
Shanghai's elderly waltz back to the past at lunchtime dance halls
The Peninsula
Shanghai: A group of retirees cheered under disco lights as 60 year old Xu Li leapt into her partner s arms, her legs spread akimbo in perfect splits....
Shanghai: A group of retirees cheered under disco lights as 60-year-old Xu Li leapt into her partner's arms, her legs spread akimbo in perfect splits.
It was just a regular Wednesday at one of Shanghai's many lunchtime dance clubs, a phenomenon born of the city's deeply rooted love of ballroom culture from its jazz-age heyday.
On any given day, multiple venues host hours-long daytime sessions across the finance hub, some starting as early as 6 am.
Establishments such as the historic Paramount Ballroom are time capsules from the 1930s, while others flash with neon pink and green rave lights in the early afternoon.
All are important spaces for their mostly elderly clientele to socialise and reclaim the past through the medium of foxtrot, rumba and polka.













