If you weren’t line dancing at honkytonks in the 1990s to “Achy Breaky Heart,” the name Diane Horner probably means nothing to you.
But her face might ring a bell.
She was the Midwestern fitness instructor in the red cowgirl boots and the Dorothy Hamill haircut who patiently explained how to string together the grapevine, rock and kick to master the Electric Slide’s country cousin, all while flaunting her sassy bandanna in the back pocket of her denim cutoffs.
Her first instructional country line dancing video in 1992 became an on-the-spot smash, selling more than 1 million copies. She appeared on a TV informercial that aired thousands of times.
Horner went on to star in more than a dozen other dance videos, teaching newbies in their living rooms the moves she learned from the boot-scuffing college kids who flocked the now-defunct Cowboy dance club in downtown Minneapolis. What made her videos unique at the time was her insistence that the camera shoot her from the back so people could more easily follow her feet.
With her sculpted thighs and precisely applied cherry-red lipstick, Horner, then in her mid-40s, couldn’t board a plane or walk down the street without someone shouting, “You’re the dance lady on TV!”
“It was kind of like disco,” Horner recalls of the peak of ‘90s line dancing. “We thought it was never going to end.”
It did end, of course. After a few years, the trend flamed out after an inescapable bang. (“The Macarena,” she reminds me.)