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Samba Elástico

A figure name unattested in the standard samba vocabularies

Samba2 min read2 citations

No partnered figure named elástico is documented in the standardized syllabi of international ballroom samba, Brazilian samba de gafieira, or solo samba no pé. Dancers searching for it in any of these three lineages — the syllabus of the World Dance Council, the Rio de Janeiro gafieira tradition, or carnival samba no pé — will find no established lead-follow mechanics, count placement, or rotation attributed to the label. The canonical samba vocabulary does include precisely named traveling and spot actions: the samba bounce, botafogos, voltas, the whisk, corta-jaca, and the cruzado walks; elástico does not appear among them.

The word's dominant attestation in Brazilian movement culture lies outside dance altogether. Elástico names a football dribbling feint — a body-weight commitment in one direction followed by a sharp, elastic reversal — associated in the public imagination with players celebrated for tricks and feints.[1] The crossover of football skill-names into casual dance vocabulary is a plausible route by which a coined phrase might circulate informally, but no such figure has been codified or transmitted in the samba teaching lineages surveyed here.

The most credible dance context in which an elástico sequence might surface is competitive televised ballroom, where choreographers routinely devise and name movements that have no counterpart in social practice. Programs of this kind have generated formal recognition for their choreography: Derek Hough, who holds a record of six winning seasons on Dancing with the Stars and has received two Primetime Emmy Awards for outstanding choreography on that program, exemplifies the creative latitude that televised ballroom awards to its choreographers.[2] A figure minted in such a setting may carry an idiosyncratic name through a single broadcast season without ever entering teaching curricula or social floors.

Absent reliable attestation in any transmitted samba tradition, this entry declines to specify mechanics for elástico as a partnered figure — doing so would manufacture a technique. Readers seeking a documented samba action should work from the attested repertoire of the relevant lineage rather than treat this label as canonical.

How it's danced

Lead and follow cues

Lead

No transmitted lead is documented: 'elástico' is not an attested partnered samba figure, so no standardized leading action (frame, preparation, or redirection) can be cited. Where the term appears, it belongs to routine-specific choreography, not to a teachable social-samba lead.

Follow

No standardized following action is documented, for the same reason: any 'elástico' a follower may encounter is a coined or choreographed movement rather than a transmitted social figure with a fixed follow.

Watch out

Common mistakes

  • Treating 'elástico' as a canonical social-samba figure and improvising lead/follow mechanics for it, when no such figure is attested.
  • Conflating the Brazilian football feint 'elástico' with a partnered dance step.

Don't confuse with

Easily confused moves

  • Elástico (Brazilian football): a dribbling feint — the ball is pushed one direction and snapped back the other — strongly associated with Brazilian players; a sporting skill, not a dance figure.
  • 'Elastic' / 'elástico' used loosely to describe a stretchy contraction–release body quality; a description, not a named samba figure.
  • Botafogo, volta, and samba walk — the genuine attested samba figures a reader may actually be seeking.

References

  1. 1.RonaldinhoWikipedia contributors, Wikipedia
  2. 2.Derek HoughWikipedia contributors, Wikipedia

How to cite this article

Choose a style and copy the citation.

APA

Bailar Editorial Team. (2026). Samba Elástico. Bailar Biblioteca. Retrieved June 29, 2026, from https://bailar.site/biblioteca/move/samba-elastico-samba

MLA

Bailar Editorial Team. “Samba Elástico.” Bailar Biblioteca, 2026, bailar.site/biblioteca/move/samba-elastico-samba. Accessed 29 June 2026.

Chicago

Bailar Editorial Team. “Samba Elástico.” Bailar Biblioteca. Accessed June 29, 2026. https://bailar.site/biblioteca/move/samba-elastico-samba.

BibTeX

@misc{bailar-move-samba-elastico-samba, author = {{Bailar Editorial Team}}, title = {{Samba Elástico}}, year = {2026}, howpublished = {Bailar Biblioteca}, url = {https://bailar.site/biblioteca/move/samba-elastico-samba}, note = {Accessed: 2026-06-29} }

Editor-in-Chief: Paul Thomas Plawin

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