I teach swing dance to adults. We usually use a room in a beautifully refurbished historic hotel (part of a small chain). Genuinely concerned as to whether it will survive, the refurb must’ve cost a fortune. I expect all the hotel staff are furloughed though, so at least they have some income.
Globally this will change our dance community for many, many years. A massive 5 week festival in Sweden has been cancelled for the first time in its 38 year history. Top teachers travel internationally and so do many students, with many more travelling nationally multiple times a year.
We’ll be OK down at the local level (although we’ll be one of the last activities to resume because a partnered social dance class literally means touching the hands of 30 plus strangers) because we aren’t reliant on it for sole income and can build back up from the bottom if necessary.
It’s very sad that a dance that has been around since the 1930s, with an international community behind it, is having to go dormant in this way. It will change everything really, as even when this virus is no longer a threat, there will always be the worry of another global pandemic.
Still, change doesn’t have to be all bad, so I am sure we will grow and develop in different ways to before, with more focus on local and smaller scale national events.
(Replying to this thread has reminded me to check in with our South Korean counterparts, so thanks for the prompt!)