YOUR TOP CHOICES OF THE CENTURY.In our December and January issues, as wen as on our Web site, we asked you, the readers of Dance Magazine, to list your favorites of the twentieth century--your top ten works, top ten dancers, ten most influential people. Although your replies continued to come in as we went to press, we are going to give you the results so far. Mikhail Baryshnikov Noun 1. Mikhail Baryshnikov - Russian dancer and choreographer who migrated to the United States (born in 1948) Baryshnikov is far and away the leader among favorite dancers, and he also received quite a number of votes for most influential figure. In the latter category, George Balanchine Noun 1. George Balanchine - United States dancer and choreographer (born in Russia) noted for his abstract and formal works (1904-1983) Balanchine surpassed everyone else. Five of his ballets were also among the top ten works. Alvin Ailey's glowing masterpiece, Revelations, was the favorite piece of choreography, far outdistancing popular ballets that use classical technique and pointe. In fact, the two works that came in first do not employ classical technique at all. Fokine's evergreen Les Sylphides, generally acknowledged as the first modern ballet in classical style, came third. Landmark modern works that did not appear in the top ten but received a fair number of votes included Martha Graham's Appalachian Spring and Night Journey and Kurt Jooss's The Green Table. Some readers misread mis·read tr.v. mis·read , mis·read·ing, mis·reads 1. To read inaccurately. 2. To misinterpret or misunderstand: misread our friendly concern as prying. our limiting our request to the twentieth century. There were several votes for such nineteenth-century classics as Giselle and Coppelia, and quite a few readers mentioned Nutcracker and Swan Lake. (They may have been thinking of contemporary rechoreographed versions of the latter two--perhaps Matthew Bourne's Swan Lake Matthew Bourne's Swan Lake is a ballet that was first staged at Sadler's Wells theatre in London in 1995. The longest running ballet in London's West End and on Broadway, it has enjoyed two successful tours in the U.K. that just closed on Broadway and is now touring the States.) All in all, there were few surprises and some interesting mentions, including the little-known ballet "Union Jake" and that elusive but arresting Native American modern dance personage, "Mary Wigwam." Many thanks to all who took the time to respond. In general, a fair mix of past and present. It is heartening heart·en tr.v. heart·ened, heart·en·ing, heart·ens To give strength, courage, or hope to; encourage. See Synonyms at encourage. Adj. 1. , for example, that Nijinsky remains an icon in spite of the fact that few, if any, people living today could possibly have seen him dance during his brief ten-year career. His influence is so pervasive that he could not have been overrated Overrated was a Horde World of Warcraft guild, based on the US Black Dragonflight Realm. On November 2 2006, the majority of the guild members were indefinitely banned from the game for use of (or directly benefiting from) a third-party "wall-hack", used to bypass content . Dance before the use of film, videotape, and the computer can somehow survive through the still photograph, the printed word, and the imagination. Compiled with the assistance of Gail Cox The top ten dancers of the twentieth century 1. Mikhail Baryshnikov 2. Rudolf Nureyev 3. Margot Fonteyn 4. Anna Pavlova 5. Natalia Makarova 6. Vaslav Nijinsky and Martha Graham (tied) 7. Suzanne Farrell 8. Isadora Duncan and Gelsey Kirkland (tied) 9. Alicia Markova 10. Maria Tallchief and Paloma Herrera (tied) Other favorites included: Maya Plisetskaya, Fred Astaire, Tamara Karsavina, Gene Kelly, Darci Kistler and Galina Ulanova, Darcey Bussell and Peter Martins, and Angel Corella. The top ten works 1. Revelations 2. Rite of Spring 3. Les Sylphides 4. Agon 5. Apollo 6. Serenade serenade [Ital. sera=evening], term used to designate several types of musical composition. Opera and song literature yield numerous examples of the serenade sung or played by a lover at night beneath his beloved's window; outstanding is 7. Romeo and Juliet Romeo and Juliet star-crossed lovers die as teenagers. [Br. Lit.: Romeo and Juliet] See : Death, Premature Romeo and Juliet archetypal star-crossed lovers. [Br. Lit. (version not specified, except for three Cranko and five MacMillan) 8. Afternoon of a Faun L'après-midi d'un faune (or The Afternoon of a Faun) may refer to the following:
Other high scorers were: Jewels, Appalachian Spring, Firebird, Night Journey, Symphony in C Symphony in C may refer to a number of symphonies written in the key of C Major:
