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Reflections on Dance and Dancing By: Selma Jeanne Cohen & Classic and Romantic Ballet By: Lincoln Kirstein Presented By: Natalie Bourcier & Andrew Elder and Edited By: Laura Pratt and Dr. Picart
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Classic Ballet ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________
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Five Positions of Classic Ballet
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Romantic Ballet What is Romantic ballet?
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Key Points for Being Romantic Did not forswear reality but ____________,_________, and __________. – it is _______ without _______, ________and ________. A localized theatrical echo of a transient literary and artistic movement The appearance of “program music” – __________________________________________ __________________________________________ __________________________________________ __________________________________________ Bring flowers
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Styles of Dance Ballet Modern Broadway- Musical- Type
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Ballet & Outwardness outwardness is derived by the ________ of the legs in the hip socket, opened by the erect ______, the lifted _____ and the raise of the ____on a vertical, long, relaxed spine in everyday life, _________ is impractical due to its consumption of space outwardness characterizes India’s Bharata Natya where the legs are also turned out but the dancer is now grounded, weighted
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Components of Classical Dance ___________ All of which embody a dancer with grace, effortless and flowing
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Modern Dance founded at the end of World War I in a spirit of revolt, made the individual the ______; “the materializing of inner experience” (Martin 246)
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Components of Modern Dance _______ rather than lightness ___________ rather than flow ___________ rather than balanced design __________rather than concealment of process
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Modern Ballet Evolutionized with modern dance producing a style which displays ___________________________ ___________________________ ___________________________ __________________________.
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Problems The lithe bodies of today’s dancers fail to attack their movements with sufficient force, with sufficient weight, for the style of early modern dance works. Is this True?
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A new dance form? think of Cunningham: light but unballetic Cunningham’s dancers are precise, skilled and impersonal His choreography links smooth movements to heterogeneous movements by a violence or a discursive flow
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Bibliography Cohen, Selma Jeanne. “Next Week Swan Lake: Reflections on Dance and Dances, Problems of Definition”. What is Dance? Roger Copeland and Marshall Cohen, eds. Oxford University Press, 1983, pp. 339-354. Kirstein, Lincoln. “Ballet Alphabet: Classic and Romantic Ballet”. What is Dance? Roger Copeland and Marshall Cohen, eds. Oxford University Press, 1983, pp. 339-354 Bernstein, Martin and Martin Picker. An Introduction to Music. (IM) Simon and Schuster Custom Publishing, 1998. Musical Pieces by Beethoven, Mozart, Schubert and Gleason
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