Titanic
Beginner Level
The foundation — what every new dancer needs to know
The iconic forward lean where the follower extends forward with the leader supporting from behind — yes, like the movie, but harder.
Beginner focus
This is a master figure. Build foundations first: strong counterbalance in all directions, comfortable leans, and deep trust with your practice partner. A preparation exercise: leader stands behind the follower, hands on her hips. She leans forward 10 degrees. Leader supports. Hold for 4 counts. Return to vertical. This micro-titanic teaches the body mechanics without the drama.
Tips
- •Leader: your hips should be directly behind the follower's hips. If you're offset, the counterbalance fails and you're using arm strength instead of structural support.
- •Follower: extend with an engaged core, not a collapsed one. Think of a plank facing downward, not a wet noodle drooping forward.
- •The titanic is a moment, not a figure. Use it once in a dance at the perfect musical moment. Using it twice is redundant.
Common mistakes
- •Leader supporting with arms only — legs and core must bear the primary load
- •Going to maximum extension on the first attempt instead of building depth gradually
- •Follower tensing up and gripping the leader instead of extending freely with engaged core
- •Not having a practiced entry and exit — improvising the titanic is a recipe for injury
- •Attempting the titanic on a dance floor without checking for surrounding couples
Practice drill
Start with a 10-degree forward lean held for 8 counts. Increase by 5 degrees each repetition until either partner feels unstable. Note the maximum comfortable angle. Over multiple sessions, gradually push this angle deeper. The goal isn't a specific degree — it's a consistent, comfortable, trust-filled extension that both partners enjoy.