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Erick Hawkins

Frederick "Erick" Hawkins (April 23, 1909 – November 23, 1994) was an American modern-dance choreographer and dancer.[1]

Erick Hawkins
Hawkins in El Penitente, 1930s
Born
Frederick Hawkins

(1909-04-23)April 23, 1909
DiedNovember 23, 1994(1994-11-23) (aged 85)
New York City, US
EducationHarvard University
School of American Ballet
Known forDance and choreography
MovementModern dance
Spouse(s)
(m. 1948⁠–⁠1954)

Lucia Dlugoszewski (m. ?–1994)
AwardsNational Medal of Arts (1994)

Early life

Frederick Hawkins was born in Trinidad, Colorado, on April 23, 1909. He majored in Greek civilization at Harvard University, graduating in 1930. A performance by the German dancers Harald Kreutzberg and Yvonne Georgi so impressed him that he went to Austria to study dance with the former. Later, he studied at the School of American Ballet.[1]

Career

Soon he was dancing with George Balanchine's American Ballet. In 1937, he choreographed his first dance, Show Piece, which was performed by Ballet Caravan. The next year, Hawkins was the first man to dance with the company of the famous modern dancer and choreographer Martha Graham. In 1939, he officially joined her troupe, dancing male lead in a number of her works, including Appalachian Spring in 1944. They married in 1948. He left her troupe in 1951 to found his own, and they divorced in 1954.

Not long afterwards, he met and began working alongside the experimental composer Lucia Dlugoszewski. They married and remained together for the rest of his life.[2]

After leaving the Graham Company, Hawkins' work developed in a quite different direction. He moved away from esthetic visions based on realistic psychology, sociopolitical themes, storylines or musical portrayals, towards one inspired by ritual and mysticism that called upon dancers' kinesthetic responses to celebrate human, animal and other natural phenonmema.[3] Major influences included Native-American dance rituals and folklore, Japanese esthetics and Zen, and various schools of dance, theater and philosophical thought from around the world, including East Asian and Ancient Greek classics.[1][4] In some ways, he took dance in a similar direction that abstract painters were taking art, though he disliked the label 'abstract'.

In a personal quest for dance safety,[a] Hawkins set out to integrate anatomic principles with dance.[5] He developed an innovative approach to dance technique based on the movement principles of kinesiology and anatomic study, thereby also creating a bridge to later somatic practices.[5] He advocated familiarity with ideokinesis (as well as other somatic approaches to training) and the acquisition of what he termed a 'thinkfeel' sensory awareness of the body and its movement.[5]

In contrast to the intense contractions and shaped positions typical of the Graham technique, Hawkins favored muscular release and free-flowing patterns of movement in a pursuit of effortless movement and seamless transitions.[5] He famously stated “The body is a clear place.”[6] Overall, his dance technique may be seen to combine kinesiology, modern dance (including Graham technique) and a particular idea of beauty.[5]

Hawkins championed contemporary composers, and insisted on performing to live music. The Erick Hawkins Dance Company toured with the Hawkins Theatre Orchestra, an ensemble of seven or more instrumentalists plus conductor. In addition to his wife, Dlugoszewski, prominent composers of the time with whom he worked included Henry Cowell, David Diamond, Ross Lee Finney, Lou Harrison, Alan Hovhaness, Wallingford Riegger, Toru Takemitsu and Virgil Thomson.[3][7] Collaborating visual artists include Isamu Noguchi, Ralph Dorazio, Barbara Morgan,[8] Helen Frankenthaler, and Robert Motherwell.

Award and death

In 1988, Hawkins received the Scripps award at the American Dance Festival. On October 14, 1994, one month before he died, he was presented with the National Medal of Arts by President Bill Clinton.[9] Hawkins died at Lenox Hill Hospital in Manhattan in November 1994. At the time of his death, he was survived by his wife, Dlugoszewski, and by his sister, Murial Wright Davis.[1]

Legacy

The Erick Hawkins Dance Company has continued after the death of its founder. Dlugoszewski initially took over as artistic director until her death in 2000, during which time she choreographed four new works.[10][b] Katherine Duke, who was appointed artistic director of the company in 2001, has been charged with supervising both the teaching of Hawkins' technique and the continuation of his repertory.[11]

Works

Works choreographed by Erick Hawkins [12][13]

1930s

  • Showpiece (1937) premiered Bennington College, Bennington, Vermont. Dancers: Members of Ballet Caravan. Music by Robert McBride

