The Morrissance: Morris dancingâs inclusive revival
When you think of the English tradition of Morris dancing, you might not picture a group of young, gender non-conforming, drag kings who dress like âchimney sweepsâ â but that will be because youâve not seen Molly No-Mates.
The Bristol team â or side â represents the changing face of Morris, a tradition in which men no longer make up the majority of participants for the first time in UK history.
For co-founder Scarlett Hutchin, it was a counter protest outside a drag queen story time in Bristol that sparked the idea of a queer-friendly Morris side.
The events see a drag queen reading a book to children with the goal of promoting reading and diversity, but some have seen backlash from the public.
âI was texting with my friend from my Morris team and I was just like, âwhat would really improve the situation? Morris dancingâ,â says Scarlett.
âOne of the traditions of Molly [a type of Morris], is to dance to just singing and thatâs what we do. And we can have these dances that we can take to the protests that donât require instruments and donât require things that are offensive weapons.
âIt gives us scope to make our values and our point of view very visible, because when you have songs, you have words.
âPretty much all of our songs are in some way feminist or queer or leftist.â
Morris dancing is a form of traditional English folk dance that takes a variety of styles depending on where the group has come from.
For example, Border Morris, originating in the Welsh border counties of Shropshire, Herefordshire and Gloucestershire, features performers who wear tatter coats and often paint their faces or use other forms of disguise.
By contrast, Clog Step is a dance style with percussive footwork and fine timing.
Scarlett feels Molly No-Mates is part of the âcultural momentâ Morris is experiencing, and points to last yearâs Brit Awards where Stroud-based group Boss Morris danced on stage with Wet Leg, who won Best New Artist and Group of the Year.
âOne of the things thatâs bringing a lot of people kind of back to folk⊠is people want to have some kind of culture,â Scarlett says.
âAnd thereâs this idea that England doesnât have any culture which is just not true. Itâs just that itâs really neglected.â
According to the 2023 Morris Census, the proportion of female members in Morris in the UK had risen from 46% in 2014 to 50.6% in 2023.
In 2020, its questions were tweaked to include the number of ânon-binary/otherâ members.
An estimated 0.8% of UK sidesâ members were reported in this category in 2023, up from 0.5% in 2020.
Molly No-Mates, which formed in May 2023 in north Bristol, had just two members when it started â hence the âno-matesâ. Now they number ten and are around â80% non binary or otherâ.
âIt feels like weâre kind of bringing visible queerness into spaces that donât always have it that much,â Scarlett says.
She describes their outfits as looking like â19th century chimney sweepsâ, donning black shorts or trousers, a white top, braces, and a flat cap.
Colin Andrews is an administrator at the Morris Dances & Teams Database and started teaching Morris dancing in 1990.
The site, which started in early 2018, provides an easily searchable database of all Morris teams worldwide.
âFrom about the mid 20s right the way through to the early 70s, Morris was regarded as being exclusively male,â he says.
âThe [incoming] Squire Elect [leader] for the Morris Ring is a woman⊠itâs moving away from being gender specific.
âI would say probably over the past five years many of the male-only Cotswold Morris sides have gone mixed, and that basically was itâs either a case of going mixed or folding⊠[they] just werenât getting enough new new members in.â
Morris is an âevolving traditionâ, Colin says, and he thinks itâs interesting to see teams develop their own interpretations of the dance.
âI think the question is whether these innovations will continue or whether they will just last as long as that particular team lasts,â he says.
âBut I think itâs a good thing that people try experimenting with different things.â
Since Molly No-Mates started, Scarlett says the side has received a âreally positive responseâ from a lot of traditional teams.
âIn August we were dancing at Northgate Folk Festival in Chester⊠and there was a lovely traditional old, white menâs team and they said theyâd arrived several hours early to see us.â
One of the most distinct elements of traditional Molly dancing is the use of cross-dressing, according to the English Folk Dance and Song Society.
At least one â but sometimes several â of the team members dress in womenâs clothing.
They say 19th Century Molly groups took pride in the appearance of their crossdressing âMollâ, competing amongst themselves to see who could produce the best dressed â and this is probably where the name Molly comes from.
In the past the term molly was an offensive word aimed at gay men, or men who carried out tasks considered to be womenâs work, such as cooking or clothes washing.
In the 18th and early 19th centuries, molly houses were locations where âmolliesâ, or queer men, met for companionship and sex.
They could be in pubs, taverns, inns or coffee houses.
Sam Murphy, who identifies as gender fluid, is Squire of Bristol-based Border Morris team, Kittiwake.
They took up Morris dancing despite having no family background in it.
âThe key things that youâd need to enjoy are moving around a lot and looking a bit funny,â Sam advises aspiring beginners.
âThe people Iâve met from it have been just the most lovely people.
âThereâs no gatekeeping, [thereâs no] âYouâre not committed enough, so you canât do thisâ. Itâs very supportive.
âAnd certainly in the circles that Iâve been in⊠there is more acceptance and openness, and people are more comfortable expressing themselves in things outside the gender binary.â
The three main organisations in the UK that support Morris and traditional dance teams are The Morris Federation, The Morris Ring, and Open Morris.
They come together as the âJoint Morris Organisationsâ to discuss issues that affect all of their members.
Nigel Strudwick, current Squire of the Morris Ring, says that the Morris world is changing and that the Morris Ring is âdelightedâ to see the traditions move forward.
âWe welcome everyone who would like to try out Morris dancing regardless of background, and itâs good to see new teams being formed to cater for those who might otherwise have felt there is nothing in the Morris for them.
âLong may this continue.â