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Ted Shawn's Legacy"Perhaps the best known and most influential dance school founded in Los Angeles was Denishawn, which opened in 1915. Ruth St. Denis and Ted Shawn were, through the audiences they attracted and the students they trained (e.g. Martha Graham, Doris Humphrey, Charles Weidman, as well as Cole) the vanguard of what would eventually become American modern dance." -- Adrienne McLeanTed Shawn's most famous endeavor was his lengthy collaboration with his wife, Ruth St Denis, in the development and promotion of the Denishawn dance company and schools, but this alliance comprised only a fraction of his artistic endeavors. After he and St Denis separated in 1929 and Denishawn (and the American economy) collapsed, he went on to form the all-male company Ted Shawn and His Men Dancers and to establish Jacob's Pillow, which continues as home to a dance school, theatre and a world-renowned dance festival. Shawn established a company of all male dancers in an effort to prove that dancing was an acceptable art form for men. They rehearsed, choreographed, and trained at Jacob's Pillow, Shawn's farm in Massachusetts, and performed throughout the United States from 1933 to 1940. Shawn continued to perform, generally as a solo artist, until 1962, but after 1940 his efforts became more concentrated upon dance in education. He established the Jacob's Pillow Dance Festival and University of the Dance which, by combining daily classes and evening performances, became the first intensive summer dance program in the United States. Shawn's primary aim was to provide students with a well-rounded dance background, which he achieved by inviting performers and instructors from all over the world. Jane Sherman in her autobiography, Soaring: He [Ted Shawn] believed that the dance-educated person should be able to do all forms of dance. This ability was achieved through a technique that, except for lack of pointes, was almost identical with basic classic ballet...It was he who designed our practice floor combinations of fouettes and arabesques, our jetees and pas de chats et al. As these combinations in turn became incorporated into dances (whether for the company or just for class), the movement became freer, less classic, more concerned with interpretations of ethnic expressiveness. Anyone who ever worked under Ted Shawn's drive for perfection (with his biting criticism) and his agressive energy could well understand how and why he became the first male dancer of real importance in America.Jane Sherman describing Ted Shawn on the 1925 Denishawn tour of the Orient: In addition to learning, creating, and assembling new ballets and performing the leading male roles in four different programs of old ones, he completed his book The American Ballet on the SS Jefferson from Seattle to Yokohama. During the tour, he succeeded in fulfilling his contract with Dance Magazine for a 3,000-word article a month on the dances of the Far East. (These eighteen articles made up the bulk of his book, Gods Who Dance, which was published in 1929.) He wrote and mailed back to the States outlines for courses to be given at the various Denishawn schools, to cover the period until he returned and could visit them in person. He prepared regular publicity bulletins of photographs and news covering our tour for some major U.S. papers, so that American audiences would not forget the Denishawn Company during our long absence. He edited the movies Buzz had taken and he pasted up scrapbooks of stills for future use. And he helped the management with the paper work necessary to get our 150 or so pieces of lugguage through the custom of many countries. Who, watching his Adonis, his Shiva, would have believed the amount of non-dancing responsibilities this artist had to carry? |
Time Line
ReferencesOne Hundred Dance Treasures, Ted Shawn, Dance Heritage Coalition, Web. Paul A Scolieri, Ted Shawn, Dance Heritage Coalition, Web. |
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