1940s

  • Insubstantial Pageant (1940) premiered 92nd Street Y, New York, NY. Dancer: Erick Hawkins. Music by Lehman Engel
  • In Time of Armament (1941) premiered 92nd Street Y, New York, NY. Dancer: Erick Hawkins. Music by Hunter Johnson
  • Liberty Tree (1941), premiered 92nd Street Y, New York, NY. Dancer: Erick Hawkins. Music by Ralph Gilbert
  • Trickster Coyote (1941), (revived in 1965 and 1983) premiered 92nd Street Y, New York, NY. Dancer: Erick Hawkins. Music by Henry Cowell
  • Curtain Raiser (1942) premiered 92nd Street Y, New York, NY. Dancer: Erick Hawkins. Music by Aaron Copland
  • Primer for Action (1942) premiered 92nd Street Y, New York, NY. Dancer: Erick Hawkins. Music by Ralph Gilbert
  • Yankee Bluebritches (1942) premiered 92nd Street Y, New York, NY. Dancer: Erick Hawkins. Music by Hunter Johnson
  • The Parting (1943) premiered 92nd Street Y, New York, NY. Dancers: Jean Erdman, Erick Hawkins. Music by Hunter Johnson
  • Saturday Night (1943) premiered Sweetbriar College, Sweetbriar, Virginia. Dancers: Muriel Brenner, Erick Hawkins. Music by Gregory Tucker
  • The Pilgrim's Progress (1944) premiered 92nd Street Y, New York, NY. Dancer: Erick Hawkins. Music by Wallingford Riegger
  • John Brown (1947) (revived as God's Angry Man 1965 and 1985) premiered Constitution Hall, Philadelphia, PA. Dancer: Captain John Brown: Erick Hawkins. Music by Charles Mills (1914–1982)
  • Stephen Acrobat (1947) premiered Ziegfeld Theatre, New York, NY. Dancer: Stuart (Gescheidt) Hodes, Erick Hawkins. Music by Robert Evett
  • The Strangler (1948) premiered Palmer Auditorium, American Dance Festival at Connecticut College. Dancer: Oedipus: Eric Hawkins, Sphinx: Anne Meacham, Chorus: Joseph Wiseman. Music by Bohuslav Martinů

1950s

  • Openings of the (eye) (1952) premiered 92nd Street Y, New York, NY. Dancer: Erick Hawkins. Music by Lucia Dlugoszewski
  • Bridegroom of the Moon (1952) premiered 92nd Street Y, New York, NY. Dancer: Erick Hawkins. Music by Wallingford Riegger
  • Black House (1952) premiered, 92nd Street Y New York, NY. Dancer: Erick Hawkins. Music by Lucia Dlugoszewski
  • Lives of Five or Six Swords (1952) premiered 92nd Street Y, New York, NY. Dancer: Erick Hawkins. Music by Lou Harrison
  • Here and Now, with watchers (1957) premiered Hunter (College) Playhouse, New York, NY. Dancer: Nancy Lang, Erick Hawkins (choreographed on Eva Raining). Music by Lucia Dlugoszewski

1960s

  • 8 clear places (1960) premiered Hunter (College) Playhouse, New York, NY. Dancer: Barbara Tucker, Eric Hawkins (choreographed on Eva Raining). Music by Lucia Dlugoszewskiv
  • Sudden Snake-Bird (1960) Dancers: Bird: Erick Hawkins, Snake: Kelly Holt, Kenneth LaVrack
  • Early Floating (1961) premiered, Portland, OR. Dancer: Kelly Holt, Kenneth LeVrack, Ruth Ravon, Erick Hawkins. Music by Lucia Dlugoszewski
  • Spring Azure (1963) premiered, Hunter (College) Playhouse, New York, NY. Dancer: Kelly Holt, Albert Reid, Erick Hawkins. Music by Lucia Dlugoszewski
  • Cantilever (1963) Dedicated to American architect Frederick Kiesler premiered, Théâtre Recamier, Théâtre des Nations Festival, Paris, France. Dancer: Pauline DeGroot, Kelly Holt, Nancy Meehan, Erick Hawkins. Music by Lucia Dlugoszewski
  • To Everybody Out There (1964) premiered Palmer Auditorium, American Dance Festival at Connecticut College. Dancers: Pauline DeGroot, Kelly Holt, Nancy Meehan, Erick Hawkins, Beverly Hirschfeld, Marilyn Patton, James Tyler, Ellen Marshall. Music by Lucia Dlugoszewski
  • Geography of Noon (1964) (excerpts on film)[14] premiered Palmer Auditorium, American Dance Festival at Connecticut College Dancers: Eastern Tailed Blue: Nancy Meehan; Cloudless Sulpher: James Tyler (choreographed on Kelly Holt); Spring Azure: Pauline DeGroot; Variegated Fritillary: Erick Hawkins. Music by Lucia Dlugoszewski
  • Lords of Persia (1965) Commissioned by the American Dance Festival at Connecticut College. Dancer: Kelly Holt, Rod Rodgers, James Tyler, Erick Hawkins. Music by Lucia Dlugoszewski
  • Naked Leopard (1965) premiered Hunter College|Hunter (College) Playhouse, New York, NY. Dancer: Erick Hawkins. Music by Zoltán Kodály
  • Dazzle on a Knife's Edge (1966) premiered Hunter College|Hunter (College) Playhouse, New York, NY. Dancer: Erick Hawkins, Beverly Hirschfeld, Kelly Hotl, Dena Madole, Barbara Roan, Rod Rogers, Penelope Shaw, James Tyler. Music by Lucia Dlugoszewski
  • Tightrope (1968) premiered Brooklyn Academy of Music, Brooklyn, NY. Dancers: First Everyone: Dena Madole; Second Everyone: Kelly Holt; Agnel: Robert Yohn; First Celestial: Beverly Brown; Second Celestial; Kay Gilbert; Third Celestial: Carol Ann Turoff. Music by Lucia Dlugoszewski.
  • Black Lake (1969) premiered Theater of the Riverside Church, New York, NY. Dancers: Beverly Brown, Kay Gilbert, Erick Hawkins, Natalie Richman, Robert Yohn, Nancy Meehan. Music by Lucia Dlugoszewski.

