The Last Galop
The Last Galop, engraving by W.S. Palimer, Sr., after a drawing by Frederick Barnard.
galop
dance
galop, lively and playful social dance, possibly of Hungarian origin, that was popular as a ballroom dance in 19th-century England and France. Except for accent, it bore similarities to both the polka and the waltz.
- Key People:
- Emil Waldteufel
- Related Topics:
- dance
- Western dance
- ballroom dance
In performing the galop, the man put his right hand around his partner’s waist and with his left hand held her right hand; the couple danced the galop’s simple step side by side—slide (or glide), close (chassé), slide—around the ballroom to music in 2/4 time. The galop often served as the last dance in a ball. Its spirited rhythm occurs in the finale of Amilcare Ponchielli’s Dance of the Hours and in many ballets, where the basic ballroom step is elaborated for theatrical effect.