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Fan

Cha-cha open-position fan ending

Cha chaLevel: Beginner1 min read2 citations

See it danced

Video demo

Demonstration tutorial on YouTube.

The Fan is a foundational cha-cha partner figure from open facing position in which the leader redirects the follower into fan position at his left side, creating a side-by-side offset shape rather than a completed closed hold. Cha-cha developed from Cuban dance and music practice in the early 1950s, with the triple step associated with the dance’s characteristic chassé rhythm.[1] In the figure, the partners keep mirrored foot use: the leader begins with a forward break on the left foot while the follower begins with a back break on the right, then the leader uses the connection to invite the follower’s leftward rotation into the opened side position. The rotation is staged rather than whipped: the follower turns about a quarter into the opening through the first two steps, then completes roughly another quarter during the chassé to finish in fan position, about a half-turn total. The timing normally follows international-style cha-cha phrasing, counted 2, 3, 4&1, where the chassé carries the quick-quick action that distinguishes the dance from mambo-derived two-step patterns.[2]

How it's danced

Lead and follow cues

CountInternational-style cha-cha: 2, 3, 4&1. The break action occurs on count 2; count 3 replaces; 4&1 is the chassé that completes the fan ending. If adapted to social cha-cha counted 1, 2, 3&4, the same mechanics shift as a whole phrase rather than changing the break relationship.

Lead

Count 2: from open facing position, step forward on the left foot with a contained forward break, keeping the joined hand elastic. Count 3: replace weight back to the right foot and begin opening the follower toward the leader's left side. Counts 4&1: chassé left-right-left, shaping the connection so the follower turns left in stages into fan position beside the leader; finish with the leader facing generally toward the follower, not pulling her past the side line.

Follow

Count 2: from open facing position, step back on the right foot with a contained back break, matching the leader's break direction from the follower's own body perspective. Count 3: replace weight forward to the left foot and allow the body to begin rotating left toward the leader's left side. Counts 4&1: chassé right-left-right while completing the leftward rotation into fan position; finish offset beside the leader with tone through the connected arm and weight settled on the final step.

Song timingBest at moderate cha-cha tempos where 2, 3, 4&1 can be articulated cleanly, roughly 112-128 bpm for ballroom cha-cha; faster recordings require a smaller chassé and more compact arm lead.

Learn first

Prerequisites

  • Open facing position
  • Cha-cha basic timing
  • Forward and back break action
  • Compact chassé
  • Light hand connection

Watch out

Common mistakes

  • Follower stepping forward on the first break instead of breaking back on the right foot.
  • Leader pulling the follower across the body rather than opening her into a side fan position.
  • Treating the rotation as one late turn instead of a staged left rotation through count 3 and the chassé.
  • Overextending the connected arm, which collapses timing and makes the fan shape unstable.
  • Rushing 4&1 so the chassé loses the quick-quick-slow cha-cha character.

Don't confuse with

Easily confused moves

  • Cross-body lead: travels through a slot and exchanges ends; Fan opens the follower to the leader's side.
  • Alemana: a turning figure that sends the follower through a different pathway rather than stopping in fan position.
  • Hockey stick: commonly begins from fan position but is not the fan itself.
  • Salsa fan styling: an arm or body styling label, not the ballroom cha-cha Fan figure.

Around the world

Other names

  • International Latin ballroom

    Fan

    Standard English syllabus name.

  • American Rhythm ballroom

    Fan

    Used for the comparable cha-cha figure or fan ending in American-style teaching.

  • Spanish-language ballroom instruction

    Abanico

    Attested as the Spanish ballroom rendering of Fan; not a generic social-dance translation to be assumed in all scenes.

References

  1. 1.wikipedia.org
  2. 2.danzaacademy.com

How to cite this article

Choose a style and copy the citation.

APA

Bailar Editorial Team. (2026). Fan. Bailar Biblioteca. Retrieved July 4, 2026, from https://getbailar.com/biblioteca/move/chacha-fan

MLA

Bailar Editorial Team. “Fan.” Bailar Biblioteca, 2026, getbailar.com/biblioteca/move/chacha-fan. Accessed 4 July 2026.

Chicago

Bailar Editorial Team. “Fan.” Bailar Biblioteca. Accessed July 4, 2026. https://getbailar.com/biblioteca/move/chacha-fan.

BibTeX

@misc{bailar-move-chacha-fan, author = {{Bailar Editorial Team}}, title = {{Fan}}, year = {2026}, howpublished = {Bailar Biblioteca}, url = {https://getbailar.com/biblioteca/move/chacha-fan}, note = {Accessed: 2026-07-04} }

Editor-in-Chief: Paul Thomas Plawin

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