Objects of Substance- Shall We Dance- Year 12 Formal
Shall we dance?
1929 Sylvie Acton’s Year 12 Annual Dance Card
The School archive holds this delicate and elegant dance card, dated 17 th August, 1929. It only measures 5.5cm x11cm but it not only represents a time long gone, but also sets the stage for what was to come. What we now call the Formal with its extravagant dresses, sophisticated venues, and chic decorations, had humble beginnings. What would Sylvie Acton’s memories be of her 1929 Year 12 Annual Dance? Would it be the three dances promised to the mysterious A.T.C., the Old Time Waltz reserved for Oliver Bell, or the Assembly Hall decorated with greenery and lanterns? The Year 12 Annual Dance, or the Formal as it has been referred to since 1972, has always figured large in the hearts and minds of the graduating year.
1930 Sylvie Acton, no doubt, was more formally attired for the Sixth Form Annual Dance.
One of our earliest references to the precursor of the Formal was an article in the Brisbane Courier dated 10 October, 1908 where “Miss Wilkinson, head mistress of the Brisbane Girls Grammar School gave her pupils a most enjoyable dance last evening at the school.” Classrooms were converted into ballrooms lavishly decorated with ropes of flowers and greenery and handsome palms with Rylatt’s Orchestra providing live music.
1929 and 1930 Sixth Form Dance Cards
Over the years, there are many common elements which highlight the Sixth Form Formal: A dance committee, venue decoration, invitations, School organisation and importantly, what are you wearing? Who are you taking? However, there have been deviations from the norm.
In 1953 when a group of ten girls, with the assistance of their parents, invited five couples each to the Sixth Form Dance. Pam Thomson [nee Napier] remembers: “…ten Sixth Formers of Brisbane Girls’ Grammar School who organised a private dance which was conducted in the O’Connor Boat House on North Quay. The music was provided by the Daisy McLean Band. The parents of the girls funded both the hire of the venue and the band. It was agreed that each girl invite ten boys and girls who either attended, or had attended, GPS Schools. The parents were there to supervise the dance, as well as paying for the drinks. Alcohol was not allowed. The hostesses wore tiaras to honour the 1953 (our Senior year) … Coronation of Queen Elizabeth II. ...” (Email 26.08.21)
1953 Back: Jill Malouf, Audrey Morwood, Pam Napier, Lois Murphy, Jill Farrar, Margaret McLuckie Front: Beverley Rogers, Elizabeth Casswell, Noela Strachan, Marcia Thomas
1972 saw the formal move off the Spring Hill campus never to return. Venues included many of Brisbane’s most popular entertainment spots such as Lennons, The Oasis, Wanganui Gardens, and 29 Murray Street. It was at one of these venues where “conduct unbecoming” occurred and resulted in the Principal, Mrs Judith Hancock, banning formals and the “darkness” descended from 1986 until 1995. This was not the first time this disciplinary action was taken as girls from 1964 recalled, “The dance was grudgingly organised by the School with deep misgivings. The legend was that at a previous dance the punch was spiked so all future dances until ours were cancelled.” (1964 Reunion Recollections)
The triumphant return of the formal came in 1996. Antonia Swindells remembers many lead-up assemblies devoted to discussions of acceptable behaviour, understanding that the event was a privilege, and that they were not to spoil it for future years. The venue was the Brisbane Convention and Exhibition Centre and, over the ensuing years, the Plaza Room was transformed into many exotic locations and themes. Kathryn Talbot (2008) remembers her formal, Masquerade … “the highlights were chunky, side fringes fierce, the rhinestones blinding, and the formal may have created a national shortage in satin.” (Email 7.09.21)
2008 Masquerade Formal
The Formal Committee “came home” to Gregory Terrace in 2015 when they decided to host the Formal at the Royal International Convention Centre or the renovated RNA. Once again, girls were transported through time to mystical places and elegant settings. For over 100 years, whether in taffeta or lace, silk or satin, bright red or deep purple, Grammar girls have primped, posed, pouted, and lost sleep over partners and parties for the School formal. 2020 posed a new challenge: COVID19 restrictions, lockdowns, quarantine, social distancing, and no dancing! Fortunately, the 2021 Winter Wonderland Formal sees the return of the dance floor. Perhaps, as a celebration and a nod to our history, it should also see the return of the dance card.
1930 Sixth Form Dance card
Pauline Harvey-Short (1971) Manager, School History and Culture
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