Jose Limon Study Guide.indd - University Musical Society
Transcription
Jose Limon Study Guide.indd - University Musical Society
05l06 Youth Education Creative Teachers...Intelligent Students...Real Learning José Limón Dance Company Teacher Resource Guide About UMS One of the oldest performing arts presenters in the country, UMS serves diverse audiences through multidisciplinary performing arts programs in three distinct but interrelated areas: presentation, creation, and education. With a program steeped in music, dance, theater, and education, UMS hosts approximately 80 performances and 150 free educational activities each season. UMS also commissions new work, sponsors artist residencies, and organizes collaborative projects with local, national as well as many international partners. UMS gratefully acknowledges the following corporations, foundations, and government agencies for their generous support of the UMS Youth Education Program: The department coordinates dozens of events with over 100 partners that reach more than 50,000 people annually. It oversees a dynamic, comprehensive program encompassing workshops, in-school visits, master classes, lectures, youth and family programming, teacher professional development workshops, and “meet the artist” opportunities, cultivating new audiences while engaging existing ones. Michigan Council for Arts and Cultural Affairs University of Michigan Arts at Michigan Linda and Maurice Binkow Borders Group, Inc. Chamber Music America DailerChrysler Corporation Fund Doris Duke Charitable Foundation DTE Energy Foundation Dykema Gossett, PLLC Heartland Arts Fund Dr. Toni Hoover in memory of Dr. Issac Thomas III JazzNet Endowment JPMorgan Chase Masco Corporation National Dance Project of the New England Foundation for the Arts National Endowment for the Arts Pfizer Global Research and Development, Ann Arbor Labratories ProQuest Company Prudence and Amnon Rosenthal K-12 Education Endowment Fund TCF Bank TIAA-CREF Toyota Technical Center UMS Advisory Committee University of Michigan Credit Union U-M Office of the Senior Vice Provost for Academic Affairs U-M Office of the Vice President of Research Wallace Foundation For advance notice of Youth Education events, join the UMS Teachers email list by emailing [email protected] or visit www.ums.org/education. The José Limón Dance Company residency is presented with support from DaimlerChrysler Corporation Fund. Cover Photo: Lar Lubovitch’s Concerto Six Twenty-Two (Photo by Rosalie O’Connor) This Teacher Resource Guide is a product of the University Musical Society’s Youth Education Program. Researched and written by Bree Juarez. Edited by Ben Johnson and Bree Juarez. All photos are courtesy of the artist unless otherwise noted. While proudly affiliated with the University of Michigan and housed on the Ann Arbor campus, UMS is a separate not-for-profit organization that supports itself from ticket sales, grants, contributions, and endowment income. UMS Education and Audience Development Department UMS’s Education and Audience Development Department seeks to deepen the relationship between audiences and art, as well as to increase the impact that the performing arts can have on schools and community. The program seeks to create and present the highest quality arts education experience to a broad spectrum of community constituencies, proceeding in the spirit of partnership and collaboration. 05/06 UMS Youth Education José Limón Dance Company Friday, January 13, 11 AM Power Center, Ann Arbor TEACHER RESOURCE GUIDE Table of Contents About the Performance * * 6 7 Repertoire 10 12 14 16 18 Short on Time? We’ve starred the most important pages. Only Have 15 Minutes? Coming to the Show The Performance at a Glance Evening Songs (1997) Chaconne (1942) Angelitos Negros (1972) Concerto Six Twenty-Two (1986) Watching a Dance Performance The Company * * 20 21 22 23 Co-Founder: José Limón Co-Founder: Doris Humphrey The Influence of José Limón A José Limón Timeline Modern Dance * Try pages 7, 20, 22 or 27 27 28 30 31 About Early Modern Dance Two Early Moderns Contemporaries of José Limón The Elements of Dance Lesson Plans 35 36 38 42 43 44 Resources * * 4 | www.ums.org/education 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 Curriculum Connections Meeting Michigan Standards The Vocabulary of Dance Dance Vocabulary Word-O Modern Dance Word Search Puzzle Word Search Puzzle Solution UMS Permission Slip Bibliography/Videography Internet Resources Recommended Reading Community Resources National Resources Using the Resource DVD Evening Performance/ Teen Ticket How to Contact UMS About the Performance Concerto Six Twenty-Two by Lar Lubovitch (Photo by Rosalie O’Connor) Coming to the Show (For Students) We want you to enjoy your time in the theater, so here are some tips to make your Youth Performance experience successful and fun! Please review this page prior to attending the performance. What should I do during the show? Everyone is expected to be a good audience member. This keeps the show fun for everyone. Good audience members... • Are good listeners • Keep their hands and feet to themselves • Do not talk or whisper during the performance • Laugh only at the parts that are funny • Do not eat gum, candy, food or drink in the theater • Stay in their seats during the performance • Do not disturb the people sitting nearby or other schools in attendance Who will meet us when we arrive? After you exit the bus, UMS Education staff and greeters will be outside to meet you. They might have special directions for you, so be listening and follow their directions. They will take you to the theater door where ushers will meet your group. The greeters know that your group is coming, so there’s no need for you to have tickets. Who will show us where to sit? The ushers will walk your group to its seats. Please take the first seat available. (When everybody’s seated, your teacher will decide if you can rearrange yourselves.) If you need to make a trip to the restroom before the show starts, ask your teacher. How will I know that the show is starting? You will know the show is starting because the lights in the auditorium will get dim, and a member of the UMS Education staff will come out on stage to introduce the performance. What if I get lost? Please ask an usher or a UMS staff member for help. You will recognize these adults because they have name tag stickers or a name tag hanging around their neck. How do I show that I liked what I saw and heard? The audience shows appreciation during a performance by clapping. In a musical performance, the musicians and dancers are often greeted with applause when they first appear. It is traditional to applaud at the end of each musical selection and sometimes after impressive solos. At the end of the show, the performers will bow and be rewarded with your applause. If you really enjoyed the show, give the performers a standing ovation by standing up and clapping during the bows. For this particular show, it will be most appropriate to applaud at the beginning and the ending. What do I do after the show ends? Please stay in your seats after the performance ends, even if there are just a few of you in your group. Someone from UMS will come onstage and announce the names of all the schools. When you hear your school’s name called, follow your teachers out of the auditorium, out of the theater and back to your buses. How can I let the performers know what I thought? We want to know what you thought of your experience at a UMS Youth Performance. After the performance, we hope that you will be able to discuss what you saw with your class. Tell us about your experiences in a letter or drawing. Please send your opinions, letters or artwork to: UMS Youth Education Program, 881 N. University Ave., Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1011. 6 | www.ums.org/education The Performance at a Glance Who is José Limón? José Limón (1908-1972) (pronounced ho-zay lee-mohn) was a crucial figure in the development of modern dance in America. Born in Mexico, Mr. Limón moved to New York City in 1928. It was here that he saw his first dance program; an event that changed his life. In 1946, he established his own company and many of his works were quickly recognized as masterpieces including The Moor’s Pavane (1949). As a choreographer, Mr. Limón was a consistently productive until his death in 1972—he choreographed at least one new piece each year—and he was also an influential teacher and advocate for modern dance. What does a choreographer do? Choreography (also known as dance composition) is the “art of making visual structures in which movement occurs.” People who make these compositions are called choreographers. A choreographer creates a dance by having a vision and then arranging or directing the movements of the dancers. The choreographer must work closely with the dancers, the stage manager and musicians during rehearsals. Although mainly used in relation to dance, choreographers also work in various settings including fencing, gymnastics and ice skating. What is the José Limón Dance Company? Founded in 1946 by José Limón and early modern dance pioneer Doris Humphrey, the Company is now led by Carla Maxwell, who worked closely with Limón before becoming Artistic Director in 1978. The Company’s repertory consists of José Limón’s classic works and works commissioned by contemporary choreographers. “The resources of the body must be developed so they can speak with truth and power” -José Limón What is a repertory company? The José Limón Dance Company is a repertory company meaning they commission and dance pieces by other choreographers. For example, at this youth performance you will see pieces by José Limón, as well as, Jirí Kylián, Donald McKayle, and Lar Lubovitch. What is Modern Dance? Modern dance is a phenomenon that started in the early 20th century, when individual dancers felt the need to break away and create a form of dance based on more natural motions of the human body. There is no specific definition for what makes something modern dance, as the concept of “modern” was simply applied to the dancers of the time who had begun a rebellion against the strict discipline of classical ballet. Today we perceive modern dance as a discipline defined by the people who began this movement and their individual traditions and followings. Now a widely appreciated style of performance, modern dance began as, and continues to be, an experiment in new ways of moving. What is the difference between modern dance and classical ballet? Ballet relies on an illusion of lightness and effortlessness, while modern dance relies on weight—dancers often fall all the way to the floor. While a ballet dancer must remain almost perfectly balanced, a modern dancer must be able to fall and slide safely. The ballet of the early 20th century relied on ornate costumes and scenery, but early modern dance was often performed on a bare stage in bare feet and a simple tunic. 7 | www.ums.org/education What will I see at the performance? During the performance of the José Limón Dance Company you will see four different pieces of repertoire being performed. Please see the DVD included in this packet for exerpts of the four pieces. They are: Evening Song (1997) Choreography: Jirí Kylián Music: Antonín Dvorák “American dance is not merely a style or idiom. It is a potent idea. When its contemporary personalities retire, the idea will persist” -José Limón In this quiet and poignant work, master choreographer Jirí Kylián (pronounced year-EE kill-EE-uhn) shows us a community of men and women who share with us a moment at twilight when they are experiencing the mysteries and wonder of nature. The dance is structured in four sections; a female trio, a duet for a man and a woman, a male trio and a sextet for three couples. In each section, through simple gestures and folk dance patterns, Mr. Kylián draws portraits of this community at play, in thought, and in observance or refelction. The music is by Antonín Dvorák (pronounced ann-TOHN-een deh-VOHR-zhahk), Songs for Mixed Choir and In the Nature, and are sung a capella. Chaconne (1942) Choreography: José Limón Music: J. S. Bach -- Partita No. 2 in d minor for unaccompanied violin The chaconne (pronounced sha-kohn) is a dance form that originated in Mexico as a robust and raucous dance. Bach employed the strict musical form of the chaconne but enriched it with powerful emotional implications. Mr. Limón has tried to capture in his dance both the formal austerity and the profound feeling of the music. This dance is one of the first important works created by Mr. Limón as he was forming his first company and is considered a modern dance classic. Angelitos Negros (1972) Choreography: Donald McKayle Music: Manuel Alvarez Maciste Choreographed by leading African American choreographer Donald McKayle, the central solo in Angelitos Negros is an African American woman looking upwards at the Sistine Chapel in Rome. She sees a heavenly view that has no Black angels – only White ones. She asks the question: “Are there no Black angels in heaven?” She looks at her own reflections and cries out that she wants to enter heaven, too, and asks the painter to include Black angels the next time he paints a heavenly view on the church