1970s

  • Of Love (1971) premiered ANTA Theatre, New York, NY. Dancers: Beverly Brown, Carol Conway, Bill Groves, Erick Hawkins, Nada Reagan, Lillo Way, Robert Yohn. Music by Lucia Dlugoszewski.
  • Angels of the Inmost Heaven (1971) premiered Washington D.C. Dancers: Beverly Brown, Carol Conway, Erick Hawkins, Nada Reagan, Natalie Richman, Robert Yohn. Music by Lucia Dlugoszewski.
  • "Classic Kite Tails" (1972) premiered Meadowbrook Festival, Detroit, MI. Dancers: Beverly Brown, Carol Conway, Erick Hawkins, Nada Reagan, Natalie Richman, Lillo Way, Robert Yohn. Music by David Diamond.
  • Dawn Dazzled Door (1972) premiered Meadowbrook Festival, Detroit, MI. Dancers: Beverly Brown, Carol Conway, Erick Hawkins, Natalie Richman, Lillo Way, Robert Yohn. Music by Toru Takemitsu.
  • Greek Dreams with Flute (1973) premiered Solomon Guggenheim Museum, New York, NY. Dancers: Beverly Brown, Cathy Ward, Carol Conway, Nada Regan, Natalie Richman, Robert Yohn, Erick Hawkins. Music by Claude Debussy.
  • Meditations of Orpheus (1974) premiered Kennedy Center, Washington D.C. Dancers: Carol Conway, Erick Hawkins, Arlene Kennedy, Alan Lynes, Nada Reagan, Natalie Richman, Kevin Tobiason, Cathy Ward. Music by Alan Hovhaness.
  • Hurrah (1975) premiered Blossom Music Center, Cleveland, OH. Dancers: Erick Hawkins, Victor Lucas, Alan Lynes, Kristin Peterson, Nada Reagan, Natalie Richman, Cathy Ward, Robert Yohn. Music by Virgil Thomson.
  • Death is the Hunter (1975) premiered Carnegie Hall, New York, NY. Dancers: Erick Hawkins, Kevin Tobiason, Alan Lynes, Nada Reagan, Natalie Richman, Cathy Ward, John Wiatt, Robert Yohn. Music by Wallingford Riegger.
  • Parson Weems and the Cherry Tree, etc. (1976) premiered University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA. Dancers: Erick Hawkins, Robert Yohn, Nada Reagan, John Wiatt, Natalie Richman, Cathy Ward. Music by Virgil Thomson.
  • Plains Daybreak (1979) premiered Cincinnati, OH. Dancers: Erick Hawkins, Laura Pettibone, Cori Terry, Douglas Andresen, Cynthia Reynolds, Jesse Duranceau, Randy Howard, Craig Nazor, Cathy Ward. Music by Alan Hovhaness.
  • Agathlon (1979) premiered in France. Dancers: Douglas Andresen, Jesse Duranceau, Randy Howard, Craig Nazor, Laura Pettibone, Cynthia Reynolds, Cori Terry, Cathy Ward. Music by Dorrance Stalvey

1980s

  • Avanti (1980) (unfinished) premiered American Dance Festival at Duke University. Dancers: Douglas Andresen, Jesse Duranceau, Randy Howard, Craig Nazor, Laura Pettibone, Cynthia Reynolds, Cori Terry, Cathy Ward. Music by Lucia Dlugoszewski
  • Heyoka (1981) premiered Alice Tully Hall, New York, NY. Dancers: Douglas Andresen, Jesse Duranceau, Randy Howard, Craig Nazor, Helen Pelton, Laura Pettibone, Cynthia Reynolds, Cathy Ward. Music by Ross Lee Finney
  • Summer Clouds People (1983) premiered Joyce Theater, New York, NY. Dancers: Douglas Andresen, Randy Howard, Helen Pelton, Laura Pettibone, Cynthia Reynolds, Daniel Tai, Cathy Ward, Mark Wisniewski. Music by Michio Mamiya
  • Trickster Coyote (revival) (1983) premiered Symphony Space, New York, NY. Dancers: Randy Howard, Laura Pettibone, Cynthia Reynolds, Daniel Tai, Mark Wisniewski. Music by Henry Cowell
  • The Joshua Tree (1984) premiered Joyce Theater, New York, NY. Dancers: Erick Hawkins, Randy Howard, James Reedy, Daniel Tai, Mark Wisniewski. Music by Ross Lee Finney
  • God's Angry Man (1985) premiered Joyce Theater, New York, NY. Dancers: Erick Hawkins. Music by Charles Mills
  • Today, with Dragon (1986) premiered Alice Tully Hall, New York, NY. Dancers: Erick Hawkins, Randy Howard, Gloria McLean, Laura Pettibone, Cynthia Reynolds, Daniel Tai, Cathy Ward, Mark Wisniewski. Music by Ge Gan-Ru
  • Ahab (1986) (commissioned for Harvard University's 350th anniversary) premiered Hasty Pudding Theatre, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Dancers: Erick Hawkins, Randy Howard, Michael Moses, James Reedy, Daniel Tai, Michael Butler. Music by Ross Lee Finney
  • God the Reveller (1987) premiered Kennedy Center, Washington D.C. Dancers: Katherine Duke, Randy Howard, Gloria McLean, Michael Moses, Laura Pettibone, James Reedy, Cynthis Reynolds, Sean Russo, Daniel Tai, Mariko Tanabe, Mark Wisniewski. Music by Alan Hovhaness.
  • Cantilever II (1988) premiered Joyce Theater, New York, NY. Dancers: James Aarons, Brenda Connors, Katherine Duke, Randy Howard, Gloria McLean, Michael Moses, Laura Pettibone, James Reedy, Cynthia Reynolds, Sean Russo, Daniel Tai, Mariko Tanabe. Music by Lucia Dlugoszewski
  • New Moon (1989) premiered Joyce Theater, New York, NY. Dancers: Douglas Andresen, Renata Celichowska, Brenda Connors, Katherine Duke, Gloria McLean, Michael Moses, Laura Pettibone, Christopher Potts, Cynthia Reynolds, Frank Roth, Sean Russo, Catherine Tharin. Music by Lou Harrison

