Latest news with #conga
Yahoo
17-05-2025
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
When an attempt to break a world record in Bournemouth was a 'miserable failure'
The summer sun beat down on Bournemouth during what was hoped to be a record-breaking spectacle. Alas, the ambitious attempt to forge the world's longest conga line, a highlight of the Bournemouth Regatta and Carnival on August 7, 1979, unravelled into what was unceremoniously dubbed a "miserable failure." These were the stark, and perhaps ironically delivered, words of the event's compere, the aptly-named Tony Fail. He, more than anyone, felt the sting as the final count revealed a conga chain that fell short by a staggering margin of more than 7,500 participants. The vision had been grand - a joyous, snaking line of thousands, jigging and jogging their way into the annals of history. The reality, however, was a far more modest affair. A respectable, yet ultimately insufficient, 1,478 enthusiastic individuals joined the line-up on that fateful day. Their collective energy, while admirable, was simply not enough to eclipse the formidable record of 8,000, proudly held by the seaside resort of Sidmouth.. The target remained tantalisingly out of reach, a distant dream dissolving in the summer haze. Mr Fail, tasked with galvanising the crowds and narrating the hopeful triumph, was left instead to dissect the downfall. He laid the blame squarely at the feet of the thousands of onlookers who, despite lining the route, chose spectating over participating. His disappointment was palpable as he lamented to the Daily Echo. "The sheer number of people who turned out to watch was astounding," he recounted, a note of frustration lacing his tone. "There must have been at least 2,000 souls gathered at the Pier Approach alone, and the clifftops were absolutely teeming with faces. Spectators, standing three deep, flanked both sides of our intended conga path along the promenade." His voice carried the weight of what might have been. "I feel sure, with absolute conviction," he continued, his gaze sweeping over the now-dispersing crowd, "that if every single one of those onlookers had cast aside their inhibitions and joined our merry chain, we wouldn't just have broken the record – we would have obliterated it. We could have easily boasted a magnificent line of at least 10,000 participants, a truly unforgettable sight for Bournemouth." But it was not to be. The day that had dawned with such vibrant promise ended with a whimper, a tale of what-ifs and a reminder that records are not broken by observation alone, but by the collective will and active participation of the many. For Bournemouth in the summer of '79, the conga dream remained just that – a dream, danced by too few. In a seaside spectacle that promised a pulsating ribbon of revelry, the ambitious attempt to forge a record-breaking conga chain in Bournemouth, unfortunately, and quite spectacularly, unravelled into what was succinctly described as a "miserable failure."


BBC News
09-05-2025
- Entertainment
- BBC News
Iconic VE Day Leicester Clock Tower conga picture recreated
An iconic picture of revellers celebrating VE Day by dancing a conga around the Clock Tower in Leicester has been recreated on its 80th Radio Leicester tracked down a number of people in the picture to recreate the dance in the city centre on Kempton-Hayes said she remembered her favourite aunt, Jean Smith, being in the conga, and she can be seen wearing a soldier's Glengarry hat in the picture from said: "[Jean] found it memorable because it happened spontaneously." Jill, from Syston in Leicestershire, said the photograph was well known within her family. She said: "Jean was on the buses as a conductor, that was how she came to be in the photograph because she'd come into town to the bus station to see what her next rota was and got caught up in it."Jill said her aunt had talked about the VE day celebrations on anniversaries over the added: "She was a bit of a rebel, she pushed the boundaries so I think she would be very proud and pleased to know that she's still remembered for that photograph."Life wouldn't be as it is today if it wasn't for that occasion." Also identified in the photo was Sheila niece Julia French, from Evington, said she remembered her aunt talking about the day."She told us how exciting it was, how fun it was, the noise, the elation," she said."I think she and her friend skipped out of work to do the conga."Julia said looking at the photograph now, she felt "proud"."To think that today we are walking in their footsteps," Julia added. "She loved a party."Among the other people identified in the 1945 photo were Jean Carter, who was then aged 15, Dennis Hastings, Doris Brown, Iris Smith, Peggy Cort and police officer Percy reporting by Ady Dayman and Matt Smith