Showing posts with label Dancer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dancer. Show all posts

Friday, July 1, 2011

Isadora Duncan: The Barefoot Dancer

When I was eleven years old, I was brought to the studio of a Russian dance master. I recall well the musty smells of his small, dark studio, the constant ticking of an antiquated clock, and the many old photographs of dancers from an earlier era - including some of him. His classes had no prescribed techniques. He taught his pupils to move from their own center, to free up their individual creative energies. So we simply danced freely to whatever music he played.

In this way I became part of a small group of children who danced periodically in our town park. We danced barefoot in white flowing Grecian-like tunics and flower wreaths in our hair, and flowing scarves.

That small group represented perhaps one of the last scattered remnants of what was known as the Duncan School of dance. And this curious man was my indirect link to the famous dancer, Isadora Duncan.

She was my first mentor and inspiration. I wanted to emulate - not only her art - but her life as well. I admired her free spirit, her enormous courage. Here was a beautiful, creative woman who dared to do and to be what she wanted. Even the tragedies of her life seemed dramatic and exciting to me.

It was not until years later that I understood the tremendous impact she had on the theatrical world, and particularly her great influence on the development of modern American dance.

Isadora Duncan was born in San Francisco in 1878. It was a comparatively quiet world then - those closing years of the Victorian era. Women had their prescribed place. The conventional was beautiful. Novelty was accepted as long as it didn't venture too deep. It was all right as a little diversion.

Popular theatrical dance reflected this attitude. It was either pretty or spectacular; but it was not seriously considered an art. Traditional classic ballet, which at that time had been mainly preserved in Russia, displayed lavish and elaborate productions, designed to entertain the elite who had their favorite ballerinas.

No fine, self-respecting family would ever consider dance as a possible career for their daughters. But there were rumblings and stirrings, and a growing sense of discontent; women were restless for equality; radical individuals had dreams of a better world - perhaps not as "safe" as the Victorian one - but possibly better.

Onto this scene appeared Isadora. She swept across the stages of Europe, causing a sensation. Some proclaimed her a great and inspiring artist; others were outraged and shocked at her behavior and revolutionary ideas.

Imagine these are the closing years of the 19th century and you are sitting in a variety theater, anticipating some spectacular event with masses of dancers and vivid scenic effects. Suddenly there emerges a lone young girl in bare feet, leaping exuberantly across the stage. There is no scenery, only a piano to accompany the daring and free-flowing movements of the dancer. She is clothed in a translucent gown, her only prop the flowing drapery she carries. Her hair is bobbed, and she wears no confining corset. This is unthinkable and you are spellbound! Perhaps you will leave the theater with cries of disapproval - shocked by her behavior and unconventional use of music. But maybe you will stay and be caught up in the excitement of her new dance.

Isadora had come with a new vision of dance. Dance was a communicative art - expressing stirrings of the heart, the soul, and the mind. It was said she did not dance to music. She danced what music did to her, and she used whatever music inspired her. The main thing was that she had to feel it.

By the time I had joined that little group of barefoot dancers, I had already begun the rigorous training of classical ballet. There were many moments of frustration when I struggled to master the techniques she so rejected. I thought of her and knew that in order for dance to truly be an art it must transcend the confines of technique - without rejecting it.

Isadora Duncan was a serious, dedicated artist who passionately believed in her vision of the dancer of the future, and the free spirit of all women. She saw the need for change.

Though her techniques were never developed into a specific school of dance, her ideas and principles have been incorporated into many schools of dance the world over, including classical ballet. This is her legacy.

http://www.connectionofpeople.com/ wants you to share and tell your stories. Stories are part of our rich heritage. They define who we are as a people, a culture, a family. We are all connected to these stories in some way.


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Sunday, June 26, 2011

The Story Of Ballet Dancer Nijinsky

Vaslav Nijinsky was born in Kiev, Ukraine to Polish parents in 1890. Both his parents were ballet dancers who ran their own company giving performances all over Russia. With his older brother and younger sister, Nijinsky began dancing under the tutelage of his father. Then at eight years old he joined the Imperial School of Dancing where the teachers recognized his great talent.

Nijinsky trained at the Mariinsky Ballet located in Saint Petersburg, Russia after graduation from the Imperial School of Dancing. He had great success with this company and danced several leads beginning at the young age of 18 which was unusual. Nijinsky caught the eye of ballet producer, Sergei Diaghilev, who featured him in several of his ballets.

The partnership between Nijinsky and Diaghilev may have led them to orchestrate a great scandal. After Nijinsky's engagement with Diaghilev was over he was required to return to his company at the Mariinsky Ballet. At this same time Diaghilev desired to have Nijinsky dance in his productions which were being performed in cities such as Paris. In order to extricate Nijinsky from his Russian engagement he neglected to wear modesty trunks around his tights. This was grounds for dismissal with the label obscene applied to the performance.

In 1913, a fateful event took place for Nijinsky. Diaghilev's company toured South America, but Diaghilev did not accompany Nijinsky on the ship because of a fortune teller's prediction that he would not survive a boat trip should he ever take one. Without the object of his affection Nijinsky had to turn his sights elsewhere and he placed them on a Hungarian Countess by the name of Romola Pulszky. They were married when they arrived in Buenos Aires. This did not please Diaghilev and he promptly released Nijinsky from his company.

From 1913 to 1916 Nijinsky choreographed four ballets of his own. Nijinsky began to be known as someone who as someone who is daring and his ballets reflected that. The ballets, L'apres-midi d'un faune, Jeux, Till Eulenspiegel and Le Sacred du Printemps, all fall under the genre of modern dance. This is what Nijinsky was famous for, creating a new style of dance which created a major stir among the audiences. The scandals might have continued had Nijinsky remained healthy.

In 1916 when Nijinsky choreographed his last ballet, Till Eulenspiegel, it became evident that he was suffering from dementia and it led to a nervous breakdown. He was diagnosed with Schizophrenia which ended his career at the age of 29. He died on April 8, 1950.

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