ceilings. This work showcases the special talents of Roxane D’Orleans Juste and brings us an intimate look at a mixture of power, restraint and passion. Concerto Six Twenty-Two (1986) Choreography: Lar Lubovitch Music: W. A. Mozart – Clarinet Concerto in A, K. 622 8 | www.ums.org/education Mr. Lubovitch’s hallmarks are his musicality, rhapsodic style, and sophisticated formal structures, as well as his highly technical choreography and deeply humanistic voice. Although this dance does not have a formal story, it expresses through its structure, relationships that speak of community, joy and love. The second movement is for two men who partner each other. It demonstrates how two male friends can be supportive with one another while still showing their strength, creating an atmosphere of mutual support rather than competition. Donald McKayle’s Angelitos Negros featuring Roxane D’Orleans Juste (Photo by Beatriz Schiller) Repertoire Evening Songs (1997) Title Description In this quiet and poignant work, master choreographer Jirí Kylián shows us a community of men and women who share with us a moment at twilight when they are experiencing the mysteries and wonder of nature. The dance is structured in four sections; a female trio, a duet for a man and a woman, a male trio and a sextet for three couples. In each section, through simple gestures and folk dance patterns, Mr. Kylián draws portraits of this community at play, in thought, and in observance or reflection. The music, by Antonín Dvorák, is from his Songs for Mixed Choir and In the Nature. As they are sung a capella, the sense of suspension that pervades the dance is intensified through this magical composition. Choreographer: Jiri Kylián Jirí Kylián (1947- ) started his dance training when he was nine years old at the ballet school of the Prague National Theatre. From the age of fifteen he studied at the Prague Conservatory. In 1967 Kylián went to the Royal Ballet School in London on a scholarship from the British Council. Here he came into contact with the most important developments in choreography - ballet as well as contemporary dance. Consequently, John Cranko, a major choreographer of this period and director of the Stuttgart Ballet in Germany, offered him a dance contract and encouraged Kylián’s ambition to create his own dance works. In 1973, following his first choreography for Nederlands Dans Theater, an artistic relationship between Kylián and the wellknown Dutch company began, which has brought about the creation of almost 50 dance productions for this group. Today, the Jirí Kylián world famous ‘Main Group’ (NDT 1) is complemented by a young, experimental company of 17 - 22 year old dancers (NDT 2) and a group of mature dancers/performing artists past the age of 40 (NDT 3) - each of which has its own repertoire reflecting the specific qualities of a certain life-time. Together, they constitute the organization called Nederlands Dans Theater: “Three dimensions of a dancer’s life”, as Jirí Kylián likes to refer to them. 1978 brought a decisive international break-through with Sinfonietta - his choreography to the music of compatriot Leoš Janácek at the U.S. Spoleto Festival in Charleston, North Carolina. The years after Charleston established Kylián’s reputation as one of the most ingenious choreographers with dance works such as Symphony of Psalms, Forgotten Land, Overgrown Path, Svadebka, Stamping Ground, l’Enfant et les sortileges - to name only a few. Since the mid-eighties Kylián’s artistic view and style have changed considerably towards abstraction and surrealistic images. Having created a unique and very personal style, Kylián’s choreographies defy academic categorization blending elements of many sources. There are always new inspirations to be explored, new challenges and boundaries to be overcome. Profoundly based on musical reading - there is something in his work deeply penetrating into the mystery of the human being itself, unveiling hidden traces through his dance. 10 | www.ums.org/education The Music of Evening Songs: Antonín Dvorák Antonin Dvorák, born on September 8, 1841 in a small town near Prague, is known to be one of the greatest Czech composers, noted for his attractive melodic compositions and the brilliance of his orchestration. At the age of 16 he studied at the Prague Organ School. There, he was introduced to the works of past great masters as well as to composers such as Robert Schumann and Richard Wagner. In 1861 Dvorák joined the National Theatre in Prague as a violist. During this time he wrote many compositions, but not until 1873 with a performance of his grand patriotic work Hymnus for chorus and orchestra, did he achieve recognition. Composer Johannes Brahms later prevailed upon his publisher to print some of Dvorák’s works. Always composing an apparently effortless output of music, including Slovonic Dances in 1878, Dvorák soon became a professor of composition at the Prague Conservatory. In 1884 following a series of trips to London to conduct his own music, he earned a commission to compose The Spectre’s Bride. In 1891 he received an honorary doctorate degree from Cambridge University, the same year he composed the popular Carnival overture. Following successful tours to Russia and Germany, Dvorák accepted an invitation in 1892 to become director of the National Conservatory of Music in New York City. In 1893 while Antonín Dvorák in the United States, he wrote what is probably his most famous work, the Symphony in E Minor from The New World. In 1895 Dvorák returned to Prague where he completed Rusalka in 1900, the ninth of his 10 operas. In it, he tells the familiar story of a water nymph who falls in love with a human prince. The following year Dvorák became the director of the Prague Conservatory. He devoted his last years to working on an opera, Armida. Despite the international recognition he had achieved, Dvorák lived in relative poverty as a result of unfavorable contracts with his music publishers. He died on May 1, 1904. A national day of mourning was declared, and Dvorák was honored with a burial in Vysehrad Cemetery, where many prominent Czechs are also buried. 11 | www.ums.org/education Chaconne (1942) Description The chaconne (pronounced sha-kohn) is a style of dance which originated in New Spain, now Mexico, as a robust and raucous dance. Bach employed the strict musical form of the chaconne but enriched it with powerful emotional implications. Mr. Limón has tried to capture in his dance both the formal austerity and the profound feeling of the music. This dance is one of the first important works created by Mr. Limón as he was forming his first company. The chaconne is a fiery and suggestive dance that appeared in Spain about 1600 and eventually gave its name to a musical form. Miguel de Cervantes, Francisco Gómez de Quevedo, and other contemporary writers imply a Mexican origin but do not indicate whether it was indigenous or a Spanish dance modified there. Danced with castanets by a couple or by a woman alone, it soon spread to Italy, where it was considered disreputable as it had been in Spain. During the 16th century the dance became subdued and stylized, and in the 17th century it gained favour at the French court. There it was danced by an ensemble of women or by a double line of couples, who as a group and as individual couples solemnly executed various figures. Choreographer: José Limón José Limón (1908-1972) was a crucial figure in the development of modern dance: his powerful dancing shifted perceptions of the male dancer, while his choreography continues to bring a dramatic vision of dance to audiences around the world. Born in Mexico, Limón moved to New York City in 1928 after a year at UCLA as an art major. It was here that he saw his first dance program and set him on new path as a dancer and choreographer. José Limón in Chaconne Photo by Barbara Morgan In 1946, after studying and performing for 10 years with Doris Humphrey and Charles Weidman, he established his own company with Humphrey as Artistic Director. It was under her experienced directorial eye that Limón created his signature dance, The Moor’s Pavane (1949). Limón’s choreographic works were quickly recognized as masterpieces and the Company itself became a landmark of American dance. Many of his dances—There is a Time, The Moor’s Pavane, Missa Brevis, Psalm, The Winged—are considered classics of modern dance. Limón was a consistently productive choreographer until his death in 1972—he choreographed at least one new piece each year—and he was also an influential teacher and advocate for modern dance. In addition to numerous dance faculty positions, Limón received two Dance Magazine Awards, the Capezio Award and honorary doctorates from four universities in recognition of his achievements. For more information on José Limón, please see pages 20-25 of this resource guide. The Music of Chaconne: Johann Sebastian Bach 12 | www.ums.org/education Johann Sebastian Bach (1685-1750) was born in Germany to a family of talented musicians. At the age of ten he began learning about music from his brother. He eventually used this knowledge and his innate talent working for Kings, Dukes, and Princes as well as in the churches of Europe. His most famous set of works for piano is The Well-Tempered Clavier, which is a set of 48 preludes and fugues in two volumes that are often played and studied by pianists throughout the world. Partita No. 2 in d minor for unacompanied violin José Limón uses one of Bach’s most famous pieces as the music for his work: the “Chaconne” movement from his Partita No. 2 in d minor for unaccompanied violin. The piece was written in the period 1717-1723 and is said to have been dedicated to the memory of Bach’s first wife, Maria Barbara Bach. The partita is of five parts, with “Chaconne” as the fifth and final part. However, its average time of 14 minutes surpasses that of all the other four movements combined. The theme in the first four measures is the base on which the rest of the piece forms a variation. It is miraculous that Bach was able from this simple theme to conjure so many variations without seeming forced or repetative. He expounds upon this phrase for nearly fifteen minutes without repeating himself and without losing our attention! Indeed, he instead conjures so much intellect and depth into the piece that it is beyond words to describe its meaning or its mood. The piece starts in a tragically agitated d minor harmonic key, moving in the mid section to D major key, but it ends in the melancholic d minor key in which it started. The ending conjures a sense of resignation mixed with pain and sorrow. “Chaconne” is considered a pinnacle in the solo violin repertoire covering almost every aspect of violin playing known during Bach’s time and thus it is among the most difficult pieces to play on any instrument. Johann Sebastian Bach “Chaconne” was also a favorite piece of Bach’s as well. He said,“The Chaconne is the most wonderful, unfathomable piece(s) of music. On one stave, for a small instrument, the man writes a whole world of the deepest thoughts and most powerful feelings. If I imagined that I could have created, even conceived the piece, I am quite certain that the excess of excitement and earth shattering experience would have driven me out of my mind.” José Limón was quite moved by Bach’s piece and found choreographing Chaconne to be a great artistic challenge. In his autobiography, Mr. Limón wrote the following about its creation: “Bach’s theme has a somber and austere majesty. It is also one of the master’s most profoundly beautiful utterances, impeccably formal and elegantly baroque. It was a struggle day after day trying to compose a phrase of movements, eight bars of slow ¾ tempo in duration, which would somehow reflect what is in the music. It took a tremendous amount of sweat. Not only of the body but of the mind and intuition. There was no dramatic idea or story on which one could lean on. Here was the challenge which must be met and transcended if totally abstract formal beauty was to result.” “There is a miraculous fecundity to the art of Bach. In this “Chaconne”, it seems inexhaustible. The work has a logic and a radiance and purity. Each variation creates its own perfect little universe, yet joins with its successor to create a mighty impetus which ascends ever higher to regions of rapturous sonority.” 