BBC News, South East
A sea of people in red clothes and wig danced through rain to an annual tribute to Kate Bush in a Kent Harbor.
The dance at Folkstone took place in the afternoon as a series of events were held in the UK to re -create the prestigious music video for the 1978 hit Vuttering Heights.
One of the organizers of Tobby Cotton Most of the most vutling heights dayWas told earlier BBC Radio Kent It was “something that everyone really enjoys.”
One dance took place in the afternoon and the other port will start with 16:00 BST on the hand.
The Focestone event, now in its fifth year, is part of a global event inspired by the world record attempt from the bright-based dance troupe Shambash! in 2013.
A spokesperson of the Focestone version, which began in 2018, described it as “Glstonbury Flash Mob, gets from the creed classic fandum”.
“When it came back after Kovid, people really joined and I think it was just the experience of doing something with a huge group of people – everyone was enjoying the same moment together – it was really powerful,” Sri Cotton said.
The organizers of the Folkstone event have created a directive dance video and were encouraging the participants to learn it in advance.
Bush’s song, which grew up in Kent, was based on a novel of the same name by Emily Bronte, which was first published in 1847 under her Penn name Ellis Bell.