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Duncan, Isadora |
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Duncan, Isadora (ĭz'ədôr`ə dŭng`kən), 1878–1927, American dancer, b. San Francisco. She had little success in the United States when she first created dances based on Greek classical art. But in Budapest (1903), Berlin (1904), and later in London and New York City (1908), she triumphed. An innovator, pioneer, and liberator of expressive movement, she was inspired by the drama of ancient Greece. She danced barefoot to music that was often not written to be danced. Her costume, a revealing adaptation of the Greek tunic, was complemented by several colored scarves draped from her shoulders. Through her many tours, her schools in Berlin, Paris, Moscow, and London, and her daring and dynamic personality, she greatly influenced the development of modern dance modern dance, serious theatrical dance forms that are distinct from both ballet and the show dancing of the musical comedy or variety stage.
The Beginnings of Modern DanceDeveloped in the 20th cent. ..... Click the link for more information. . She was briefly (1922–23) married to the Russian poet Sergei Yesenin Yesenin, Sergei Aleksandrovich (syĭrgā` əlyĭksän`drəvĭch yĭsyā`nĭn) ..... Click the link for more information. . In 1927 she gave her last concert in Paris; she died when her scarf caught in the wheel of her car while she was motoring at Nice. BibliographySee her autobiography (1927, repr. 1966) and The Art of The Dance, ed. by S. Cheney (1928, repr. 1970); biographies by I. Duncan (1958), W. Terry (1964), V. Seroff (1971), F. Blair (1987), and P. Kurth (2001). Duncan, Isadoraorig. Angela Duncan(born May 26, 1877, or May 27, 1878, San Francisco, Calif., U.S.—died Sept. 14, 1927, Nice, Fr.) U.S. interpretive dancer. She rejected the conventions of classical ballet and based her technique on natural rhythms and movement inspired by ancient Greece, dancing barefoot in a tunic without tights. Enjoying little success in the U.S., she moved to Europe in 1898. She toured Europe, giving recitals to great acclaim throughout her life and earning notoriety for her liberated unconventionality, and she founded several dance schools. She was strangled when her long scarf became entangled in the rear wheel of the car in which she was riding. Her emphasis on “free dance” made her a precursor of modern dance, and she became an inspiration to many avant-garde artists. Duncan, Isadora (1878–1927) dancer; born in San Francisco. Her parents were divorced shortly after her birth and she was raised by her poor but romantic mother, who filled her children with the sounds of music and notions of unconventionality. Isadora showed an early talent for dance and by age ten left school to teach dancing. She soon began to dance in public and in 1896 she went with her mother to New York City where she joined Augustin Daly's theater company as a dancer and actress. She disliked doing traditional dances, so in 1898 she began to perform her own free-style dances. In 1900 she made her debut in London, where she became interested in recreating what she perceived as the ancient Greek dances. By 1902 she was performing her own dances on the Continent to great acclaim. She also started a dance school in Berlin, tried to start a "Temple to the Dance" in Greece (1903–04), had a child by Gordon Craig, the British stage designer, and performed in Russia (1905, 1907, 1908). Wherever she went she gave lecture-demonstrations of what she called "the dance of the future," based on her improvised movements intended to unite music, poetry, and nature; she usually performed barefoot in revealing Greek tunics and with flowing scarves. Her American tour in 1908 was not successful but she went back to Europe and more acclaim. She also had another child, this one by Paris Singer, heir to the sewing machine fortune; when both her children drowned while in a car that accidentally rolled into the Seine (1913), her life not unnaturally became even more erratic although she showed a new profundity in her dances. In the following years she moved about—to the U.S.A., South America, San Francisco, Athens (Greece)—dancing and teaching with mixed success, and in 1921–22 she tried to start a school in Moscow. She married the much younger Russian poet, Sergei Essenin in 1922; mentally unstable, he drank his way through her money; her U.S. tour in 1923 led to charges of her being a Bolshevik, and they fled back to Russia with no money; Essenin deserted her in 1924 and committed suicide in 1925. Her school for young dancers had been taken over by others and she was penniless, so she went to France, where she gave one legendary final performance in Paris and wrote her autobiography, My Life (1927). She died in Nice, France, as dramatically as she had lived, when her long scarf caught in the spokes of a car wheel, breaking her neck. Although her influence on dance and the arts is debated, to some in her day and since she seemed one of the greatest spirits who had ever lived. How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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