1990s

  • Killer of Enemies: The Divine Hero (1991) premiered Joyce Theater, New York, NY. Dancers: Erick Hawkins, James Aarons, Douglas Andresen, Brenda Connors, Renata Celichowska, Katherine Duke, Randy Howard, Othello Jones, Gloria McLean, Joseph Mills, Michael Moses, Kathy Ortiz, Laura Pettibone, James Reedy, Cynthia Reynolds, Catherine Tharin. Music by Alan Hovhaness
  • Intensities of Wind & Space (1991) premiered Joyce Theater, New York, NY. Dancers: Douglas Andresen, Othello Jones, Gloria McLean, Joseph Mills, Michael Moses, Laura Pettibone, Cynthia Reynolds, Frank Roth, Catherine Tharin. Music by Katsuhisa Hattori
  • Each Time You Carry Me This Way (1993) premiered Joyce Theater, New York, NY. Dancers: Coleen McIntosh Blacklock, Othello Jones, Joseph McClintock, Joy McEwen, Gloria McLean, Tim McMinn, Joseph Mills, Kathy Ortiz, Christopher Potts, Brian Simmerson, Mariko Tanabe, Catherine Tharin. Music by Lucia Dlugoszewski
  • Many Thanks (1994) premiered Joyce Theater, New York, NY. Dancers: Joy McEwen, Coleen McIntosh Blacklock, Joseph Mills, Michael Moses, Kathy Ortiz, Christopher Potts, Brian Simmerson, Mariko Tanabe, Catherine Tharin. Music by Lucia Dlugoszewski

See also

Notes

  1. ^ An injury to his knees and lower back sustained while dancing with Graham in 1945 had led him to reflect critically on the different types of concert dance in relation to the body's musculoskeletal vulnerability.[4]
  2. ^ Radical Ardent and Taking Time to be Vulnerable were both premiered in 1999.[11]

References

  1. ^ a b c d Kisselgoff, Anna (24 November 1994). . The New York Times. Archived from the original on 13 April 2016.
  2. ^ Mazo, Joseph H. . Dance Magazine (February 1995). Archived from the original on 5 May 2009.
  3. ^ a b Conyers, Claude (2001). "Modern dance: second generation". In Sadie, Stanley; Tyrrell, John (eds.). The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians (2nd ed.). London: Macmillan. ISBN 978-1-56159-239-5.
  4. ^ a b Shorr, Kathleen Verity (1984). (PDF) (Thesis). The University of Arizona. Archived from the original (PDF) on 9 August 2019.
  5. ^ a b c d e Ajamian, Marissa (May 2018). Stripping Away Archaic Ideologies: Reversing the Disappearance of the Hawkins Technique (Thesis). Department of Dance Undergraduate Research Theses, 2018 (presented at the 23rd Annual Richard J. and Martha D. Denman Undergraduate Research Forum). The Ohio State University. hdl:1811/84605.
  6. ^ Hawkins 1992.
  7. ^ Aldrich, Elizabeth (2001). "Erick Hawkins". In Sadie, Stanley; Tyrrell, John (eds.). The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians (2nd ed.). London: Macmillan. ISBN 978-1-56159-239-5.
  8. ^ Labrecque, B. (1971). Still Photography and Human Motion. Quest, 16(1), 26-36.
  9. ^ . The White House – Office of the Press Secretary. 13 October 1994. Archived from the original on 13 May 2011.
  10. ^ Legg, Joshua (2011). Introduction to Modern Dance Techniques. Princeton Book Company. pp. 124–151. ISBN 978-0-87127-325-3.
  11. ^ a b Craine, Debra; Mackrell, Judith (2010). . The Oxford Dictionary of Dance (2nd ed.). Oxford University Press. Archived from the original on 22 August 2019.(subscription required)
  12. ^ Erick Hawkins Collection. Guides to Special Collections in the Music Division of the Library of Congress. Washington D.C. 2007
  13. ^ Celichowska & Hawkins 2000.
  14. ^ Library record, WorldCat

Sources

  • Hawkins, Erick (1992). The Body is a Clear Place and Other Statements on Dance. Hightstown, New Jersey: Princeton Book Company. ISBN 978-0-87127-271-3.
  • Celichowska, Renata; Hawkins, Erick (2000). The Erick Hawkins Modern Dance Technique. Hightstown, New Jersey: Princeton Book Company. ISBN 978-0-87127-213-3.

