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Attitudes.


The 20th century could--at least in the Western world-be called the Century of the Woman. It was a century of emancipation and universal suffrage, women's rights The effort to secure equal rights for women and to remove gender discrimination from laws, institutions, and behavioral patterns.

The women's rights movement began in the nineteenth century with the demand by some women reformers for the right to vote, known as suffrage, and
, feminism, and, at least on paper, equal opportunity, if not equal wages. But despite any glass ceiling, it was a century of enormous progress for women. This progress was also evident in the arts, particularly dance, which during that very same century happened to be the emergent and rising art form. As Maurice Bejart put it, "In the theater, if the 19th century was the Century of Opera, then the 20th century was the Century of Dance." During the entire 20th century it was women who were fundamentally the movers and shakers, the pioneers and leaders.

In modern dance--from Isadora Duncan, Loie Fuller, Mary Wigman, and Ruth St. Denis Denis, king of Portugal: see Diniz.  through to Martha Graham, Doris Humphrey, and Hanya Holm--women not only led the field, they actually planted it. One might point to the likes of Ted Shawn, Harald Kreutzberg, and Charles Weidman, and most certainly in the second generation, to Kurt Jooss, Jose Limon, and Alwin Nikolais. All had their place as modern dance leaders. Nevertheless, when the dance community thought of modern dance, it thought of Isadora, Miss Ruth, Martha, Wigman (did anyone dare to call her Mary?) and Doris, with the men coming up as the second-violin section.

The picture in classical ballet, as far as pioneering went, was much the same. In Russia, Denmark, and France, where ballet was well established and publicly subsidized before the 20th century, men continued to dominate artistically and organizationally. Although even here, largely as a long-lasting afterglow afterglow

small amounts of light emitted by a phosphor after the stimulating radiation has ceased. Seen in x-ray intensifying screens and fluoroscopic screens.
 of 19th-century Romanticism, the stage spotlight remained fixed on the ballerina, that almost fetishist figure of male adoration and female emulation, with her toe shoes and magic tutu tutu

coriariaarborea.
.

In English-speaking nations, a remarkable race of women pioneers came along, the likes of Marie Rambert and Ninette de Valois Dame Ninette de Valois, OM, CH, DBE (June 6, 1898 – March 8, 2001) was the founder of London's renowned Royal Ballet. Born Edris Stannus in Baltiboys, County Wicklow, Ireland, Stannus began dancing in 1908 at age ten, and became noticed throughout England because of  in Britain; Catherine Littlefield, Lucia Chase, and Dorothy Alexander in the United States; and later Dulcie Howes in South Africa; Gweneth Lloyd, Betty Farrally, and Celia Franca in Canada; and Peggy van Praagh Dame Margaret "Peggy" van Praagh, DBE, OBE (b. 1 September 1910, London, England - d. 15 January 1990, Melbourne, Australia) had a long and distinguished career in ballet as a dancer, choreographer, teacher, producer, advocate and director.  in Australia. Yes, there were men involved as well! The names Lincoln Kirstein, the Christensen Brothers, even the short-reigned Ballet Theatre founder Richard Pleasant and a few others leap to mind. Yet for the most part women continued to rule the roost.

That was the 20th century. Fast forward to the 214. The other day I got a press release from the dance department of Barnard College in New York City New York City: see New York, city.
New York City

City (pop., 2000: 8,008,278), southeastern New York, at the mouth of the Hudson River. The largest city in the U.S.
 announcing a special initiative to assist women dancemakers, with the very clear implication that they were an endangered species. I could scarcely believe it. Why was such a thing necessary? Surely here was a gender battle that was long over, if it had ever even started. So what on earth were Barnard College and its estimable es·ti·ma·ble  
adj.
1. Possible to estimate: estimable assets; an estimable distance.

2. Deserving of esteem; admirable: an estimable young professor.
 dance department complaining about? And then I thought a little more.

OK, Monica Mason and Brigitte Lefevre are doing fine. But had not two other women directors of classical companies, Maina Gielgud, late of both the Australian Ballet and The Royal Danish Ballet Royal Danish Ballet, one of the oldest major ballet companies, established at the opening of Denmark's Royal Theater in Copenhagen in 1748. The company was developed over the centuries by three great masters. , and Anna-Marie Holmes, late of the Boston Ballet, encountered unusual difficulty with heavily male-oriented directorates? And while a woman, determined to test, develop, and ply her craft, can rent a studio and hire some dancers as easily as a man, how many women choreographers in modern dance have really hit the international big time over the past half century? Twyla Tharp, Pina Bausch, Trisha Brown certainly, perhaps Sasha Waltz, and Anne Teresa de Keersmaeker Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker (born 1960 in Mechelen, Belgium, grew up in Wemmel) studied from 1978 to 1980 at MUDRA in Brussels, the school linked to La Monnaie and to Maurice Béjart's Ballet of the XXth Century. In 1981, she attended the Tisch School of the Arts in New York. ; the list is neither enormous nor even indisputable.

And after years-about 180 I would guess since Marie Taglioni--in which women have held the commanding balance on the dance stage itself, that balance is beginning to shift. Male dancers are possibly today a bigger performing attraction than women--largely because nowadays more men are attracted to dance as a profession. Moreover (and this is not male chauvinism chauvinism (shō`vənĭzəm), word derived from the name of Nicolas Chauvin, a soldier of the First French Empire. Used first for a passionate admiration of Napoleon, it now expresses exaggerated and aggressive nationalism.  asserting itself) the male physique, just as in sports, enables men to be quantitatively superior in sheer physical strength. Put simply, they can jump higher, spin faster, etc. Audiences find this exciting. So is there a new and developing gender gap in dance? I'm honestly not sure. But certainly that press release from Barnard gave me more pause for thought than I would have expected.

Senior Consulting Editor Clive Barnes also covers dance and theater for the New York Post The New York Post is the 13th-oldest newspaper published in the United States and the oldest to have been published continually as a daily.[3] Since 1976, it has been owned by Australian-born billionaire Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation and is one of the 10 .
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Title Annotation:20th century dance
Author:Barnes, Clive
Publication:Dance Magazine
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jul 1, 2006
Words:741
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