13 | www.ums.org/education Angelitos Negros (1972) Description Angelitos Negros (Black Little Angels), is a classic Donald McKayle solo from the suite, Songs of the Disinherited, a four-part piece that explored Black culture in America in the 20th century. Songs of the Disinherited opens with On My Way, where the dancers depict people who are on their way to freedom and a better life up North. In Up On The Mountain, two workers bemoan their lives working hard for very little pay – struggling to survive against insurmountable odds. Finally, Shaker Life shows the holy spirit and its power to carry downtrodden people through hard times to a better life. The central solo in Angelitos Negros is an African American woman looking upwards at the Sistine Chapel in Rome. She sees a heavenly view that has no Black angels – only White ones. She asks the question: “Are there no Black angels in heaven?” She looks at her own reflections and cries out that she wants to enter heaven, too, and asks the painter to include Black angels the next time he paints a heavenly view on the church ceilings. This work showcases the special talents of Roxane D’Orleans Juste and brings us an intimate look at a mixture of power, restraint and passion. Choreographer: Donald McKayle New York-born Donald McKayle (1930- ) began dancing in his senior year in high school, winning a scholarship to the New Dance Group. There he studied with Pearl Primus, Sophie Maslow, Jean Erdman, and others. He made his professional debut in 1948, and choreographed his first pieces with the New Dance Group when he was 18 years old. In 1951, he, along with Daniel Nagrin and others, founded the Contemporary Dance Group, which premiered McKayle’s Games in 1951. Perhaps his best-known piece, Games, juxtaposes the innocent imaginings of urban children with the real dangers Donald McKayle they face. McKayle received a scholarship to the Martha Graham School and then joined her company from 1955-1956. In addition to his work with Graham, he danced with Merce Cunningham, Anna Sokolow, and Charles Wiedman, among others. A free agent, McKayle danced as a guest artist with various companies, as well as in Broadway musicals. But McKayle’s central focus was always choreography, and though he was a wellknown choreographer, he never maintained a permanent company. He choreographed for other companies or assembled dancers as he needed them for specific concert seasons; two popular examples are Rainbow ‘Round My Shoulder (1959) and District Storyville (1962), both in the repertory of the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater. 14 | www.ums.org/education Successful in the worlds of dance and theater, McKayle created dances for concert stages, Broadway, television, and film. His Broadway credits include Golden Boy (1964), I’m Solomon (1969), Raisin (1974), and Dr. Jazz (1975); he was also one of the four choreographers for Sophisticated Ladies (1981). Beginning in 1963, McKayle choreographed for television programs about once a year, including The Ed Sullivan Show (1966-1967), The Bill Cosby Special (1968), the Marlo Thomas special Free to Be You and Me (1974), and the 1977 Oscar Presentations. He created dances for films in The Great White Hope (1970), Disney’s Bedknobs and Broomsticks (1971), and Charlie and the Angel (1972). In the field of popular music, he has choreographed stage acts for singers such as Harry Belafonte and Tina Turner. McKayle’s sensibilities were formed by the theatrical dance of the 1950s. A humanistic choreographer, he uses narratives and deals with potent emotion conveyed through dramatic characters. At times his stories are specific to the African American experience, as in his protest dance Rainbow ‘Round My Shoulder, but his choreography is universal in its implications. McKayle has taught at Bennington College, the Juilliard School, the American Dance Festival, and in Europe. His closest associations are with the repertory group at the Los Angeles Inner City Cultural Center and with the School of Dance at the California Institute of the Arts, to which he was appointed artistic director in 1975. McKayle currently serves as professor of dance at the University of California, Irvine. As a prolific craftsman whose dances exist in many repertories and in many mediums, Donald McKayle has been one of the most influential African American choreographers of the postwar era. The Music of Angelitos Negros The dance Angelitos Negros is set to a song of the same name that is sung in Spanish by the popular 1970s vocalist Roberta Flack. The composer is Manuel Alvarez Maciste with lyrics by Andres Eloy Blanco. The following is the text of the poem by Andres Eloy Blanco on which the song is based: Painter born in my native land with the foreign brush Painter that continues the course of all the painters of old Even though the Virgin may be White, paint little Black angels for me For they too go to heaven Painter indeed you paint with love! Why do you deprecate those of your color, If you know that in heaven God also loves them? Painter of saints in the alcoves, if you have a soul in your body Why have you forgotten those of Black color in your paintings? Every time you paint a church you paint beautiful little angels But never have you remembered to paint a black angel. For photos of the Sistine Chapel, go to: www.wga.hu/ tours/sistina/ Andres Eloy Blanco (1896-1955) was a Venezuelan poet, humorist, lawyer and politician. His poem Angelitos Negros was first made famous in Spain and Latin America through a song by Cuban singer Antonio Machín. The poem is a hymn against racial discrimination and Blanco continued to write socially-oriented poetry throughout his career. 15 | www.ums.org/education Concerto Six Twenty-Two (1986) Description Concerto Six Twenty-Two is one of choreographer Lar Lubovitch’s classic works, as well as one the masterworks of 20th century modern dance. Lar has set his dance to Mozart’s Concerto for Clarinet and Orchestra, or K.622. Mr. Lubovitch’s hallmarks are his musicality, rhapsodic style, and sophisticated formal structures, as well as his highly technical choreography and deeply humanistic voice. It is precisely for these qualities that the Limón Company has sought his work to join their repertory. Although this dance does not have a formal story, it expresses through its structure, relationships that speak of community, joy and love. As one reviewer wrote, (this dance) “combines the formality of the classical concerto with the composer’s delightful sense of humor and tender expressivity.” The second movement is for two men who partner each other. Here Mr. Lubovitch demonstrates how two male friends can be supportive and tender with one another while still showing their strength, creating an atmosphere of mutual support rather than competition. The first and third movements are for the entire company and illuminate both the clarity of Mozart’s music and joy and wit that abound in his score. Choreographer: Lar Lubovitch Lar Lubovitch Photo by Broadway Beat/ Bradshaw Smith One of this country’s most versatile, popular and widely seen choreographers, Lar Lubovitch (1943- ) founded the Lar Lubovitch Dance Company 37 years ago and has choreographed more than 60 dances for the company. Based in New York City, the company has performed in virtually all 50 states of this country as well as in more than 30 foreign countries throughout the world. In addition, he has also allowed his works to be included in the repertories of other select companies throughout the world, including the New York City Ballet, American Ballet Theater, Paris Opera Ballet, Royal Danish Ballet, Stuttgart Ballet, Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, Baryshnikov’s White Oak Dance Project and Netherlands Dance Theater. In response to a commission from New York City Ballet in 1988, Lubovitch created Rhapsody in Blue, to the music of George Gershwin. The dance was featured on opening night of New York City Ballet’s American Music Festival. Lubovitch made his Broadway debut in 1987 with the musical staging for the Stephen Sondheim/James Lapine musical, Into the Woods, for which he received a Tony Award nomination. In 1992 he choreographed the notorious Dance of the Seven Veils for the Broadway production of Salome, starring Al Pacino and Sheryl Lee. In 1993 he choreographed the highly-praised dance sequences for the Broadway show The Red Shoes. The final ballet from that show is now in the repertory of American Ballet Theater. For his work on that show, he received the 1993-94 Astaire Award from the Theater Development Fund. Most recently he created the musical staging (and two new dances) for the current Broadway revival of The King and I. 16 | www.ums.org/education Born in Chicago, Lubovitch was educated at the University of Iowa and the Juilliard School in New York. His teachers at Juilliard included Antony Tudor, José Limón and the Martha Graham Company. He danced in numerous modern, ballet, jazz and ethnic companies before forming the Lar Lubovitch Dance Company in 1968, when Paul Lepercq generously sponsored the company’s first performance. The Music of Concerto Six Twenty-Two: Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791) was born in Salzburg, which is now in modern-day Austria. Mozart’s musical ability became apparent when he was about three years old. Mozart received intensive musical training from his father, including instruction in both the piano and violin. He developed very rapidly and was already composing at the age of six. During his formative years, Mozart completed several journeys throughout Europe. A highlight of the Italian journey, which is now an almost legendary tale, occurred when he heard Gregorio Allegri’s Miserere once in performance in the Sistine Chapel, then wrote it out in its entirety from memory, only returning a second time to correct minor errors: he thus produced the first illegal copy of this closelyguarded property of the Vatican. Mozart wrote a variety of different types of music. His enormous output includes works that are widely acknowledged as pinnacles of symphonic, chamber, piano, operatic, and choral music. Many of his works are part of the standard concert repertory and are widely recognized as masterpieces of the classical style. Mozart died on December 5, 1791 while he was working on his final composition, the Requiem. A younger composer, Franz Xaver Süssmayr, was engaged to complete the Requiem after Mozart’s death. Clarinet Concerto in A major, K.622 Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart At the peak of his compositional abilities and just weeks before his death, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart composed the Clarinet Concerto in A major. He wrote it specifically for his friend, Anton Stadler. While a master of all classical genres, Mozart’s most influential advances were probably in the area of the concerto as well as opera. His concertos contain three movements: First: generally in double-sonata form Second: Variable, slow movement Third: lighter, usually rondo or sonata-rondo, sometimes a variation form In addition to standard strings, nearly all of the orchestrations contain woodwind sections and French horns, and some use trumpets and timpani as well. Such full accompaniments contribute to the symphonic quality of the concertos, which is one of their most innovative and influential features. Mozart’s treatment of the genre was so complete that it has changed little in substance since his death, despite the fact that practically every major composer after him has written in it. As the final concerto, the Clarinet Concerto stands as a supreme example of the genre and contains some of Mozart’s finest writing for any instrument. He had already written extensively for the clarinet and basset horn (precursor to the modern bass clarinet), and all of these works indicate a remarkable understanding of the instrument’s capabilities and idiosyncrasies. The clarinet’s ability to navigate very large intervals is tastefully demonstrated in numerous passages and helps create excitement and freshness. For more indepth information on the sonata form, go to: http:// en.wikipedia.org/ wiki/Sonata_form 17 | www.ums.org/education Watching a Dance Performance Title Suggestions for Watching the Performance Visit UMS Online www.ums.org/ education You don’t have to have any special training or experience to watch dance. You will be taking in information with all of your senses: eyes, ears, even your muscles. You may be fascinated with the physical activity you see, the music, the production elements (lighting, costumes and props) or with a “story” the dancers tell you. Your muscles may even react to the action with a kinetic response as you empathize with the movements on stage; tensing when the dancers leap or bracing as they perform a daring fall or a remarkable lift. It is very natural to want to get up and dance after watching an inspiring performance. Open your mind to the moment; concentrate and and raise your awareness to the immediate moment in front of you. The members of the audience are as much a part of the performance as the dancers are! As the lights lower and the music begins, take a deep breath and relax in your seat. You are beginning to watch motion, movement, shape, line, rhythm, tempo, color, space, time and energy...dance. Allow yourself to let go of any notion that you already know what dance means, or has to mean. Release the notion that you have to look at dance as if you were reading a book. If you watch dance with this type of open mind, you may experience an emotion, an image or a feeling that you may not be able to describe. You may not know why or where these reactions come from, but don’t worry. This is all a part of the magic of dance. You may want to ask yourself some questions as you watch the performance: What are the sensory properties in the dance? What do you see? What do you hear? What are the dancers actually doing on the stage? What are the technical properties in the dance? What kind of space is being used? What are the shapes and designs being created? What kinds of energy, dynamics or motions are being used? What are the emotional