External links

  • Erik Hawkins collection, 1940-1993 (Library of Congress catalog)
  • Erick Hawkins Dance Company (official website)

erick, hawkins, frederick, erick, hawkins, april, 1909, november, 1994, american, modern, dance, choreographer, dancer, hawkins, penitente, 1930sbornfrederick, hawkins, 1909, april, 1909trinidad, colorado, usdiednovember, 1994, 1994, aged, york, city, useducat. Frederick Erick Hawkins April 23 1909 November 23 1994 was an American modern dance choreographer and dancer 1 Erick HawkinsHawkins in El Penitente 1930sBornFrederick Hawkins 1909 04 23 April 23 1909Trinidad Colorado USDiedNovember 23 1994 1994 11 23 aged 85 New York City USEducationHarvard UniversitySchool of American BalletKnown forDance and choreographyMovementModern danceSpouse s Martha Graham m 1948 1954 wbr Lucia Dlugoszewski m 1994 AwardsNational Medal of Arts 1994 Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 3 Award and death 4 Legacy 5 Works 5 1 1930s 5 2 1940s 5 3 1950s 5 4 1960s 5 5 1970s 5 6 1980s 5 7 1990s 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Sources 10 External linksEarly life EditFrederick Hawkins was born in Trinidad Colorado on April 23 1909 He majored in Greek civilization at Harvard University graduating in 1930 A performance by the German dancers Harald Kreutzberg and Yvonne Georgi so impressed him that he went to Austria to study dance with the former Later he studied at the School of American Ballet 1 Career EditSoon he was dancing with George Balanchine s American Ballet In 1937 he choreographed his first dance Show Piece which was performed by Ballet Caravan The next year Hawkins was the first man to dance with the company of the famous modern dancer and choreographer Martha Graham In 1939 he officially joined her troupe dancing male lead in a number of her works including Appalachian Spring in 1944 They married in 1948 He left her troupe in 1951 to found his own and they divorced in 1954 Not long afterwards he met and began working alongside the experimental composer Lucia Dlugoszewski They married and remained together for the rest of his life 2 After leaving the Graham Company Hawkins work developed in a quite different direction He moved away from esthetic visions based on realistic psychology sociopolitical themes storylines or musical portrayals towards one inspired by ritual and mysticism that called upon dancers kinesthetic responses to celebrate human animal and other natural phenonmema 3 Major influences included Native American dance rituals and folklore Japanese esthetics and Zen and various schools of dance theater and philosophical thought from around the world including East Asian and Ancient Greek classics 1 4 In some ways he took dance in a similar direction that abstract painters were taking art though he disliked the label abstract In a personal quest for dance safety a Hawkins set out to integrate anatomic principles with dance 5 He developed an innovative approach to dance technique based on the movement principles of kinesiology and anatomic study thereby also creating a bridge to later somatic practices 5 He advocated familiarity with ideokinesis as well as other somatic approaches to training and the acquisition of what he termed a thinkfeel sensory awareness of the body and its movement 5 In contrast to the intense contractions and shaped positions typical of the Graham technique Hawkins favored muscular release and free flowing patterns of movement in a pursuit of effortless movement and seamless transitions 5 He famously stated The body is a clear place 6 Overall his dance technique may be seen to combine kinesiology modern dance including Graham technique and a particular idea of beauty 5 Hawkins championed contemporary composers and insisted on performing to live music The Erick Hawkins Dance Company toured with the Hawkins Theatre Orchestra an ensemble of seven or more instrumentalists plus conductor In addition to his wife Dlugoszewski prominent composers of the time with whom he worked included Henry Cowell David Diamond Ross Lee Finney Lou Harrison Alan Hovhaness Wallingford Riegger Toru Takemitsu and Virgil Thomson 3 7 Collaborating visual artists include Isamu Noguchi Ralph Dorazio Barbara Morgan 8 Helen Frankenthaler and Robert Motherwell Award and death EditIn 1988 Hawkins received the Scripps award at the American Dance Festival On October 14 1994 one month before he died he was presented with the National Medal of Arts by President Bill Clinton 9 Hawkins died at Lenox Hill Hospital