smooth suits are short and trim like a modern dinner jacket; others use longer skirting closer to a frock coat. Stretch panels under the arms and across the back let the jacket open with the body during shadow walks and tandem turns. Off-the-rack tuxedos collapse the line and trap the shoulders — a smooth suit is a different garment.

Followers

Class: Fitted top with a practice gown skirt that has real weight to it — Smooth choreography sweeps the skirt through bigger arcs than Standard, and the body learns that with fabric to manage.

Competition: Wingless ballgown with heavy float in the skirt and a clean upper body. Sleeves are cap-length, three-quarter, sleeveless, or sheer mesh — never wings. Wings would catch the leader's hand during a hand change, drag across the face during a spin, and restrict open arm extensions. Color and styling skew warmer and more individual than Standard.

Tailsuit vs Smooth Suit · Wings vs No Wings

International Standard vs American Smooth

International Standard

  • Leader: Tailsuit (white tie). Tailcoat with stretch panels — not a tuxedo.
  • Follower: Ballgown with wings — fabric panels at wrist or upper arm.
  • Frame: Permanent closed hold — wings work because frame never breaks.

American Smooth

  • Leader: Smooth suit — stretch dance jacket, often without tails.
  • Follower: Ballgown without wings — arms must be free to leave the frame.
  • Frame: Opens for tandem walks, shadow positions, and free turns.

American Smooth and International Standard share four dances (Waltz, Tango, Foxtrot, Viennese Waltz) and almost nothing else. Standard's wardrobe (tailsuit, winged gown) supports a permanent closed hold. Smooth's wardrobe (smooth suit, wingless gown) supports choreography that breaks the frame on purpose — open work, tandem walks, shadow positions, and free turns. Wearing a Standard tailsuit or a winged gown to a Smooth event will look out of place at best, and will tangle your own choreography at worst.

Common Pitfalls

  • Wearing an off-the-rack tuxedo: shoulders bunch, chest pulls tight, frame collapses on raised arms.
  • Wearing a winged Standard gown to a Smooth event — wings will catch on the leader's hand during hand changes and drag during free turns.
  • Borrowing a Standard tailsuit; Smooth suits are cut differently for the open phases of the dance.
  • Wearing a belt with the trousers — creates a horizontal break in the line; use suspenders instead.

Price Range

  • Budget: Practice gown skirt $80–150; entry men's stretch trousers and tucked shirt $100–200; entry court shoes $90–140.
  • Mid: Off-the-rack smooth suits and gowns $800–2,500; mid-tier shoes $150–250.
  • Premium: Bespoke smooth suit $1,500–3,500; custom Smooth gown $3,000–8,000+; premium ballroom shoes $250–400.

Key Terms

Smooth suit
Custom dance jacket in stretch fabric — more contemporary than a tailsuit, often without tails. The men's competition garment for American Smooth.
Wings (and why Smooth has none)
Fabric panels attached at wrist or upper arm. Standard gowns use them; Smooth gowns never do because Smooth choreography breaks frame and wings would tangle.
Float
Layered soft fabric in the gown's skirt that creates a controlled wake during travel — Smooth often uses heavier float than Standard because the choreography sweeps the skirt through bigger arcs.

Quick Tips

  • Suede-soled shoes allow controlled sliding and pivoting — essential for most partner dances.
  • Avoid rubber soles on dance floors; they grip too much and can cause knee injuries.
  • Bring a separate pair of clean shoes for the dance floor to keep it in good condition.

Recommended Gear for American Peabody

Essential equipment and apparel selected for dancers learning American Peabody.

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Pro Tan Instant Competition Color

Pro Tan

accessories

Under $50

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Jan Tana Ultra 1 Competition Tan

Jan Tana

accessories

Under $50

Image unavailable

Dream Tan #2 Gold Brown

Dream Tan

accessories

Under $50

Image unavailable

Swarovski Crystal Rhinestone Pack (1440pc)

Swarovski

accessories

$50–$100

Image unavailable

E6000 Craft Adhesive

E6000

accessories

Under $50

Image unavailable

Rhinestone Applicator Wand

BeJeweler

accessories

Under $50

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Sources & Further Reading

Official References & Syllabi

For competitive dances, official technique and choreographic standards are maintained by:

  • • ISTD (Imperial Society of Teachers of Dancing) and WDSF (World DanceSport Federation) official syllabi and technique manuals
  • • DVIDA (Dance Vision International Dance Association) materials for American dance variants
  • • USA Dance and other national governing body resources
  • • WDC (World Dance Council) competition rules and adjudication standards

Cultural & Historical Context

American Peabody emerged from United States during the 1890s—1920s. Understanding the cultural roots, musical traditions, and social circumstances of this era enriches appreciation for the dance's characteristics and significance.

Formative Influences

Codifiers & Standardizers:

American ballroom tradition, DVIDA (Dance Vision International Dance Association), NDCA (National Dance Council of America), Arthur Murray International, Fred Astaire Dance Studios

Signature Movement Vocabulary:

Basic Walk, Lock Step, Running Steps, Quarter Turn, Passing Steps

Primary Source Documents

The LODance Library contains original syllabi, instructional materials, and published references for dance technique and history. Search by dance name or codifier to discover primary source documents.

Last reviewed: May 2026 — This dance profile synthesizes historical research, cultural documentation, and contemporary practice knowledge to provide authoritative context.

What did dancers wear?

American Peabody belongs to the Modern Competition (1950s–present) era. See how attire shaped the choreography — and the other way around.

Explore Modern Competition attire →