properties in the dance? How does the movement on stage make you feel? How does the music make you feel? Do you think the music and movements work well together? Every piece of choreography has a reason for being. Dances may be celebrations, tell stories, define moods, interpet poems, express emotions, carve designs or even help you to visualize music. As you watch a dance, a story may occur to you because of your past experiences. However, not all dances relate to stories. The sequences do not have to make literal sense. Allow images and personal feelings to come to the surface of your consciousness. Following the Performance 18 | www.ums.org/education After the performance, feel free to discuss your thoughts with others. Please don’t be disturbed if others had a different reaction to the dance than yours. Take time to think about your personal images and thoughts. Was it enjoyable to watch? Did the dance remind you of experiences in your own life? Did the choreography inspire you to express yourself by writing a poem, drawing a picture or even creating your own dance? José Limón Dance Company José Limón’s Choreographic Offering (Photo by Rosalie O’Connnor) Co-Founder: José Limón José Limón (1908-1972) was a crucial figure in the development of modern dance: his powerful dancing shifted perceptions of the male dancer, while his choreography continues to bring a dramatic vision of dance to audiences around the world. Born in Mexico, Limón moved to New York City in 1928 after a year at UCLA as an art major. It was here that he saw his first dance program: “What I saw simply and irrevocably changed my life. I saw the dance as a vision of ineffable power. A man could, with dignity and towering majesty, dance... dance as Michelangelo’s visions dance and as the music of Bach dances.” In 1946, after studying and performing for 10 years with Doris Humphrey and Charles Weidman, he established his own company with Humphrey as Artistic Director. During her tenure, Humphrey choreographed many pieces for the Limón Dance Company, and it was under her experienced directorial eye that Limón created his signature dance, The Moor’s Pavane (1949). Limón’s choreographic works were quickly recognized as masterpieces and the Company itself became a landmark of American dance. Many of his dances—There is a Time, The Moor’s Pavane, Missa Brevis, Psalm, The Winged—are considered classics of modern dance. José Limón Photo by John Lindquist The Moor’s Pavane, one of José Limón’s signiture pieces 20 | www.ums.org/education Limón was a consistently productive choreographer until his death in 1972—he choreographed at least one new piece each year—and he was also an influential teacher and advocate for modern dance. He was in residence each summer at the American Dance Festival, a key faculty member in The Juilliard School’s Dance Division beginning in 1953, and the director of Lincoln Center’s American Dance Theatre from 1964-65. Limón received two Dance Magazine Awards, the Capezio Award and honorary doctorates from four universities in recognition of his achievements. He was the subject of a major retrospective exhibition at the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts, The Dance Heroes of José Limón (Fall 1996), and in 1997 he was inducted into the Hall of Fame at the National Museum of Dance in Saratoga Springs, NY. His autobiographical writings, An Unfinished Memoir, were edited by Lynn Garafola and published in 1999 by Wesleyan University Press. Co-Founder: Doris Humphrey Doris Humphrey (1895-1958) was one of the founders of American modern dance. She created a distinctive approach to movement based on the body’s relationship to gravity and the use of weight, and her choreographic works are considered classics of modern dance. Born in Oak Park, Illinois, Humphrey was an avid dance student from a young age, and she opened her own dance studio after graduating from high school. She moved to Los Angeles in 1917 to join the Denishawn School and Company, where she performed and taught until 1928, when she and Charles Weidman left to form their own group in New York. Between 1928 and 1944, she choreographed and performed for the Humphrey-Weidman Company, an artistic collaboration that produced ground-breaking dances as well as outstanding performers, José Limón among them. When physical disability ended her career as a dancer, she became the artistic director and mentor for Limón and his company, creating classic works such as Lament for Ignacio Sanchez Mejias (1946), Day on Earth (1947), Invention (1949), and Night Spell (1951). Her final artistic contribution, The Art of Making Dances, was published in 1959 and remains an essential text on choreographic principles. Doris Humphrey and Charles Weidman 21 | www.ums.org/education The Influence of José Limón “I try to compose works that are involved with man’s basic tragedy and gradeur of his spirit...to probe the human entity for the powerful, often crude beauty of the gesture that speaks to man’s humanity.” -José Limón In the beginning, José Limón often experimented with movement and shape in an attempt to explore how the bodies of his dancers were capable of moving. His dancing was particularly daring and exciting as he played with balance and shape. As he developed and studied more technique, he combined this natural enthusiasm with the clarity of line and form. After decades of thinking of male dancers simply as support posts for their female partners, Limón raised the art of male dancing to a new level. His choreography often focused on the strong male figure and, in turn, gave more stylistic possibilities for both male and female dancers. Though he initiated movement from personal insights, José Limón believed that dance was a universal language. He used it to search for the essence of feelings that anyone could recognize and empathize with. In his choreography, Limón often turned to heroic figures and events taken from history including, Adam and Eve, Shakespeare’s Othello, Native Americans, and the Poles after World War II. By choosing these subjects, Limón showcased his humanist approach to modern dance. His dancers’ turns, balances, lunges and soaring leaps seemed to be the irrepressible physical expression of the human spirit. Mexico is also part of Limón’s identity, and occasionally he made explicit reference to his heritage. For example, in collaboration with other Mexican artists, he was commissioned by the Mexican government for a series of dances derived from Mexican history. His piece La Malinche (1949) is a dramatic trio based on the true story of the Indian woman who served as a translator for Cortez during his conquests of Mexico. Gravity also plays an important role in José Limón’s work and is the basis for his technique. A person can harness th energy of gravity, and use it to build momentum, change direction, and shape movement. This concept is called “fall and recovery.” It is common that a Limón dancer may one minute by executing spiraling turns, the next minute lunging in a series of weighted, earth-bound runs, or balancing on one leg as the body tilts to one side suspended in a completely off-balanced position. It is this ability to take the energy of gravity and transfer it into propulsion across the floor that drives José Limón’s choreography. However, unlike ballet, the effect of his movement is not one of weightlessness. In fact, another signature of Limón’s work is that the dancers are in constant dialogue with the floor beneath them. They run and jump making vertical leaps only to reconnect with ground and rise again. The concept of suspension is also central to Limón’s choreography. This concept begins with the belief that a dancer can prolong the time spent at the height of a motion. In this way, a dancer controls the weight of his or her body as it nears the point where it must fall again. The movement is lighter, slowed down, and gains a hovering quality, as when a body is floating. This “light point” in which the dancer is neither falling nor resisting, is called “suspension.” 22 | www.ums.org/education Following his death, the José Limón Dance Company became the first American dance troupe to survive the death of its founder. Prior to this, it had been taken for granted that a modern choreographer’s work was dependent on his or her own physical presence. The fact that Limón’s company outlived him was an important step in establishing the idea of American modern dance as a legitimate art form rather than merely the idiosyncratic vision of individual artists. A José Limón Timeline 1908 José Arcadio Limón is born in Culiacan, Mexico. 1915 Limón’s family moves to the United States; first to Arizona, and then to California. Title Please visit the offical José Limón Dance Company website at www.limon.org 1928 Limón moves to New York City. 1929 Limón sees his first dance performance and enrolls in the Humphrey-Weidman School. 1930 Limón appears in Americana, a musical revue on Broadway featuring dances by Doris Humphrey and Charles Weidman. 1937 Limón creates his first major choreographic work, Danzas Mexicanas, while in residency at Mills College as part of the Bennington Festival. 1943 Limón is drafted into the U.S. Army and choreographs several works for the Special Services. He is discharged in 1945. 1946 Limón forms his own dance company with Doris Humphrey, his mentor and teacher, as Artistic Director and co-choreographer. 1947 The José Limón Dance Company has its debut performance at New York’s Belasco Theater. The New York Times hails Limón as “the finest male dancer of his time” and favorably reviews the choreographic works of both Limón and Humphrey. 1948 The Company appears at the first Connecticut College American Dance Festival, where it remains in residence each summer until 1973. 1949 Limón creates and premieres The Moor’s Pavane, a masterwork that remains one of the most widely performed modern dances in the world. 1950 Limón receives his first Dance Magazine Award, for The Moor’s Pavane. 1951 Limón begins his association with the Juilliard School in New York, where he will teach and choreograph until his death. 1954 The Company inaugurates the U.S. State Department’s International Exchange Program with a tour to South America. 23 | www.ums.org/education Please visit the offical José Limón Dance Company website at www.limon.org 1958 Doris Humphrey dies on December 29th, marking the end of a remarkable 30-year creative partnership with Limón. 1957 Limón receives his second Dance Magazine Award. 1960 The Company returns to South America under the U.S. International Exchange Program. 1963 The Company is the first dance company to perform at Lincoln Center, in Philharmonic Hall. 1964 Limón receives a Capezio Dance Award, and is appointed Artistic Director of Lincoln Center’s American Dance Theater, a publicly supported modern dance repertory company. 1968 The José Limón Dance Foundation is incorporated, establishing a non-profit organization that is dedicated to Limón’s work in the dance field. 1969 Limón begins setting his dances on other companies: American Ballet Theater produces The Moor’s Pavane and The Traitor, and the Royal Swedish Ballet presents an all-Limón program. Limón makes his final stage appearance at the Brooklyn Academy of Music, performing “The Leader” in The Traitor and “The Moor” in The Moor’s Pavane. The José Limón Dance Company makes its UMS debut. 1972 The Company presents its final season under Limón’s direction and premieres his final work, Carlota. He dies of cancer on December 2nd. 1973 The Company tours the Soviet Union; Ruth Currier is appointed Artistic Director, and begins to shape it into a modern dance repertory company. 1975 Carla Maxwell is appointed Assistant Artistic Director. 1977 The Company celebrates its 30th anniversary at New York’s Roundabout Theater. 1978 Carla Maxwell is appointed Artistic Director of the José Limón Dance Foundation, and the Company presents its NYC season at City Center—Roots of American Dance—which establishes it as a dance company with a repertory from a range of choreographers. 24 | www.ums.org/education Title 1982 The Company’s NYC performances are part of the Joyce Theater’s inaugural season. 1985 The Limón Institute is formed as a component of the José Limón Dance Foundation to oversee the licensing of Limón dances and offer classes in Limón Technique. Please visit the offical José Limón Dance Company website at www.limon.org 1986 The Company drops “José” from its title, re-naming itself the Limón Dance Company to emphasize its status as a repertory company. 1992 Mark Jones is appointed Executive Director of the José Limón Dance Foundation. 1994 The Company establishes a formal presence in San Jose, CA, performing annually and conducting education/outreach activities. 1996 The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts presents The Dance Heroes of José Limón, a retrospective exhibition on Limón’s life and work. The exhibition is permanently installed in the National Dance Museum in Saratoga Springs, NY, and Limón is inducted into the Hall of Fame. 1997 The Company celebrates its 50th Anniversary and performs in Sarajevo. 1998 Artistic Director Carla Maxwell is honored with a Bessie, New York’s performance Award; Executive Director Mark Jones receives the Arts & Business Council’s Arts Managers Excellence Award. 