in Manhattan in November 1994 At the time of his death he was survived by his wife Dlugoszewski and by his sister Murial Wright Davis 1 Legacy EditThe Erick Hawkins Dance Company has continued after the death of its founder Dlugoszewski initially took over as artistic director until her death in 2000 during which time she choreographed four new works 10 b Katherine Duke who was appointed artistic director of the company in 2001 has been charged with supervising both the teaching of Hawkins technique and the continuation of his repertory 11 Works EditWorks choreographed by Erick Hawkins 12 13 1930s Edit Showpiece 1937 premiered Bennington College Bennington Vermont Dancers Members of Ballet Caravan Music by Robert McBride1940s Edit Insubstantial Pageant 1940 premiered 92nd Street Y New York NY Dancer Erick Hawkins Music by Lehman Engel In Time of Armament 1941 premiered 92nd Street Y New York NY Dancer Erick Hawkins Music by Hunter Johnson Liberty Tree 1941 premiered 92nd Street Y New York NY Dancer Erick Hawkins Music by Ralph Gilbert Trickster Coyote 1941 revived in 1965 and 1983 premiered 92nd Street Y New York NY Dancer Erick Hawkins Music by Henry Cowell Curtain Raiser 1942 premiered 92nd Street Y New York NY Dancer Erick Hawkins Music by Aaron Copland Primer for Action 1942 premiered 92nd Street Y New York NY Dancer Erick Hawkins Music by Ralph Gilbert Yankee Bluebritches 1942 premiered 92nd Street Y New York NY Dancer Erick Hawkins Music by Hunter Johnson The Parting 1943 premiered 92nd Street Y New York NY Dancers Jean Erdman Erick Hawkins Music by Hunter Johnson Saturday Night 1943 premiered Sweetbriar College Sweetbriar Virginia Dancers Muriel Brenner Erick Hawkins Music by Gregory Tucker The Pilgrim s Progress 1944 premiered 92nd Street Y New York NY Dancer Erick Hawkins Music by Wallingford Riegger John Brown 1947 revived as God s Angry Man 1965 and 1985 premiered Constitution Hall Philadelphia PA Dancer Captain John Brown Erick Hawkins Music by Charles Mills 1914 1982 Stephen Acrobat 1947 premiered Ziegfeld Theatre New York NY Dancer Stuart Gescheidt Hodes Erick Hawkins Music by Robert Evett The Strangler 1948 premiered Palmer Auditorium American Dance Festival at Connecticut College Dancer Oedipus Eric Hawkins Sphinx Anne Meacham Chorus Joseph Wiseman Music by Bohuslav Martinu1950s Edit Openings of the eye 1952 premiered 92nd Street Y New York NY Dancer Erick Hawkins Music by Lucia Dlugoszewski Bridegroom of the Moon 1952 premiered 92nd Street Y New York NY Dancer Erick Hawkins Music by Wallingford Riegger Black House 1952 premiered 92nd Street Y New York NY Dancer Erick Hawkins Music by Lucia Dlugoszewski Lives of Five or Six Swords 1952 premiered 92nd Street Y New York NY Dancer Erick Hawkins Music by Lou Harrison Here and Now with watchers 1957 premiered Hunter College Playhouse New York NY Dancer Nancy Lang Erick Hawkins choreographed on Eva Raining Music by Lucia Dlugoszewski1960s Edit 8 clear places 1960 premiered Hunter College Playhouse New York NY Dancer Barbara Tucker Eric Hawkins choreographed on Eva Raining Music by Lucia Dlugoszewskiv Sudden Snake Bird 1960 Dancers Bird Erick Hawkins Snake Kelly Holt Kenneth LaVrack Early Floating 1961 premiered Portland OR Dancer Kelly Holt Kenneth LeVrack Ruth Ravon Erick Hawkins Music by Lucia Dlugoszewski Spring Azure 1963 premiered Hunter College Playhouse New York NY Dancer Kelly Holt Albert Reid Erick Hawkins Music by Lucia Dlugoszewski Cantilever 1963 Dedicated to American architect Frederick Kiesler premiered Theatre Recamier Theatre des Nations Festival Paris France Dancer Pauline DeGroot Kelly Holt Nancy Meehan Erick Hawkins Music by Lucia Dlugoszewski To Everybody Out There 1964 premiered Palmer Auditorium American Dance Festival at Connecticut College Dancers Pauline DeGroot Kelly Holt Nancy Meehan Erick Hawkins Beverly Hirschfeld Marilyn Patton James Tyler Ellen Marshall Music by Lucia Dlugoszewski Geography of Noon 1964 excerpts on film 14 premiered Palmer Auditorium American Dance Festival at Connecticut College Dancers Eastern Tailed Blue Nancy Meehan Cloudless Sulpher James Tyler choreographed on Kelly Holt Spring Azure Pauline DeGroot Variegated Fritillary Erick Hawkins Music by Lucia Dlugoszewski Lords of Persia 1965 Commissioned by the American Dance Festival at Connecticut College Dancer Kelly Holt Rod Rodgers James Tyler Erick Hawkins Music by Lucia Dlugoszewski Naked Leopard 1965 premiered Hunter College Hunter College Playhouse New York NY Dancer Erick Hawkins Music by Zoltan