The ten most influential people 1. George Balanchine 2. Jerome Robbins 3. Martha Graham 4. Merce Cunningham 5. Serge Diaghilev 6. Lincoln Kirstein 7. Michel Fokine 8. Paul Taylor 9. Alvin Alley 10. Jose Limon Additional notables: Isadora Duncan, Agnes de Mille Noun 1. Agnes de Mille - United States dancer and choreographer who introduced formal dance to a wide audience (1905-1993) Agnes George de Mille, de Mille and Antony Tudor, Lucia Chase and Bob Fosse, Twyla Tharp, Frederick Ashton, Rudolf Nureyev, and Mikhail Baryshnikov. (And there were two votes for Michael Jackson, make of that what you will.) RELATED ARTICLE: Timeline of Modern Dance in the 20th Century Highlights of an Art Form At the turn of the century, the public looked upon dance as a diversion, not a form of artistic expression. The pioneers of modern dance, often performing in vaudeville theaters, chose classical or exotic subjects. After World War I, successors would drop gods, lyricism lyr·i·cism n. 1. a. The character or quality of subjectivity and sensuality of expression, especially in the arts. b. The quality or state of being melodious; melodiousness. 2. , and color for strong, percussive per·cus·sive adj. Of, relating to, or characterized by percussion. per·cus sive·ly adv. dancing and psychological and political subjects. By the 1950s, mood and relationships were presented with few historical references and in a less literal manner. The next generation mistrusted theater and favored minimalist effects. Our century winds down with a generation that favors abstract as well as timely subjects and dances them in an unconventional, frankly theatrical way to a wide variety of music. * Isadora Duncan (1878-1927) was a revolutionary who danced solos to classical music and whose private life defied political and sexual norms. Fervently believing that dance could enhance the spiritual health of society, she became a legend through her interpretive artistry and personal example. * Ruth St. Denis Denis, king of Portugal: see Diniz. (1880-1968). After an international career performing lyrical interpretations of Asian myths, she returned to the U.S. and formed the Denishawn Company (1915) with her pupil and husband, Ted Shawn. The dominant serious dance company of the 1920s, Denishawn was the training ground for Graham, Humphrey, and Weidman, among others. * Loie Fuller (1862-1928). An American actress with no dance training, she became a wizard at creating magical illusions of natural forms with lighting and drapery. Idolized i·dol·ize tr.v. i·dol·ized, i·dol·iz·ing, i·dol·iz·es 1. To regard with blind admiration or devotion. See Synonyms at revere1. 2. To worship as an idol. in France, she made Paris her permanent home. * Mary Wigman (1886-1973). A peerless solo artist who became the most important figure in German expressionist dance. Influenced by the movement theories of Rudolf Laban, she drew on primitive mythical subjects that emphasized a bond with nature while developing a style that evolved from muscular tension and release. 1925 * Katherine Dunham (b. 1912) pursued her artistic vision in popular theater and movies. A serious student of Afro-Caribbean folk culture--she is shown here in her L'Ag'Ya (1937)--Dunham prepared evening-length productions of sensuously costumed dance. * Hanya Holm (1893-1992). A student of Wigman, she established a school here in 1931 and introduced the German Expressionist ex·pres·sion·ism n. A movement in the arts during the early part of the 20th century that emphasized subjective expression of the artist's inner experiences. ex·pres use of space as a sculptural entity to U.S. modern dance. * Martha Graham (1894-1991). After a late start at age twenty-two as a Denishawn student, this intensely passionate artist developed a contraction-and-release technique based on breathing that became the most widely taught of modern styles in the U.S. Developing a company as she built a repertory, Graham explored Greek myths, the Bible, the American frontier, and the human heart while struggling against our Puritan heritage. Among the choreographers she nurtured were Hawkins, Cunningham, Taylor, and Sokolow. as well as May O'Donnell and John Butler. * Bella Lewitzky (b. 1916) shared the eclectic artistic sensibility of her mentor, Lester Horton (1906-53). In 1946 they established Dance Theater in Los Angeles, the first U.S. performing space devoted exclusively to dance. Lewitzky is shown above with Carl Ratcliff in Horton's A Bouquet for Molly (1950). * Charles Weidman (1901-75) and Doris Humphrey (1895-1958) in their Humphrey-Weidman Company (1928-45) developed a movement vocabulary based on fall and recovery. His wit meshed comfortably with her idealistic humanism in a repertory that stretched the body to its physical limits. * Helen Tamiris (1905-66) danced with the Metropolitan Opera Ballet before beginning her solo career and choreagraphing for Broadway musicals, the concert stage--she was the first to use spirituals for concert dance--and the company she formed with her husband, Daniel Nagrin (b. 1917). * Ted Shawn (1891-1972) parted artistic company with St. Denis in 1933--they never were officially divorced--to form Teal Shawn and His Men Dancers, the first all-male troupe in the U.S. (Shawn is the central figure above). He disbanded it in 1940 to start Jacob's Pillow Dance Festival Jacob's Pillow Dance Festival, summer dance concert series held annually near Lee, Mass., in the Berkshires. The site, originally an 18th-century farm, was purchased by the American modern dancer Ted Shawn in 1930, and three years later it became the home of his Men . * Paul Taylor (b. 1930). Determined to explore human experience, he has created an outstanding repertory of antic wit and hard reality. Taylor scrutinizes the epic and the everyday with tough innocence and athletic vigor. (He's at the center, in white, in this 1964 company photo.) * Jose Limon (1908-72). Born in Mexico and brought up in the U.S., he joined the Humphrey-Weidman company (1930-40) and organized his own troupe after World War II. A hero betrayed is a motif in his work. Limon is flanked by Pauline Koner (b. 1912), Lukas Hoving (b. 1912), and Betty Jones in his Moor's Pavane pavane Stately court dance introduced from southern Europe into England in the 16th century. The dance, consisting of forward and backward steps to music in duple time, was originally used to open ceremonial balls; later its steps became livelier and it came to be paired (1949). 