1999 Limón’s autobiographical writings are edited by Lynn Garafola and published as An Unfinished Memoir by Wesleyan University Press. 2000 Limón is named one of “America’s Irreplaceable Dance Treasures” by the Dance Heritage Coalition. 2002 The Company premieres Carla Maxwell’s re-creation of Limón’s Psalm at the Cultural Olympiad in Salt Lake City, UT. 2004 Carla Maxwell and the José Limón Dance Company win an Isadora Duncan Award for the for restaging of Psalm (Jose Limón), at the Cowell Theater. 2006 The Company appears as part of the UMS 05/06 season. It is their second appearance in Ann Arbor under UMS auspices. 25 | www.ums.org/education Modern Dance Painting of Isadora Duncan by Fritz August von Kaulbach from Isadora Duncan, The Art of the Dance. courtesy of Theatre Arts Books. About Early Modern Dance Title Modern dance, now practiced and performed throughout the world, originated in the United States and Germany. Launched as a deliberate rejection of the heritage of classical ballet and popular spectacle, this new form of dance was intended to provoke and to inform. Early modern dance borrowed heavily from other cultures, incorporated new technologies and used the body to reveal the psyche. Modern dance was pioneered predominantly by female artists such as Isadora Duncan, Loie Fuller, and Ruth St. Denis in the United States, Rudolf von Laban and Mary Wigman in Germany. It became widely identified as a unique art form within just two generations. Isadora Duncan shocked or delighted audiences by baring her body and soul in what she called “free dance.” She weaved and whirled in flowing natural movements that emanated, she said, from the solar plexus. She aimed to idealize abstractly the emotions induced by the music that was her motivating force, daringly chosen from the works of serious composers including Beethoven, Wagner, and Gluck. Although Duncan established schools and had many imitators, her improvisational technique was too personalized to be carried on by direct successors. The work of the two other American pioneers was far less abstract although no less free. Loie Fuller used dance to imitate and illustrate natural phenomena: the flame, the flower, the butterfly. Experimenting with stage lighting and costume, she created illusionistic effects that remained unique in the history of dance theater until the works of Alwin Nikolais in the 1960s. “...the one artform other than jazz that can be called truly American,” - Robert Coe, Historian The pictorial effects achieved by Ruth St. Denis had a different source: the ritualistic dance of Asian religion. She relied on elaborate costumes and sinuous improvised movements to suggest the dances of India and Egypt and to evoke mystical feelings. With Ted Shawn, who became her partner and husband in 1914, St. Denis enlarged her repertoire to include dances of Native Americans and other ethnic groups. In 1915 St. Denis and Shawn formed the Denishawn company, which increased the popularity of modern dance throughout the United States and abroad and nurtured the leaders of the second generation of modern dance: Martha Graham, Doris Humphrey, and Charles Weidman. At the end of the 1920s those who rebelled against the commercialism of Denishawn devised their own choreography and launched their own companies. Their dances were based on new techniques developed as vehicles for the expression of human passions and universal social themes. Martha Graham found the breath pulse the primary source of dance; exaggerating the contractions and expansions of the torso and flexing of the spine caused by breathing, she devised a basis for movement that for her represented the human being’s inner conflicts. To Doris Humphrey, gravity was the source of the dynamic instability of movement; the arc between balance and imbalance of the moving human body, fall and recovery, represented one’s conflicts with the surrounding world. Forsaking lyrical and imitative movement and all but the most austere costumes and simplest stage effects, Graham and Humphrey composed dances so stark, intellectual, and harshly dramatic as to shock and anger audiences accustomed to being pleased by graceful dancers. José Limón was deeply afftected by their work would later carry on this aesthtic when he and Doris Humphrey established the José Limón Dance Company in 1947. 27 | www.ums.org/education Title Two Early Moderns Ruth St. Denis: 1879-1968 “Society has discovered something new under the limelight. Out of the jaws of vaudeville a group of New York women who still keep a weary eye out for up-to-date novelties, have snatched a turn which they hope to make more or less an artistic sensation.” -The New York Times, March 25, 1906 Ruth Dennis was born in 1879 on a New Jersey farm. The daughter of a strongwilled and highly educated woman who was a physician by training, St. Denis was encouraged to study dance from an early age. Her early training included Delsarte Technique, ballet lessons with the Italian ballerina Maria Bonfante and social dance forms. Ruth began her professional career in New York City in 1892, where she worked in vaudeville houses. In 1898, the young vaudeville dancer was noticed by David Belasco, a well-known and highly successful Broadway producer and director. He hired her to perform with his large company as a featured dancer, and was also responsible for giving her the stage name “St. Denis.” Under Belasco’s influence, Ruthie Dennis became Ruth St. Denis, toured with his production of Zaza around the United States and in Europe, and was exposed to the work of Japanese and European artists. St. Denis’ artistic imagination was ignited by these artists. She became very interested in the dance/drama of Eastern cultures including those of Japan, India and Egypt. After 1900, St. Denis began formulating her own theory of dance/drama based on the dance and drama techniques of her early training, her readings into philosophy, scientology and the history of ancient cultures. In 1904, during one of her tours with Belasco, she saw a poster of the goddess Isis in an advertisement. The image of the goddess sparked her imagination and she began reading about Egypt, and then India. In 1906, after studying Hindu art and philosophy, she offered a public performance. She had designed an elaborate and exotic costume and a series of steps telling the story of a mortal maid who was loved by the god Krishna. Entitled Radha, this solo dance was first performed in Proctor’s Vaudeville House in New York City. Radha was an attempt to translate St. Denis’ understanding of Indian culture and mythology to the American dance stage. She began performing Radha in respectable Broadway theaters. In 1914 St. Denis married Ted Shawn, her dance partner, and the next year they founded the Denishawn School and Company in Los Angeles. During this time, St. Denis’ choreographic style broadened. She had a profound influence on the course of modern dance in America, particularly through Denishawn, which was the first major organized center of dance experiment and instruction in the country and whose students included Martha Graham and Doris Humphrey. Prompted by a belief that dance should be spiritual instead of simply entertaining or technically skillful, St. Denis brought to American dance a new emphasis on meaning and communication of ideas by using themes previously considered too Ruth St. Denis as Radha, circa 1908. philosophical for theatrical dance. Courtesy of Culver Pictures. 28 | www.ums.org/education Isadora Duncan: 1878-1927 Dancer, adventurer, revolutionist, ardent defender of the poetic spirit, Isadora Duncan has been one of the most enduring influences on 20th century culture. Isadora Duncan is regarded as the founder of modern dance. Angela Isadora Duncan was born in California in 1877. Her mother was an accomplished pianist who introduced her to the great composers, whose music later inspired Isadora’s creation of a new dance form. As a child she studied ballet, Delsarte technique and burlesque forms. Isadora’s genius was appreciated by her family when she was very young, but her revolutionary ideas on dance were not well accepted in America. She began her professional career in Chicago in 1896, where she met the theatrical producer Augustin Daly. Soon after, Duncan joined his his touring company, appearing in roles ranging from one of the fairies in a Midsummer Night’s Dream to one of the quartet girls in The Giesha. Duncan traveled to England with the Daly Company in 1897. During this time she also danced as a solo performer in and around London. Isadora’s dream was to teach children who would then continue to teach others. This was more important to her than performances, although performing was valuable as a motivating force and also to help finance her school. One of her objectives was to obtain government support for the school. The first and only government to sponsor her work was the Soviet Union, and this support lasted approximately ten years. Even so, raising money was always difficult, but with financial support, she founded Schools of Duncan Dance in France and Germany. Eventually, Isadora gained great fame in both Europe and America; in fact, in the entire world. Isadora Duncan in Revolutionary; circa 1903. Isadora Duncan was influenced by the Greeks and Romans where dance was regarded as a sacred art form. She felt that dance was meant to be an expression of the natural movements of the human body, and her graceful flowing dance style was revolutionary. She developed within this idea, free and natural movements inspired by the classical Greek arts, folk dances, social dances, nature and natural forces as well as an approach to the new American athleticism which included skipping, running, jumping, leaping and tossing. She was a theorist of dance, a critic of modern society, culture, education and a champion of the struggles for women’s rights, social revolution and the realization of poetry in everyday life. Dancing in long tunics with bare feet and loose hair, Duncan awed audiences with her grace and expression. She inspired a new way of looking at dance and began a movement into a new exploration of the potential of the human body, encouraging many of her contemporaries to do the same, and beginning what we know today as Modern Dance. 29 | www.ums.org/education Contemporaries of José Limón Martha Graham: 1894-1991 “It takes great passion and great energy to do anything creative, especially in the theater. You have to care so much that you can’t sleep, you can’t eat, you can’t talk to people. It’s just got to be right. You can’t do it without that passion.” -Agnes De Mille Martha Graham is one of the most widely recognized names in the history of modern dance. Her school is still one of the most prominent dance schools in America today. Martha Graham was originally a member of the Denishawn School of Dance, but she became dissatisfied with the Eastern dance techniques and broke away to form her own tradition. Graham felt that the center of dance was breathing, and that all of our motions centered around the inhale and exhale of air. Her choreography is recognizable for it’s stark angular look, and for the dramatic contractions and expansions of the body, symbolizing and mimicking the human breath. Her most notable works are Frontier (1935), El Penitente (1940) and Appalachian Spring (1944) Alvin Ailey: 1931-1989 Alvin Ailey began studying ballet in 1949, leaving behind his studies at UCLA. One of his teachers was choreographer Martha Graham, and over the next ten years, Ailey appeared on stage and film as a dancer, choreographer, actor, and director. He choreographed Leonard Bernstein’s Mass and Samuel Barber’s opera, Antony and Cleopatra, which was the inaugural production of the Metropolitan Opera at Lincoln Theater. Ailey founded the Alvin Ailey Dance Company, and in 1965 Ailey left dancing to concentrate entirely on choreography and running his company. He moved between the worlds of african-american and caucasian dance, beginning the long history of intermingling that yielded the contemporary dance we know today. Aliven Ailey’s signiture pieces include his breakthrough Blue Suites (1958) and Revelations (1960). Agnes De Mille: 1905-1993 An American choreographer and dancer from New York City, De Mille was the daughter of playwright W. C. De Mille and niece of Cecil B. De Mille. De Mille brought the ballet form to musical comedy using dance to enhance the plot and move the story along. Choreographing some 15 musicals and 21 ballets, she was a significant force in a new American realism that mingled ballet technique, vernacular movement, and modern psychology. In addition, she was an important spokesperson for governmental and private support for the arts at congressional hearings and other public forums. In 1973 De Mille founded the Heritage Dance Theater, which was based at the North Carolina School of the Arts. Her most popular works include Rodeo (1941) and Fall River Legend (1948). Merce Cunningham: 1919- 30 | www.ums.org/education Merce Cunningham was originally a member of the Martha Graham Dance Company before splitting off to form his own Company. Cunningham’s style of dance is composed of abrupt changes and suspensions of motion, and