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Radio 2's Dance Season: It's Got Bells On

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Stewart Lee Stewart Lee | 15:09 PM, Monday, 5 December 2011

Ed's note: Comedian Stewart Lee presents It's Got Bells On, a new documentary, part of the Dance Season on Ö÷²¥´óÐã Radio 2. Here he writes about his love of Morris dancing. Really - PM

Morris dancers

East Suffolk Morris men: Photo by , used under

I don't remember when I saw my first .

I think it was sometime in the early seventies. My mum was working, I wasn't yet at school, and I spent a lot of time with my grand-dad. He'd been, or maybe was still, a rep for Colman's, the Norfolk based mustard company, who had diversified into providing wine and spirits. I have memories, though they may have become semi-fictionalised, of accompanying him to rural events - hunts, fetes and festivals - in forgotten places between Birmingham and Norwich, when he was invited by virtue of some commercial connection with the booze supply.

I remember a fuzzy photograph of a brown corduroy, pre-school me with him, watching men in white on a patch of grass, leaping and dancing. I've looked for it but I can't find it. Maybe it never happened. But for me that was where the Morris was filed, for most of my life, in the seventies memories stash, in the past, something mysterious and beautiful and pastoral, and probably on the way out now, along with butterflies and wild flowers and birds that nest in hedgerows.

But, like some threatened species making a comeback, over the last decade I've noticed the Morris, and various mutated species of traditional English dance, staging a slight return.

At the folk-singer 's 60th birthday show in Oxford, ten years ago, a Morris troupe took the stage before a crowd of thousands, and again, when I saw the Carthy clan gathered at the Royal Albert Hall five year back.

A live art promoter in the village of Hovingham, on the Yorkshire moors, unexpectedly got Damian Barber's traditional dancers the to open before one of my stand-up comedy shows in the mid-noughties, stunning an initially skeptical crowd with their violent and virile performance. This year I invited the folk rock band to appear in a season of music and comedy I was curating at the South Bank center, and they brought with them the , a new all-female Morris trio.

But my fondness for The Morris was sealed six years ago.

My wife and I were married in the Forest of Dean, in her native Gloucestershire. Searching for something significant and local, she had booked the Forest Of Dean Morris Men for the reception, attended by fifty or so people, in a musky woodland cellar. We'd been married in a church that morning.

My wife's a Catholic, and I am an atheist, but nonetheless I'll happily admit that the priest gave a great service, and the ritual elements added a real significance to the ceremony. That said, the service did represent for me a compromise I suppose, of the sort one must make in a marriage. I hadn't expected it, but the appearance of the Morris men that evening somehow squared the circle, and left me feeling that the old gods, too, had been paid their due.

came out of the black November night, all in white. They were accompanied by a "beast", in their particular case a man in the costume of a bright red stag, who excited all the young ladies, and intimidated the men.

I normally hate dancing, or being the centre of attention in any way, but I felt no shame as my new wife and I were made to skip in circles round the stone walled cellar, and between and beneath sudden arches made of the Morris men's human hands, while the beast looked on approvingly and clacked its wooden hooves, draped in adoring women, scowled at by their temporarily cuckolded partners.

It's no exaggeration to say that The Morris made our day, and in the dark times of exhaustion and 3am feeds, when the romance of your first meeting seems so far away, we reach back to the symbols we laid in store to give us strength at later dates, and I see the Morris once more.

That's why, when Radio 2 asked me to narrate It's Got Bells On, I couldn't say no. I am forever in the dance's debt.

Stewart Lee is a comedian

Comments

  • Comment number 1.

    Stewart Lee's programme strove to make the honest point that morris dancing isn't about beribboned wimps in silly hats (etc.). As a morris dancer of over forty seasons, I revel in the strength, rhythm, symmetry and athleticism of morris danced well and the sheer joy of being part of a 'side' which has its act together.
    Here, however, is my point. Although morris dancers generally don't care to take themselves TOO seriously (thank God), there are dancers (and indeed whole teams) who play up the regalia, noise and antics to cover a basic lack of dancing talent. Sorry, guys and gals; of course I don't mean YOU but there is a lot of it about.
    Morris can - and should - be danced with conviction, co-ordination and a sneaking belief that it really will make the crops grow. It's also a damned good excuse for a pint, provided that you've actually earnt it.

  • Comment number 2.

    I've been morris dancing for around 10 years now. I think that the Olympics would be an amazing way to show off how an amazing British tradition that everyone can partake in.

  • Comment number 3.

    Podcast for this excellent programme would be fantastic

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