The dances are graceful, but virile. Music is to the pipe-and- tabor, melodeon or fiddle. The dancers are often accompanied by a bizarre "Beast", and sometimes even a "Fool" dressed in an old farmers smock and carrying an inflated sheeps bladder.
A special highlight of the Spring season is May Day, when we "dance up the dawn" usually accompanied by the famous "Green Man". Around Easter, a PACE-EGGING MUMMERS PLAY is also performed.
During the Winter Solstice, we perform our mid-winter, DEATH-&-RESURRECTION MUMMERS PLAY.
Around Plough Monday (the first Monday after 12th night), we perform MOLLY DANCING from East Anglia.
For this, the men, dressed in old farmers clothes and with blackened faces, typically carry a plough from door-to-door, performing a strange, stamping dance lead by the "head" couple - the King and the Molly (a "man-woman").
The photo to the right was taken in 1992 during our inaugural Molly dance-out, an event which has now become a regular, annual event. The dances come from the villages of Girton and Comberton, near Cambridge.
We also perform the "WOOING" MUMMERS PLAY from Bassingham.