usually is in a decentralized space on the stage. Cunningham’s work is not based on plot, characterization, or sequence but instead focuses on movement for movement’s sake. Cunningham’s early experiments with LifeForms software for choreography become a tool for Cunningham to go beyond restrictive assumptions about movement. Although he sometimes uses the program to warehouse particular steps for the dancers to practice, he is mainly interested in its possibilities for accessing movement that he hasn’t experienced or hasn’t thought of before. Merce Cunnigham’s broad repetoire has over 70 pieces includes the works such as How To Pass, Kick, Fall and Run (1965) and Native Green (1985). Title The Elements of Dance Every art form has its instruments, artistic medium, and design elements. For dance, they are summed up in the sentence, “Dancers move with energy through time and space.” This statement includes the basic components that dancers work and play with. People dancing are themselves their own instruments, expressing themselves through their bodies. Their body states and movement are characterized by variations in the use of energy, time and space. Dance Instrument Visit UMS Online www.ums.org/education The art of dance takes place through the dancer. Human beings are both the creators and the instruments. The physical manifestation of the dancer’s ideas and feelings is the living, breathing human body. In dance, the body is the mobile figure or shape: felt by the dancer, seen by others. The body shape is sometimes relatively still and sometimes changing as the dancer moves in place or travels through the dance area. Whether moving or pausing, dancers are alive with inner movement, feelings and thoughts. Artistic Medium of Dance Movement is the artistic medium of dance, just as sound is the artistic medium of music. The movement of human beings includes a wide range, from large and obvious to so small and subtle that it appears to be stillness. Periods of relative stillness are as effective and essential in dance as are silences or rests within music. The movement vocabulary of modern dance is made up of human actions. A few of many possible actions are run, hop, crawl, stop, rise, jump, fall, bend, hold, shake, stand, walk, twist., turn, balance, roll, stretch, slide, leap, jiggle, pull, push, kick, hover, reach and hang. Dance Design Elements: Energy, Time and Space Dancers make choices as to how, when, and where to do each action. In other words, dancers apply the variables of energy, time and space to their actions. While elements of dance design may be categorized and described in a variety of different ways, they are used, whether consciously or not, by all dancers, from beginning explorers to seasoned practitioners. Together, they provide a broad menu from which to make dance choices. Choices about any of the three elements tend to affect the others, but analyzing them separately can help dancers understand and use them. Energy “How?” is a question about the energy, force, or dynamic quality of an action. Choices about energy include variations in movement flow and use of force, tension and weight. Here are some examples of action driven by different energy choices: a run might be free flowing or easily stopped, and it may be powerful or gentle, tight or loose, heavy or light. A skip might have a sprightly, listless, rollicking, smooth or other quality of energy. A person might roll heavily across the floor or use explosive energy to jump. Pushing might be done with gentle or powerful energy. 31 | www.ums.org/education Title Visit UMS Online www.ums.org/education Energy choices may also reveal emotional states. For example, a powerful push might imply aggression or confidence depending of the intent and situation. A delicate touch might reflect affection and timidity or perhaps precision and skill. Some types of energy can be described in words; other spring from the movement itself and are difficult to label with language. Sometimes differences in the use of energy are easy to perceive; other times these differences can be quite subtle. Variations in movement flow, force, tension, and weight can be combined in many ways and may communicate a wide spectrum of human emotional states. Time “When?” is a question about time or timing. Choices about time include such things as duration, speed, divisions of time (e.g., beats and intervals), timing of accents, and rhythmic patterns. Timing choices are applied to actions. Here are some examples: a twist could be gradual or quick. A stop might be sudden followed by a pause. Leaping might speed up, slow down, or be paced by even beats. A series of sitting, standing, and stretching actions could occur with an even pace taking a short or a long time. Such actions could be accented with pauses at regular intervals or occur sporadically. Bending jumping, and shaking actions might be arranged in a rhythmically patterned sequence. Rising and curling might ride on the rhythm of breathing. There are endless possibilities for timing one’s movements because timing variables such as speed, duration, accents and rhythmic patterns, simple to complex, can be applied to actions in many different combinations. Space “Where?” is a question about space and spacing. Choices about use of space include such variables as position or place, size, or range, level, direction and pathways. Here are some examples of space choices applied to actions: the dancer might choose to move or pause at any specific place in the dancing area. A skip could be in any direction such as diagonally forward and toward one side of the room. A twist might be high in the air or low to the ground or in between. A run or turning action could be in place or perhaps travel a certain distance along a particular pathway. The pathway might be curved, straight, zigzagging, meandering. The dancer’s movements can also trace pathways in the air as in an elbow drawing loops, a hip jutting out straight to the side, the head swooping down and up through an arc. The range of these movements can vary from so small as to be almost invisible, to as large as the reach of the dancer or the size of the dance area. There are countless variations and combinations of ways that movement can occur in space. Is All Movement Dance? The dancer moves with energy through time and space. But then, who doesn’t? Are we always dancing every moment we are alive? Or are there some special features that lead us to call some of our movement experiences dance? It does seem that in dance, people tend to be more consciously involved in their movement, taking particular enjoyment or interest in their body. 32 | www.ums.org/education Title Language Dance is a language. It is spoken through the movement of the human body. It tell stories, expresses emotions and creates images. All dance is based upon a universal experience: the rhythms and movement of the human body. At a party, at home, or even on the street, most of us have felt the urge to dance. Whether it is hip-hop, swing, salsa, meringue, foxtrot, waltz, or twist, we all know a style of dance. Visit UMS Online www.ums.org/education In dance we take in, synthesize and transmit our ideas and feelings about life through our bodies. Dance is a medium for learning about oneself and one’s world. It is truly a universal art since all humans relate body movement and the need to communicate with each other. As we dance, we sense our bodies and the world around us. We learn how and where our bodies can move, expanding our movement possibilities and enjoying our sense experience as we dance. Dance is a vehicle for understanding life experience. Through dance, we give form to our experience of self and world. Dance is a way to generate and give dynamic form to our thoughts and feelings. It symbolizes our thoughts and feelings kinesthetically. Dance is a unique form for communicating. As we manifest our experience of life in dance, we send out messages through our bodies. We can appreciate these messages ourselves, and others can receive them. Dance communicates in ways that words cannot. Practice Sometimes, dance is designed to be performed and seen by an audience. In those cases, no matter what the style, dancers must train their bodies and their imaginations to be more expressive. Dance artists extend the vocabulary of their movement language through classes, rehearsals, and performances. What they practice are the basic building blocks of dance. José Limón Dance Company in Psalm 33 | www.ums.org/education Lesson Plans Student busily working during a UMS in-school visit. Curriculum Connections Are you interested in more lesson plans? Visit the Kennedy Center’s ArtsEdge web site, the nation’s most comprehensive source of artsbased lesson plans. www.artsedge. kennedy-center. org Introduction The following lessons and activities offer suggestions intended to be used in preparation for the UMS Youth Performance. These lessons are meant to be both fun and educational, and should be used to create anticipation for the performance. Use them as a guide to further exploration of the art form. Teachers may pick and choose from the cross-disciplinary activities and can coordinate with other subject area teachers. You may wish to use several activities, a single plan, or pursue a single activity in greater depth, depending on your subject area, the skill level or maturity of your students and the intended learner outcomes. Our Lesson Plans Are Now Online! Lesson plans were created to help enrich your study of the José Limón Dance Company and make it come alive for your students. We hope that this new online format will make it easier for teachers to adapt the lesson plans for their own classrooms. The plans can bee accessed at www.ums.org/education. Lessons plans available for download are: 1. Time, Space and Energy (Grades 3-12) 2. Seeing Music, Hearing Dance (Grades 3-12) 3. Sculptures (Grades 3-12) 4. Connections (Grades 3-12) 5. Directed Improvisation (Grades 3-12) 6. Appreciating the Performance (Grades 3-12) Learner Outcomes 35 | www.ums.org/education • Each student will develop a feeling of self-worth, pride in work, respect, appreciation and understanding of other people and cultures, and a desire for learning now and in the future in a multicultural, gender-fair, and abilitysensitive environment. • Each student will develop appropriately to that individual’s potential, skill in reading, writing, mathematics, speaking, listening, problem solving, and examining and utilizing information using multicultural, gender-fair and ability-sensitive materials. • Each student will become literate through the acquisition and use of knowledge appropriate to that individual’s potential, through a comprehensive, coordinated curriculum, including computer literacy in a multicultural, gender-fair, and ability-sensitive environment. Meeting Michigan Standards ARTS EDUCATION UMS can help you meet Michigan’s Curricular Standards! The activities in this study guide, combined with the live performance, are aligned with Michigan Standards and Benchmarks. For a complete list of Standards and Benchmarks, visit the Michigan Department of Education online: www.michigan.gov/ mde Standard 1: Performing All students will apply skills and knowledge to perform in the arts. Standard 2: Creating All students will apply skills and knowledge to create in the arts. Standard 3: Analyzing in Context All students will analyze, describe, and evaluate works of art. Standard 4: Arts in Context All students will understand, analyze and describe the arts in their historical, social, and cultural contexts. Standard 5: Connecting to other Arts, other Disciplines, and Life All students will recognize, analyze and describe connections among the arts; between the arts and other disciplines; between the arts and everyday life. ENGLISH LANGUAGE ARTS Standard 3: Meaning and Communication All students will focus on meaning and communication as they listen, speak, view, read, and write in personal, social, occupational, and civic contexts. Standard 6: Voice All students will learn to communicate information accurately and effectively and demonstrate their expressive abilities by creating oral, written and visual texts that enlighten and engage an audience. SOCIAL STUDIES Standard I-1: Time and Chronology All students will sequence chronologically eras of American history and key events within these eras in order to examine relationships and to explain cause and effect. Standard I-3: Analyzing and Interpreting the Past All students will reconstruct the past by comparing interpretations written by others from a variety of perspectives and creating narratives from evidence. Standard II-1: People, Places, and Cultures All students will describe, compare and explain the locations and characteristics of places, cultures and settlements. Standard VII-1: Responsible Personal Conduct All students will consider the effects of an individual’s actions on other people, how one acts in accordance with the rule of law and how one acts in a virtuous and ethically responsible way as a member of society. MATH Standard I-1: Patterns Students recognize similarities and generalize patterns, use patterns to create models and make predictions, describe the nature of patterns and relationships and construct representations of mathematical relationships. Standard I-2: Variability and Change Students describe the relationships among variables, predict what will happen to one variable as another variable is changed, analyze natural variation and sources of variability and compare patterns of change. Standard III-3: Inference and Prediction Students draw defensible inferences about unknown outcomes, make predictions and identify the degree of confidence they have in their predictions. SCIENCE Standard I-1: Constructing New Scientific Knowledge All students will ask questions that help them learn about the world; design and conduct investigations using appropriate methodology and technology; learn from books and other sources of information; communicate their findings using appropriate technology; and reconstruct previously learned knowledge. Standard IV-4: Waves and Vibrations All students will describe sounds and sound waves; explain shadows, color, and other light phenomena; measure and describe vibrations and waves; and explain how waves and vibrations transfer energy. 