Kodaly Dazzle on a Knife s Edge 1966 premiered Hunter College Hunter College Playhouse New York NY Dancer Erick Hawkins Beverly Hirschfeld Kelly Hotl Dena Madole Barbara Roan Rod Rogers Penelope Shaw James Tyler Music by Lucia Dlugoszewski Tightrope 1968 premiered Brooklyn Academy of Music Brooklyn NY Dancers First Everyone Dena Madole Second Everyone Kelly Holt Agnel Robert Yohn First Celestial Beverly Brown Second Celestial Kay Gilbert Third Celestial Carol Ann Turoff Music by Lucia Dlugoszewski Black Lake 1969 premiered Theater of the Riverside Church New York NY Dancers Beverly Brown Kay Gilbert Erick Hawkins Natalie Richman Robert Yohn Nancy Meehan Music by Lucia Dlugoszewski 1970s Edit Of Love 1971 premiered ANTA Theatre New York NY Dancers Beverly Brown Carol Conway Bill Groves Erick Hawkins Nada Reagan Lillo Way Robert Yohn Music by Lucia Dlugoszewski Angels of the Inmost Heaven 1971 premiered Washington D C Dancers Beverly Brown Carol Conway Erick Hawkins Nada Reagan Natalie Richman Robert Yohn Music by Lucia Dlugoszewski Classic Kite Tails 1972 premiered Meadowbrook Festival Detroit MI Dancers Beverly Brown Carol Conway Erick Hawkins Nada Reagan Natalie Richman Lillo Way Robert Yohn Music by David Diamond Dawn Dazzled Door 1972 premiered Meadowbrook Festival Detroit MI Dancers Beverly Brown Carol Conway Erick Hawkins Natalie Richman Lillo Way Robert Yohn Music by Toru Takemitsu Greek Dreams with Flute 1973 premiered Solomon Guggenheim Museum New York NY Dancers Beverly Brown Cathy Ward Carol Conway Nada Regan Natalie Richman Robert Yohn Erick Hawkins Music by Claude Debussy Meditations of Orpheus 1974 premiered Kennedy Center Washington D C Dancers Carol Conway Erick Hawkins Arlene Kennedy Alan Lynes Nada Reagan Natalie Richman Kevin Tobiason Cathy Ward Music by Alan Hovhaness Hurrah 1975 premiered Blossom Music Center Cleveland OH Dancers Erick Hawkins Victor Lucas Alan Lynes Kristin Peterson Nada Reagan Natalie Richman Cathy Ward Robert Yohn Music by Virgil Thomson Death is the Hunter 1975 premiered Carnegie Hall New York NY Dancers Erick Hawkins Kevin Tobiason Alan Lynes Nada Reagan Natalie Richman Cathy Ward John Wiatt Robert Yohn Music by Wallingford Riegger Parson Weems and the Cherry Tree etc 1976 premiered University of Massachusetts Amherst MA Dancers Erick Hawkins Robert Yohn Nada Reagan John Wiatt Natalie Richman Cathy Ward Music by Virgil Thomson Plains Daybreak 1979 premiered Cincinnati OH Dancers Erick Hawkins Laura Pettibone Cori Terry Douglas Andresen Cynthia Reynolds Jesse Duranceau Randy Howard Craig Nazor Cathy Ward Music by Alan Hovhaness Agathlon 1979 premiered in France Dancers Douglas Andresen Jesse Duranceau Randy Howard Craig Nazor Laura Pettibone Cynthia Reynolds Cori Terry Cathy Ward Music by Dorrance Stalvey1980s Edit Avanti 1980 unfinished premiered American Dance Festival at Duke University Dancers Douglas Andresen Jesse Duranceau Randy Howard Craig Nazor Laura Pettibone Cynthia Reynolds Cori Terry Cathy Ward Music by Lucia Dlugoszewski Heyoka 1981 premiered Alice Tully Hall New York NY Dancers Douglas Andresen Jesse Duranceau Randy Howard Craig Nazor Helen Pelton Laura Pettibone Cynthia Reynolds Cathy Ward Music by Ross Lee Finney Summer Clouds People 1983 premiered Joyce Theater New York NY Dancers Douglas Andresen Randy Howard Helen Pelton Laura Pettibone Cynthia Reynolds Daniel Tai Cathy Ward Mark Wisniewski Music by Michio Mamiya Trickster Coyote revival 1983 premiered Symphony Space New York NY Dancers Randy Howard Laura Pettibone Cynthia Reynolds Daniel Tai Mark Wisniewski Music by Henry Cowell The Joshua Tree 1984 premiered Joyce Theater New York NY Dancers Erick Hawkins Randy Howard James Reedy Daniel Tai Mark Wisniewski Music by Ross Lee Finney God s Angry Man 1985 premiered Joyce Theater New York NY Dancers Erick Hawkins Music by Charles Mills Today with Dragon 1986 premiered Alice Tully Hall New York NY Dancers Erick Hawkins Randy Howard Gloria McLean Laura Pettibone Cynthia Reynolds Daniel Tai Cathy Ward Mark Wisniewski Music by Ge Gan Ru Ahab 1986 commissioned for Harvard University s 350th anniversary premiered Hasty Pudding Theatre Cambridge Massachusetts Dancers Erick Hawkins Randy Howard Michael Moses James Reedy Daniel Tai Michael Butler Music by Ross Lee Finney God the Reveller 1987 premiered Kennedy Center Washington D C Dancers Katherine Duke Randy Howard Gloria McLean Michael Moses Laura Pettibone James Reedy Cynthis Reynolds Sean Russo Daniel Tai Mariko Tanabe Mark Wisniewski Music by Alan