Tom DeLay isn’t alone. While the former House majority leader had a quick fall from grace on Dancing With the Stars—stress fractures in both feet caused him to drop out early—a lot of fancy footwork is going on in political circles (and not just in the health-care-bill negotiations).
President Obama, who danced onstage with Ellen DeGeneres to Beyoncé’s “Crazy in Love,” has a classically trained ballet dancer heading the White House staff: Rahm Emanuel studied dance throughout his Chicago childhood and was offered a scholarship with the Joffrey Ballet. We even hear that Emanuel worked with a private ballet instructor at a downtown DC studio in recent years.
In his years on Saturday Night Live, Minnesota senator Al Franken danced up a storm, including in a memorable sketch where he played Rolling Stones frontman Mick Jagger.
GOP senator Jim DeMint of South Carolina helped his mother run a dance studio out of their house as a child and still loves doing his home state’s official dance—the Carolina shag.
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton busted a move twice on an August trip to Africa, prompting husband Bill Clinton, at a Harlem event, to compliment her on her ability to “boogie.”
Fresh from her Supreme Court confirmation, Sonia Sotomayor cut a rug to celebrate Labor Day weekend at DC’s Irish Channel Pub. Then days after her investiture, in her first outing as a justice at the National Hispanic Foundation for the Arts gala, she danced the mambo with actor Esai Morales (see photo on page 107).
According to Peter DiMuro, director of Dance/MetroDC, dancing and politics are a natural fit—even if DeLay’s cha-cha needs some work.
Says DiMuro: “You learn how to partner, to lead, to follow, to collaborate.”
This article first appeared in the November 2009 issue of The Washingtonian. For more articles from that issue, click here.
Tom and Rahm Do It—Who Else Has Dance Fever?
Tom DeLay isn’t alone. While the former House majority leader had a quick fall from grace on Dancing With the Stars—stress fractures in both feet caused him to drop out early—a lot of fancy footwork is going on in political circles (and not just in the health-care-bill negotiations).
President Obama, who danced onstage with Ellen DeGeneres to Beyoncé’s “Crazy in Love,” has a classically trained ballet dancer heading the White House staff: Rahm Emanuel studied dance throughout his Chicago childhood and was offered a scholarship with the Joffrey Ballet. We even hear that Emanuel worked with a private ballet instructor at a downtown DC studio in recent years.
In his years on Saturday Night Live, Minnesota senator Al Franken danced up a storm, including in a memorable sketch where he played Rolling Stones frontman Mick Jagger.
GOP senator Jim DeMint of South Carolina helped his mother run a dance studio out of their house as a child and still loves doing his home state’s official dance—the Carolina shag.
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton busted a move twice on an August trip to Africa, prompting husband Bill Clinton, at a Harlem event, to compliment her on her ability to “boogie.”
Fresh from her Supreme Court confirmation, Sonia Sotomayor cut a rug to celebrate Labor Day weekend at DC’s Irish Channel Pub. Then days after her investiture, in her first outing as a justice at the National Hispanic Foundation for the Arts gala, she danced the mambo with actor Esai Morales (see photo on page 107).
According to Peter DiMuro, director of Dance/MetroDC, dancing and politics are a natural fit—even if DeLay’s cha-cha needs some work.
Says DiMuro: “You learn how to partner, to lead, to follow, to collaborate.”
This article first appeared in the November 2009 issue of The Washingtonian. For more articles from that issue, click here.
More>> Capital Comment Blog | News & Politics | Party Photos
Most Popular in News & Politics
The Shutdown Is About to Get Really Bad, Shootings Plagued DC Over the Weekend, and a Furloughed Fed Flogs Frankfurters
Some DC Residents Are Actually Leaving the Country
A Bizarre Taco Bell-Fueled Ultramarathon Is Coming to DC
Can Jay Jones Still Win?
Most Powerful Women in Washington 2025
Washingtonian Magazine
November Issue: Top Doctors
View IssueSubscribe
Follow Us on Social
Follow Us on Social
Related
This Unusual Virginia Business Offers Shooting and Yoga
Why Is Studio Theatre’s David Muse Stepping Down?
Want to Live in a DC Firehouse?
DC Punk Explored in Three New History Books
More from News & Politics
Winsome Earle-Sears’s Bus Caught on Fire, Noem Declines Request to Stop Tear-Gassing Chicagoans Over Halloween, and Kennedy Center Ticket Sales Plummet
Guest List: 5 People We’d Love to Hang Out With This November
White House Says It Posts “Banger Memes,” National Guard Troops Will Stand Around in DC Until February, Police Say Naked Man Terrorized Area Walmart Customers
Photos: Thousands Turn Out for DC’s Annual High Heel Race
Sandwich Guy Skeletons Are This Halloween’s Must-Have Decoration in DC
Judge Blocks Shutdown Layoffs, Border Patrol Urged to Stop Tear-Gassing Children, Post Editorial Board Keeps Forgetting to Mention Owner’s Economic Interests
Meet Adelita Grijalva, the Arizona Congresswoman-Elect Who Can’t Take Her Seat
Federal Food Aid Is About to Run Out, Trump Wants to Know What Happened to Jimmy Hoffa, and Albert Pike’s Statue Is Back in DC