36 | www.ums.org/education CAREER & EMPLOYABILITY Standard 1: Applied Academic Skills All students will apply basic communication skills, apply scientific and social studies concepts, perform mathematical processes and apply technology in work-related situations. Standard 2: Career Planning All students will acquire, organize, interpret and evaluate information from career awareness and exploration activities, career assessment and work-based experiences to identify and to pursue their career goals. Standard 3: Developing and Presenting Information All students will demonstrate the ability to combine ideas or information in new ways, make connections between seemingly unrelated ideas and organize and present information in formats such as symbols, pictures, schemat ics, charts, and graphs. Standard 4: Problem Solving All students will make decisions and solve problems by specifying goals, identifying resources and constraints, generating alternatives, considering impacts, choosing appropriate alternatives, implementing plans of action and evaluating results. Standard 5: Personal Management All students will display personal qualities such as responsibility, self-management, self-confidence, ethical behavior and respect for self and others. Standard 7: Teamwork All students will work cooperatively with people of diverse backgrounds and abilities, identify with the group’s goals and values, learn to exercise leadership, teach others new skills, serve clients or customers and contribute to a group process with ideas, suggestions and efforts. Each UMS lesson plan is aligned to specific State of Michigan Standards. TECHNOLOGY Standard 2: Using Information Technologies All students will use technologies to input, retrieve, organize, manipulate, evaluate and communicate information. Standard 3: Applying Appropriate Technologies All students will apply appropriate technologies to critical thinking, creative expression and decision-making skills. WORLD LANGUAGES Standard 2: Using Strategies All students will use a varietry of strategies to communicate in a nonEnglish language. Standard 8: Global Community All students will define and characterize the global community. Standard 9: Diversity All students will identify diverse languages and cultures throughout the world. 37 | www.ums.org/education The Vocabulary of Dance Art The production of something beautiful that shows a level of skill (or specific intention) in the chosen medium and an intent to communicate meaning. Art may be classified as architecture, dance, music, theater, visual, literary, technological, etc. Audience People who have gathered together to hear or watch something. They may gather formally in a hall designed to sponsor professional performances, or they may gather in a classroom to observe each other’s work. Body Shapes The design of the body in stillness; shapes may be curved, angular, twisted or straight. Choreography The process of creating a dance; originating from the Greek word choros (meaning “to dance”) and graphos (meaning “to write”). This process includes an understanding of form and movement development in dance. Choreographer A person who creates a dance work and decides how, when and where the dancers should move. Concentration The ability to focus on the task at hand. This may include listening, following directions and completing assigned tasks or combinations in a dance class. Concert A formal performance of music or dance for an audience. Costumes Specific clothes designed for a dance or theater production. Dance Many sequences of movement that combine to produce a whole; a dance has organization, progression and development, including a beginning, middle and end. Dance Technique The specific vocabulary of dance and the physical principles for producing efficient and correct body movement are called technique. Dance Elements Dance is an art form comprised of the elements of time, space, energy and the body; each of these elements has its own knowledge base which is interpreted uniquely by each dance whether it be folk, ballet, modern, jazz or ethnic dance. Element Any one of the three basic components of movement: space, time and energy. (Body is sometimes included as a fourth element.) The Vocabulary of Dance Energy One of the elements of movement; energy propels or initiates movement or causes changes in movement or body position. Ensemble A group of dancers who perform together. Expression A manner of speaking, playing music, dancing, writing or visually producing something that shows feeling and meaning. General Space The area of space through which a dancer travels or takes his/her personal space; it may include a dance studio, a stage, a classroom or the gymnasium; pathways and directions are defined in this space. Gesture A movement of the body or part of the body that a dancer makes in order or express an idea or an emotion; everyday gestures include a handshake, a wave or a fist; abstract gestures in dance are those movements given special emotional or content meaning by a choreographer. Improvisation Movement that is created spontaneously ranging from free-form to highly structured environments. Isolation Movements restricted to one area of the body such as the shoulders, rib cage or hips; isolations are particularly prominent in jazz dance. Jazz A uniquely American dance form that evolved with jazz music. Jazz dance is identified by its high level of energy, modern themes, costumes and wide variety of approaches and improvisation. Kinesthetic Sense The sense of movement and bodily awareness of oneself, others and the environment; this sense provides feedback about speed, height, tension/relaxation, force, exertion, direction, etc.; accessible to audience and performers alike. Levels The height of the dancer in relation to the floor: high, medium, or low. When a dancer is low, a part of his/her torso is touching the floor; when a dancer is middle level the feet are flat on the floor; when a dancer is on high level, he/she is in the air or on the toes. Literal choreography Choreography that communicates a story or message to the audience. The Vocabulary of Dance Locomotor Movement that occurs in general space when a dancer moves place to place; basic locomotor movements are walk, run, skip, jump, hop, leap, slide and gallop. Low level locomotor movements may be rolling, crawling or creeping. Modern Ballet A choreography that maintains elements of traditional ballet but that was created during the 20th century; many modern ballets are abstract and nonliteral. Modern Dance A performance movement form that evolved at the beginning of the 20th century, modern dance can be contrasted with ballet, tap or jazz. Creative work on choreography is an important part of the learning experience in modern dance. Motion Moving; a change of position. It may be in one place or through space. Nonliteral choreography Choreography that emphasizes movement manipulation and design without the intent of telling a story; nonliteral works communicate directly through movement and need no translation. Non-locomotor A teacher may refer to non-locomotor movement as axial movement, referring to movement that occurs in person’s pace with one body part anchored to one spot; movement is organized around the spine or axis of the body. Basic non-locomotor movements are bending, stretching, twisting, rising, falling, opening, closing, swinging and shaking. Percussive Use of energy that is powerful, staccato and explosive. Personal Space The kinesphere that one occupies that is defined by the reach space around the body; it includes all levels, planes and directions both near and far from the body’s center. Phrase The smallest and simplest unit of dance form; usually part of a larger, more complex passage. A phrase is frequently repeated throughout a work in order to give it continuity. Prop An object that is separate from the dancer’s costume but that is a part of the action or spatial design in the choreography or that contributes to the meaning of a dance. Common dance props include flowers and swords. Repertoire Movement phrases or full sections from completed dance works that are taught in order to familiarize dancers with a specific choreographer’s style and movement vocabulary. Repertoire can also mean the dance pieces a dance company is prepared to perform. The Vocabulary of Dance Rhythm The organization of sound in time; rhythm is a pattern of pulses/beats with selected accents that can be repeated or joined with other patterns to form longer phrases. Rhythm is one of the basic elements of music. Section A smaller division of a whole work that contains many phrases in and of itself. Shape An interesting and interrelated arrangement of body parts of one dancer; the visible makeup or molding of the body parts of a single dancer; the overall visible appearance of a group of dancers; also the overall development or form of a dance. Space One of the elements of movement. Direction, level, size, focus and pathway are the aspects of space. An altered use of the aspects allows the choreographer to use space in different ways. Style A distinctive manner of moving. Suite A choreographic form with a moderate first section, second slow section and a lively third section. Symmetrical A visually-balanced body shape or grouping of dancers. Technique The learning of movement skills; the ability to use specific methods to create a dance. Tempo The speed of movement as it progresses faster, more slowly or on a pulse beat. Unity A principle of choreographic form in which phrases fit together, with each phrase important to the whole. Vibratory Use of energy that involves shaking or trembling actions. Dance Vocabulary Word-o FREE SPACE Before the game begins, fill in each box with one of the vocabulary words or phrases below. Your teacher will call out the definition for one of the words below. If you’ve got the matching word on your board, cover the space with your chip. When you’ve got a horizontal, vertical, or diagonal row of five chips, call out WORD-O! audience concert choreography dance energy expression call & response isolation ensemble levels percussive phrase improvisation section technique vibratory costumes rhythm suite motion concentration props shape jazz gesture Modern Dance Word Search i s y j o z b w e m g a x b c v m e s k z v d l o j t l p h e l p d a l d g b t o x r k o d l e r f i k g m i r r k g r f a p t o v a e e o o b l e e e u n v z v c u s n x q l n o j c x c s n i j n p t e h z g i k n n e e c s e j m r w v r t i o i o a m x a e q k y g a q a d o m y y u n t f z z a p a u k f b k g t t j i v x j h a b z s u i t e w s r o w j e i s o l a t i o n g o q n x r o a t r e c n o c w m c u j j u m z m f h w u e o l e a p a All of the words from the left column can be found in the puzzle. These words relate to the José Limón Dance Company performance. Look in all directions for the words! audience People who have gathered together to hear or watch something. concert A formal performance of music or dance for an audience. element Any one of the three basic components of movement: space, time and energy. (Body is sometimes included as a fourth element.) choreographer A person who creates a dance work and decides how, when and where the dancers should move. improvisation Movement that is created spontaneously, ranging from free-form to highly structured environments. dance Many sequences of movement that combine to produce a whole; a dance has organization, progression and development, including a beginning, middle and end. ensemble A group of dancers who perform together. isolation Movements restricted to one area of the body such as the shoulders, rib cage or hips; isolations are particularly prominent in jazz dance. motion Moving; a change of position. It may be in one place or through space. suite A choreographic form with a moderate first section, second slow section and a lively third section. costumes Specific clothes designed for a dance or theater production. Word Search Solution Here are the answers to the word search: audience costumes ensemble motion choreographer dance improvisation suite concert element isolation i s y j o z b w e m g a x b c v m e s k z v d l o j t l