1950 * Anna Sokolow (b. 1910) Urban isolation, set to the cadences of jazz, and the lone individual, coping with the buffeting of daily life, are at the core of her works, grimly attuned at·tune tr.v. at·tuned, at·tun·ing, at·tunes 1. To bring into a harmonious or responsive relationship: an industry that is not attuned to market demands. 2. to social and political reality. * Alwin Nikolais (1910-93). His dances emerge in a wonderland of visual effects and structured costumes that recall the pioneering days of Fuller. Divorced from the stress and strain of emotion, a Nikolais dance explores a world of motion in which man is a cog, not the whole wheel of life. * Merce Cunningham (b. 1919). He explored and conquered an unknown world when he removed the cause-and-effect relationship between music and dance. Cherishing independence, he gave similar freedom to the artists who were his collaborators; they repaid him with stunning lighting, settings, and costumes. * Erick Hawkins (1909-94), shown in Early Floating (1961), combined nature mysticism and classic folk tales in a style that substituted smoothly muscled flow for the angular tension he learned as the first male in the Graham company. * Alvin Ailey (1931-89) explored the black experience in America more widely than any other choreographer. Hope, despair, success, faith, and joy--all have found expression in his work. He drew inspiration from the deep belief of spirituals and from the elegant sophistication so·phis·ti·cate v. so·phis·ti·cat·ed, so·phis·ti·cat·ing, so·phis·ti·cates v.tr. 1. To cause to become less natural, especially to make less naive and more worldly. 2. of Ellington. Above: Ailey in his Blues Suite (1958). * Yvonne Rainer (b. 1934) studied composition under Robert Dunn and, with Steve Paxton (b.1939), turned Judson Memorial Church The Judson Memorial Church is located in Greenwich Village of Manhattan on the south side of Washington Square Park. It is affiliated with the American Baptist Churches USA and with the United Church of Christ. into a space for a generation of minimalist choreographers. Her Three Seascapes Seascapes is an RTÉ Radio 1 programme broadcast on Fridays at 8.30 pm. and presented by Tom MacSweeney. It is intended to cover all subjects of maritime interest, from leisure to commercial shipping, as well as fishing and the environment. (1962) is at right. 1975 * Mark Morris (b. 1956). A remarkably gifted performer, he has brought his economical sense of gesture to some 100 dances created over two decades to a wide variety of music. Folk dance and homages to modern styles are undercurrents Undercurrents is:
* Pilobolus. Four Dartmouth students--Moses Pendleton, Jonathan Wolken, Robby Barnett, and Lee Harris--founded this choreographic collective in 1971. Initially, they created startling star·tle v. star·tled, star·tling, star·tles v.tr. 1. To cause to make a quick involuntary movement or start. 2. To alarm, frighten, or surprise suddenly. See Synonyms at frighten. sculptural shapes that unfolded with biological linkage. The addition of Alison Chase and Martha Clarke in 1973 allowed them to set their gymnastic aplomb a·plomb n. Self-confident assurance; poise. See Synonyms at confidence. [French, from Old French a plomb, perpendicularly : a, according to (from Latin ad-; see to exploring sexual interaction. * Trisha Brown (b. 1936). Her dancers once walked around on walls in harnesses, and her recent work in more conventional settings remains muscular and distinctive. Her Set and Reset (1982) is at left. * Pina Bausch (b. 1940) is the leading force in Tanztheater, contemporary Germany's successor to 1920s Expressionism expressionism, term used to describe works of art and literature in which the representation of reality is distorted to communicate an inner vision. The expressionist transforms nature rather than imitates it. . Sexual alienation is her main subject, and she spurns formal schooling for dialogue, gymnastics, and gesture amid such settings as pools, hillocks, and collapsing walls. * Twyla Tharp (b. 1941). Her mathematically musical mind and sympathy for popular culture have created a quick, bold, slithery slith·er v. slith·ered, slith·er·ing, slith·ers v.intr. 1. To glide or slide like a reptile. See Synonyms at slide. 2. To walk with a sliding or shuffling gait. 3. , and densely packed style of movement that she applies to a wide range of classical and pop music. Bach Duet (1974) is shown above. * John Jasperse (b. 1963) may embody the trend of modern dance in this century: He first studied at Sarah Lawrence and attracted attention in Europe before forming his own company. He combines a sense of social and personal crisis with wit, wisdom, and physical frankness. Shown above is his Waving to you from here (1997). 2000 * Bill T. Jones (b. 1952) and Arnie Zane (1948-88) established their company without undergoing apprenticeship in another troupe to choreograph an eclectic body of work dealing with such topics as sex and racism, a tradition that Jones has continued after Zane's death. |
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