THE STROLL - ORIGINAL FROM 1958 AMERICAN BANDSTAND

In the dance, two lines of dancers, men on one side and women on the other, face each other, moving in place to the music. Each paired couple then steps out and does a more elabarate dance up and down between the rows of dancers.
Music: "Stroll" Diamonds, "C.C. Rider" Chuck Willis, "Walking to New Orleans" Fats Domino, "Midnight Stroll," Revels
Type: Contra lines
Level: Beginner
Choreographer: Unknown
Counts: Basic: 12, center walk: 6
BPM: 120
A hip update of the old Virginia Reel, the Stroll features dancers forming tight contra lines, creating a lane down the middle wide enough to allow two to stroll down the aisle. Popularized through exposure on the daily American Bandstand program in late 1957, the Stroll stands as one of the few nationally-popular line dances of the 50s and 60s, rivaled in prominence only by the earlier Bunny Hop and the subsequent Hully Gully. Grab your partner--c’mon, baby, let’s Stroll!
BASIC PATTERN - RIGHT SIDE TOWARD FRONT OF LINE
To coincide with the song’s beat, start dance with a timing step out with right foot. Execute this step only once at the beginning of the song. Repeat basic continuously until you perform aisle walk.
AISLE WALK - RIGHT SIDE TOWARD FRONT OF LINE
Count 1 on aisle walk replaces count 4 on basic pattern. Complete basic pattern steps 1,2, and 3, then head down the aisle! When you reach the end of the line traveling down the middle, fold into contra lines and pick up basic pattern when comfortable.