p h e l p d a l d g b t o x r k o d l e r f i k g m i r r k g r f a p t o v a e e o o b l e e e u n v z v c u s n x q l n o j c x c s n i j n p t e h z g i k n n e e c s e j m r w v r t i o i o a m x a e q k y g a q a d o m y y u n t f z z a p a u k f b k g t t j i v x j h a b z s u i t e w s r o w j e i s o l a t i o n g o q n x r o a t r e c n o c w m c u j j u m z m f h w u e o l e a p a Recordare by Lar Lubovitch (Photo by Rosalie O’Connor) Resources UMS FIELD TRIP PERMISSION SLIP Dear Parents and Guardians, We will be taking a field trip to see a University Musical Society (UMS) Youth Performance of the José Limón Dance Company on Friday, January 13, from 11am-12noon at the Power Center in Ann Arbor. We will travel (please circle one) • by car • by school bus • by private bus • by foot Leaving school at approximately ________am and returning at approximately ________pm. The UMS Youth Performance Series brings the world’s finest performers in music, dance, theater, opera, and world cultures to Ann Arbor. This performance features the Paul Taylor Dance Company. We (circle one) • need • do not need additional chaperones for this event. (See below to sign up as a chaperone.) Please (circle one) • send lunch along with your child on this day. • do not send If your child requires medication to be taken while we are on the trip, please contact us to make arrangements. If you would like more information about this Youth Performance, please visit the Education section of www.ums.org/education. Copies of the Teacher Resource Guide for this performance are available for you to download. If you have any questions, please don’t hesitate to call me at ____________________________________ or send email to _________________________________________________________________________. Please return this form to the teacher no later than ________________._____________________________ Sincerely, - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - My son/daughter, __________________________________, has permission to attend the UMS Youth Performance on Friday, January 13, 2006. I understand that transportation will be by _____________. I am interested in chaperoning if needed (circle one). • YES • NO Parent/Guardian Signature________________________________________ Date_____________________ Relationship to student ____________________________________________ Daytime phone number__________________________________________ Emergency contact person________________________________________ Emergency contact phone number_________________________________ Bibliography/Videography Some of the textual information as well as some of the graphics included in this guide were derived from the following sources: Bibliography Anderson, Jack. The American Dance Festival. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 1987. Cohen-Straytner, Barbara Naomi. Biographical Dictionary of Dance. New York: G. Schirmer, Inc., 1982. There are more study guides like this one, on a variety of topics online! Just visit... www.ums.org/ education de Mille, Agnes. America Dances. New York: The Macmillan Company, 1980. Jamison, Judith. Dancing Spirit. Garden City, NY: Double Day, 1992. Lewis, Daniel. The Illustrated Dance Technique of José Limón. New York: Harper & Row Publishers., 1984. Maynard, Olga. Judith Jamison: Aspects of a Dancer. New York: Doubleday & Company, Inc., 1976. McDonagh, Don. The Complete Guide to Modern Dance. Garden City, NY: Doubleday & Company, Inc., 1976. Robertson, Allen & Donald Hutera. The Dance Handbook. New York: G.K. Hall & Co., 1988. Terry, Walter. The Dance in America. New York: Harper & Row, Publisher, 1956. Videos and DVDs Limón: A Life Beyond Words, Limón Dance Foundation. Three Modern Classics, Video Artists International, 1999. Featuring three José Limón classics: The Moor’s Pavane, The Traitor, The Emperor Jones. The Dance Works of Doris Humphrey, Part II, Dance Horizons Video, 1999. Donald McKayle: Heartbeats of a DanceMaker, Princeton Book Co., 2005. Lar Lubovitch’s Othello/San Francisco Ballet, Kultur, 1997. Martha Graham: The Dancer Revealed, Kultur, 1994. Martha Graham: An American Legend in Performance, Kultur, 1988. Denishawn; The Birth of Modern Dance, Kultur, 1991. Merce Cunningham; A Lifetime in Dance, Winstar Home Entertainment, 2000. 47 | www.ums.org/education Internet Resources Arts Resources www.ums.org/education The official website of UMS. Visit the Education section (www.ums.org/education) for study guides, information about community and family events and more information about the UMS Youth Education Program. www.artsedge.kennedy-center.org The nation’s most comprehensive web site for arts education, including lesson plans, arts education news, grant information, etc. The José Limón Dance Company and Modern Dance www.limon.org - José Limón Dance Company’s home page www.dorishumphrey.org - An organization whose mission is to provide information about the great American dance pioneer and choreographer, Doris Humphrey. www.lubovitch.org - Lar Lubovitch Dance Company’s home page www.euronet.nl/users/cadi/Introduction.html - The home of the Nederlands Dans Theater where Jirí Kylián serves as artistic director. www.voiceofdance.com - provides an international outlook on the world of dance including reviews, news and discussion forums. www.pbs.org - offers program schedules and arts-related lesson suggestions based on the PBS catalog. http://www.url.co.nz/resources/dance.php- a gateway to an extensive range of dance resources on the internet. www.criticaldance.com - offers both professional dancers and dance enthusiasts forums for conversation and information on current dance events. Although UMS previewed each web site, we recommend that teachers check all web sites before introducing them to students, as content may have changed since this guide was published. 48 | www.ums.org/education Recommended Reading PRIMARY & ELEMENTARY GRADES Baylor, Byrd. (1973). Sometimes I Dance Mountains. Scribner. Text and Photographs capture of a young girl’s feelings about dance. Freedman, Russell. Martha Graham, a Dancer’s Life. New York: Clarion Books, 1998. This is a photo-biography of Martha Graham. Haskell, Arnold L. The Wonderful World of Dance (El maravilloso mundo de la danza). Garden City: NY Doubleday, 1969. (Madrid: Aguilar) Describes the development of dance from Stone Age ritual to modern ballet and twist. There are many more books available about modern dance Just visit www.amazon.com Martin, John Joseph. John Marin’s Book of the Dance. New York: Tudor Pub Co., 1963. Maynard, Olga. American Modern Dancers. Boston: Little Brown, 1965. An introduction to modern dance through the biographical studies of the first creative dancers of that art. Reich, Susanna & Raul Colon (Illustrator). José! Born to Dance : The Story of José Limón. Simon & Schuster/Paula Wiseman Books: 2005. This picture-book biography tells the story of José Limón, who became a legendary figure in the history of American dance. Sorine, Stephanie Riva. Imagine That! It’s Modern Dance. New York: Knopf, 1981. Three young dancers present some modern dance vocabulary…including objects, actions, directions, sizes, shapes, feeling, and ideas. Van Zandt, Eleanor. Dance. Austin, Texas: Steck-Vaughn Co., 1990. Surveys dance as an art form, examining such categories as folk dance, ballet dance, modern dance, ballroom dancing, and contemporary dance and discussing the creation and recording of dance. UPPER MIDDLE & SECONDARY GRADES Anderson, Jack. Ballet and Modern Dance. Pennington, NJ: Princeton Book Company, 1992. Au, Susan. Ballet and Modern Dance (World of Art). London: Thames and Hudson, 2000. Coe, Robert. Dance in America. New York: E.P. Dutton, 1985. Dunbar, June. José Limón. Routledge: 2002. Limón, José & Lynn Garafola (ed.). José Limón: An Unfinished Memoir. Wesleyan University Press, 1999. Ford, Carin T. Legends of American Dance and Choreography. Berkeley Heights, NJ: Enslow Publishing, Inc., 2000. Mazo, Joseph H. Prime Movers: The Makers of Modern Dance in America, 2nd Edition. Princeton: Princeton Book Co., 2000. 49 | www.ums.org/education Community Resources University Musical Society University of Michigan Burton Memorial Tower 881 N. University Ave Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1101 734.615.0122 [email protected] www.ums.org/education University of Michigan Department of Dance 3501 Dance Building Ann Arbor, MI 48109-2217 734.763.5460 www.music.umich.edu/departments/dance/index.htm Michigan Dance Council P.O. Box 381103 Clinton Twp., MI 48038 www.michigandance.org Detroit Dance Collective 23 E. Adams Detroit, MI 48226 313.965.3544 Michigan Theater and Dance Troupe 24333 Southfield Road Southfield, MI 48705 248.552.5501 Swing City Dance Studio Susan Filipiak, Director 1960 S. Industrial Ann Arbor, MI 48104 734.668.7782 www.swingcitydance.com Wayne State University Dance Department 4841 Cass Avenue Detroit, MI 48202 313.577.4273 www.dance.wayne.edu Dance Gallery Studio 815 Wildt Street Ann Arbor, MI 48103 734.747.8885 www.dancegalleryfoundation.org 50 | www.ums.org/education National Resources American Dance Festival 1697 Broadway, Room 900 New York, NY 10019 212.586.1925 [email protected] www.americandancefestival.org Jacob’s Pillow P.O. Box 287 Lee, MA 01238 413.243.0745 [email protected] www.jacobspillow.org The Joyce Theater 175 Eighth Avenue New York, NY 10011 212.242.0800 www.joyce.org/ New York City Center 130 West 56th Street New York, NY 10019 212.247.0430 [email protected] www.nycitycenter.org/ Dance Theater Workshop 219 West 19th Street New York, NY 10011 212.691.6500 www.dtw.org/ Danspace Project 131 East 10th Street New York, NY 10003 212.674.8112 [email protected] www.danspaceproject.org/ 51 | www.ums.org/education Using the Resource Disk The DVD accompanying this Resource Guide includes excerpts to demonstrate the styles and textures of the José Limón Dance Company. This Resource DVD is for educational purposes only and should not be duplicated. Thank you. The contents of this Resource DVD includes 9 pieces danced by the José Limón Dance Company four of which will be seen at the Youth Performance on January 13: Angelitos Negros (Track 3), Chaconne (Track 4), Evening Songs (Track 5), and Concerto Six Twenty-Two (Track 9). The José Limón Company Dancers in Psalm 52 | www.ums.org/education Evening Performance Info José Limón Dance Company Lar Lubovitch, artistic associate Friday, January 13, 8pm Saturday, January 14,1pm (One-Hour Family Performance) Sunday, January 15, 2pm Power Center José Limón’s choreography brings a dramatic vision of dance to audiences around the world. The Limón technique underscores the body’s natural rhythms of fall and recovery— the dynamic, unsettling interplay between weight and weightlessness. The company’s dramatic expression, technical mastery, and expansive, yet nuanced, movement illustrate the timelessness of Limón’s work and vision. The company balances classic Limón masterpieces with new commissions by contemporary choreographers. Lar Lubovitch was one of Limón’s most accomplished students, and his new work, Recordare, takes its inspiration from the Day of the Dead, the Mexican holiday honoring the spirits of departed loved ones. “Lubovitch’s choreography takes Limón’s organic movement language into a new realm of theatricality and magical realism,” says the Cleveland Plain Dealer of the work’s first public performance. This presentation is part of UMS’s decade-long survey of seminal modern dance companies, which has included the companies of Martha Graham, Merce Cunningham, Bill T. Jones, Twyla Tharp, Paul Taylor, Mark Morris, Trisha Brown, and Alvin Ailey. PROGRAM (FRI 1/13) 8pm (Full-Length) Evening Songs (Jirí Kylián, Dvorák songs) (1997) Angelitos Negros (Donald McKayle, Manuel Alvarez Maciste) (1972) Chaconne (José Limón, J.S. Bach) (1942) The Moor’s Pavane (José Limón, Henry Purcell) (1949) Concerto Six Twenty-Two (Lar Lubovitch, Mozart) (1986) PROGRAM FOR THE FAMILY PERFORMANCE (SAT 1/14) 1PM (One-Hour) Evening Songs (Jirí Kylián, Antonín Dvorák) (1997) Chaconne (José Limón, J.S. Bach) (1942) Angelitos Negros (Donald McKayle, Manuel Alvarez Maciste) (1972) A Choreographic Offering (José Limón, J.S. Bach) (1964) Title To purchase UMS tickets: Online www.ums.org By Phone 734.764.2538 TEEN Ticket In response to the needs of our teen audience members, the University Musical Society has implemented the TEEN Ticket. All teens can attend UMS events at a significant discount. Tickets are available for $10 the day of the performance at the Michigan League Ticket Office, or for 50% off the published price at the venue 90 minutes before the performance begins. One ticket per student ID. PROGRAM (SUN 1/15) 2pm (Full-Length) A Choreographic Offering (José Limón, J.S. Bach) (1964) Recordare (Lar Lubovitch, Elliot Goldenthal) (2005) The Moor’s Pavane (José Limón, Henry Purcell) (1949) 53 | www.ums.org/education Send Us Your Feedback! UMS wants to know what teachers and students think about this Youth Performance. We hope you’ll send us your thoughts, drawings, letters or reviews. UMS Youth Education Program Burton Memorial Tower • 881 N. University Ave. • Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1011 734.615.0122 phone • 734.998.7526 fax • [email protected] www.ums.org/education