Hovhaness Cantilever II 1988 premiered Joyce Theater New York NY Dancers James Aarons Brenda Connors Katherine Duke Randy Howard Gloria McLean Michael Moses Laura Pettibone James Reedy Cynthia Reynolds Sean Russo Daniel Tai Mariko Tanabe Music by Lucia Dlugoszewski New Moon 1989 premiered Joyce Theater New York NY Dancers Douglas Andresen Renata Celichowska Brenda Connors Katherine Duke Gloria McLean Michael Moses Laura Pettibone Christopher Potts Cynthia Reynolds Frank Roth Sean Russo Catherine Tharin Music by Lou Harrison1990s Edit Killer of Enemies The Divine Hero 1991 premiered Joyce Theater New York NY Dancers Erick Hawkins James Aarons Douglas Andresen Brenda Connors Renata Celichowska Katherine Duke Randy Howard Othello Jones Gloria McLean Joseph Mills Michael Moses Kathy Ortiz Laura Pettibone James Reedy Cynthia Reynolds Catherine Tharin Music by Alan Hovhaness Intensities of Wind amp Space 1991 premiered Joyce Theater New York NY Dancers Douglas Andresen Othello Jones Gloria McLean Joseph Mills Michael Moses Laura Pettibone Cynthia Reynolds Frank Roth Catherine Tharin Music by Katsuhisa Hattori Each Time You Carry Me This Way 1993 premiered Joyce Theater New York NY Dancers Coleen McIntosh Blacklock Othello Jones Joseph McClintock Joy McEwen Gloria McLean Tim McMinn Joseph Mills Kathy Ortiz Christopher Potts Brian Simmerson Mariko Tanabe Catherine Tharin Music by Lucia Dlugoszewski Many Thanks 1994 premiered Joyce Theater New York NY Dancers Joy McEwen Coleen McIntosh Blacklock Joseph Mills Michael Moses Kathy Ortiz Christopher Potts Brian Simmerson Mariko Tanabe Catherine Tharin Music by Lucia DlugoszewskiSee also EditList of dancersNotes Edit An injury to his knees and lower back sustained while dancing with Graham in 1945 had led him to reflect critically on the different types of concert dance in relation to the body s musculoskeletal vulnerability 4 Radical Ardent and Taking Time to be Vulnerable were both premiered in 1999 11 References Edit a b c d Kisselgoff Anna 24 November 1994 Erick Hawkins a Pioneering Choreographer of American Dance Is Dead at 85 The New York Times Archived from the original on 13 April 2016 Mazo Joseph H Erick Hawkins dancer and choreographer Obituary Dance Magazine February 1995 Archived from the original on 5 May 2009 a b Conyers Claude 2001 Modern dance second generation In Sadie Stanley Tyrrell John eds The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians 2nd ed London Macmillan ISBN 978 1 56159 239 5 a b Shorr Kathleen Verity 1984 Dancing the miao yu Asian influences in the dance arts of Merce Cunningham and Erick Hawkins PDF Thesis The University of Arizona Archived from the original PDF on 9 August 2019 a b c d e Ajamian Marissa May 2018 Stripping Away Archaic Ideologies Reversing the Disappearance of the Hawkins Technique Thesis Department of Dance Undergraduate Research Theses 2018 presented at the 23rd Annual Richard J and Martha D Denman Undergraduate Research Forum The Ohio State University hdl 1811 84605 Hawkins 1992 Aldrich Elizabeth 2001 Erick Hawkins In Sadie Stanley Tyrrell John eds The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians 2nd ed London Macmillan ISBN 978 1 56159 239 5 Labrecque B 1971 Still Photography and Human Motion Quest 16 1 26 36 President and First Lady Honor Artists and Scholars The White House Office of the Press Secretary 13 October 1994 Archived from the original on 13 May 2011 Legg Joshua 2011 Introduction to Modern Dance Techniques Princeton Book Company pp 124 151 ISBN 978 0 87127 325 3 a b Craine Debra Mackrell Judith 2010 Hawkins Erick The Oxford Dictionary of Dance 2nd ed Oxford University Press Archived from the original on 22 August 2019 subscription required Erick Hawkins Collection Guides to Special Collections in the Music Division of the Library of Congress Washington D C 2007 Celichowska amp Hawkins 2000 Library record WorldCatSources EditHawkins Erick 1992 The Body is a Clear Place and Other Statements on Dance Hightstown New Jersey Princeton Book Company ISBN 978 0 87127 271 3 Celichowska Renata Hawkins Erick 2000 The Erick Hawkins Modern Dance Technique Hightstown New Jersey Princeton Book Company ISBN 978 0 87127 213 3 External links EditErik Hawkins collection 1940 1993 Library of Congress catalog Erick Hawkins Dance Company official website Portal Biography Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Erick Hawkins amp oldid 1144131577, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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