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Hoopsters animate ring 'round middle

A fad from a past generation resurfaces as a tool for fitness - and for coolness

January 15, 2008|By Julie Scharper , Sun reporter

About two dozen women and men trooped into a Charles Village church on a recent afternoon to slough off winter pounds and become more in touch with their bodies.

They did not use complicated exercise machines or torturous-looking Pilates devices, but something far more friendly and familiar: the hula hoop.

"I hate the thought of going to the gym, but pick up a hoop and it can be playtime," said Noelle Powers, 30, who is teaching the six-week course. "It's a great way to burn calories and strengthen muscles, especially core muscles, and it can be very meditative."

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The hula hoop, the baby boomers' beloved toy, is back. Hooping classes are popping up at gyms and community centers around the country, including several in the Baltimore-Washington area. Hipsters tote hoops to concerts and dance clubs. And many celebrities are giving the hoop a whirl, including musician Beyonce, who reportedly uses it to maintain her famously "bootylicious" figure.

"People didn't even imagine that you could do things like this with a hula hoop," said Rayna McInturf, founder of Hoopnotica, a California-based hooping school.

While advanced dancers pull off elaborate tricks - such as twirling a hoop on their feet while standing on their heads - most of the students in Powers' first class were looking to nail down the basics and enjoy a fun workout.

As they picked out hoops, twins Jeannette Young-Wingfield and Jean Faulcon, 56, reminisced about growing up in the 1950s.

"All the little girls would get together and hula hoop," Faulcon said. "I loved the `swish swish' sound that it made."

Hoops for adults are wider and heavier than those for kids, which makes them easier to spin around a larger waist. And fans usually just call them "hoops" - since they aren't a part of the traditional Hawaiian hula dance.

The Hula-Hoop was introduced in 1958 by the Wham-O company of California, producers of other childhood delights such as the Slip-n-Slide and the Frisbee. More than 20 million hoops were sold in the first six months of production, according to Wham-O marketing associate Martin Marechal.

The Hula-Hoop became an iconic toy of the day and is often noted, along with flagpole-sitting and goldfish-swallowing, as one of the great fads of the 20th century. Sales dropped in the early 1960s, Marechal said.

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