Rare footage found.THE SUMMER OF 1938 at the legendary Bennington School of the Dance might have gone the way of all memories. But Oceana Wilson, a reference librarian at Bennington College Bennington College, at Bennington, Vt.; coeducational (originally for women); chartered 1925, opened 1932. Its curriculum is based on individual interests and needs. , recently unearthed Unearthed is the name of a Triple J project to find and "dig up" (hence the name) hidden talent in regional Australia. Unearthed has had three incarnations - they first visited each region of Australia where Triple J had a transmitter - 41 regions in all. an unmarked film from that summer. She slogged through it for hours, frame by frame, in order to identify thirteen minutes of precious footage of modern dance pioneers. Included are fleeting moments of Doris Humphrey Doris Batcheller Humphrey (October 17, 1895 - December 29, 1958) was a dancer of the early twentieth century. She was born in Oak Park, Illinois but grew up in Chicago, Illinois; she was a descendant of Pilgrim William Brewster and Simon James Humphrey. , Martha Graham, Hanya Holm Hanya Holm (3 March 1893, Worms, Germany – 3 November 1992, New York City) was the professional name of Johanna Eckert, dancer, choreographer, and teacher. Holm was one of the pioneers of modern dance. , Charles Weidman Charles Edward Weidman, Jr. (1901 in Lincoln, Nebraska-1975) was a modern dancer, choreographer and teacher. He studied and performed with Denishawn before leaving to form the Humphrey-Weidman school and company with Doris Humphrey and Pauline Lawrence. , Erick Hawkins, John Martin, and Ted Shawn, hanging out on the Bennington campus. But the actual dance sequences, all taken outdoors, are revelatory. Doris Humphrey, wearing a red dress, skips and skitters with a windblown lightness. Jose Limon, so young that he looks unsure of himself, is already using his shoulders with the deep axial twist that gave him such emotional sensitivity later on. A dancer in white demonstrates the oppositional pull of Hanya Holm's technique, one arm pressing down as she springs off the ground. Jane Dudley demonstrates Graham technique, including the "pleading." In what seems like the mother of all contractions, her movements erupt from the center of the body and pour outward, thick as lava. The contrasting styles might lead one to observe that Humphrey's element is air, while Graham's is earth. THE FILM was shot by Doris Ewing, a student in 1938 who later taught modern dance at Hillsdale College in Michigan. Her nephew, Wallace Ewing, donated the film to Bennington in 1997. It lay in a locked cabinet in the Crossett library until Wilson discovered it in 2002 and got curious. Sali Ann Kriegsman, Don Redlich, Mary Ann Santos Newhall, Ann Vachon, and Humphrey's son, Charles Woodford, helped identify the dancers. Kriegsman, author of Modern Dance in America: The Bennington Years, (unfortunately out of print), says this home movie "gives a sense of the vitality, the original impulse and the bursting forth of this [then] new dance." Very few other films exist from the Bennington School of the Dance, which was a precursor to the American Dance Festival The American Dance Festival is a six-week summer festival of modern dance performances, and a school for dance currently held at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina. . "Seeing these images now, in light of all the revivals and changes," continued Kriegsman, "is a potent reminder of how difficult it is to recapture the original intent and spirit of these dances, those times." A copy has been lodged with the Dance Division of the New York Public Library New York Public Library, free library supported by private endowments and gifts and by the city and state of New York. It is the one of largest libraries in the world. of the Performing Arts. For information contact Oceana Wilson at 802.440.4606 or library@bennington.edu. |
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