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Ted Shawn

Ted Shawn (born Edwin Myers Shawn; October 21, 1891 – January 9, 1972) was a male pioneer of American modern dance. He created the Denishawn School together with his wife Ruth St. Denis. After their separation he created the all-male company Ted Shawn and His Men Dancers. With his innovative ideas of masculine movement, he was one of the most influential choreographers and dancers of his day. He was also the founder and creator of Jacob's Pillow Dance Festival in Massachusetts, and "was knighted by the King of Denmark for his efforts on behalf of the Royal Danish Ballet."[1]

Ted Shawn
Ted Shawn, c. 1918,
photographed by Arthur F. Kales
Born
Edwin Myers Shawn

(1891-10-21)October 21, 1891
DiedJanuary 9, 1972(1972-01-09) (aged 80)
OccupationDancer
Spouse
(m. 1914; died 1968)

Ted Shawn and the creation of Denishawn

 
Ted Shawn with dancer and wife Ruth St. Denis in 1916.
 
Ted Shawn and Ruth St. Denis in Egyptian Ballet

Ted Shawn was born in Kansas City, Missouri on October 21, 1891.[2] Originally intending to become a minister of religion, he attended the University of Denver. While attending the university, he caught diphtheria at the age of 19 causing him temporary paralysis from the waist down. It was during his physical therapy for the disease that Shawn was introduced to dance by way of studying with Hazel Wallack in 1910, a former dancer with the Metropolitan Opera. In 1912, Shawn relocated to Los Angeles where he became part of an exhibition ballroom dance troupe with Norma Gould as his partner.[3]

It wasn't until moving to New York in 1914 that Shawn realized his true potential as an artist upon meeting Ruth St. Denis. The two were married within 2 months on August 13, 1914.[4] St. Denis served not only as a partner but an extremely valuable creative outlet to Shawn. Both artists believed strongly in the potential for dance as an art form becoming integrated into everyday life. The combination of their mutual artistic vision, as well as Shawn's business knowledge, led to the couple opening the first Denishawn School in Los Angeles, California in 1915, with the goal being to meld dance together with the body, mind, and spirit.

Notable performances choreographed by him during Denishawn's 17-year run include Invocation to the Thunderbird" (1917), the solo Danse Americaine, performed by Charles Weidman (1923), Julnar of the Sea, Xochitl performed by Martha Graham (1920) and Les Mysteres Dionysiaques.[5] In addition to spawning the careers of Weidman and Graham, the Denishawn school also housed Louise Brooks and Doris Humphrey as students.

Style and technique

Together, Shawn and Ruth St. Denis established an eclectic grouping of dance techniques including ballet (done without shoes), and movement that focused less on rigidity and more on the freeing of the upper body. To add to St. Denis' mainly eastern influence, Shawn brought the spirit of North African, Spanish, American and Amerindian influence to the table. The Denishawn Company, founded by Shawn and St. Denis in 1914, ushered in a new era of modern American dance. Breaking with European traditions, their choreography connected the physical and spiritual, often drawing from ancient, indigenous, and international sources. St. Denis's and Shawn's Orientalism and cultural appropriation raise questions of imperialism, colonization, and racism.[citation needed]

Ted Shawn and His Male Dancers

I believe that dance communicates man's deepest, highest and most truly spiritual thoughts and emotions far better than words, spoken or written.

— attributed to Ted Shawn,
in Outback and Beyond[6]

Due to Shawn's marital problems and financial difficulties, Denishawn closed in the early 1930s. Subsequently, Shawn formed an all-male dance company of athletes he taught at Springfield College, with the mission to fight for acceptance of the American male dancer and to bring awareness of the art form from a male perspective.[7][citation needed]

The all-male company was based out of a farm that Shawn purchased near Lee, Massachusetts. On July 14, 1933, Ted Shawn and His Men Dancers had their premier performance at Shawn's farm, which would later be known as Jacob's Pillow Dance Festival. Shawn produced some of his most innovate and controversial choreography to date with this company such as "Ponca Indian Dance", "Sinhalese Devil Dance", "Maori War Haka", "Hopi Indian Eagle Dance", "Dyak Spear Dances", and "Kinetic Molpai". Through these creative works Shawn showcased athletic and masculine movement that soon would gain popularity. The company performed in the United States and Canada, touring more than 750 cities, in addition to international success in London and Havana. Ted Shawn and His Men Dancers concluded at Jacob's Pillow on August 31, 1940, with a homecoming performance.

Shawn had a romantic relationship with one of his dancers, Barton Mumaw, from 1931 to 1948. One of the leading stars of the company, Barton Mumaw would emerge onto the dance industry and be considered "the American Nijinsky". While with Shawn, Mumaw began a relationship with John Christian, a stage manager for the company. Mumaw introduced Shawn to Christian. Later, Shawn formed a partnership with Christian, with whom he stayed from 1949 until his death in 1972.[8]

Jacob's Pillow

 
Ted Shawn resting on the Jacob's Pillow Rock

With this new company came the creation of Jacob's Pillow: a dance school, retreat, and theater. The facilities also hosted teas, which, over time, became the Jacob's Pillow Dance Festival.[9][10] Shawn also created The School of Dance for Men around this time, which helped promote male dance in colleges nationwide.

Shawn taught classes at Jacob's Pillow just months before his death at the age of 80.[11] In 1965, Shawn was a Heritage Award recipient of the National Dance Association. Shawn's final appearance on stage in the Ted Shawn Theater at Jacob's Pillow was in Siddhas of the Upper Air, where he reunited with St. Denis for their fiftieth anniversary.

Saratoga Springs is now the home of the National Museum of Dance, the United States' only museum dedicated to professional dance. Shawn was inducted into the museum's Mr. & Mrs. Cornelius Vanderbilt Whitney Hall of Fame in 1987.

Writings

Ted Shawn wrote and published nine books that provided a foundation for Modern Dance:[12]

  • 1920 – Ruth St. Denis: Pioneer and Prophet
  • 1926 – The American Ballet
  • 1929 – Gods Who Dance
  • 1935 – Fundamentals of a Dance Education
  • 1940 – Dance We Must
  • 1944 – How Beautiful Upon the Mountain
  • 1954 – Every Little Movement: a Book About Francois Delsarte
  • 1959 – Thirty-three Years of American Dance
  • 1960 – One Thousand and One Night Stands (autobiography, with Gray Poole)

Legacy

In the 1940s, Shawn bestowed his works to the Museum of Modern Art. The museum subsequently deaccessed these works, giving them to New York Public Library for the Performing Arts and Jacob's Pillow archive, while Shawn was still alive. Dancer Adam Weinert saw this as a violation of MoMA's policy not to sell or give away works by living artists, and created The Reaccession of Ted Shawn, digital, augmented reality performances of Shawn's works to be displayed in MoMA.[13][14]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Ted Shawn". Jacob's Pillow Dance, jacobspillow.org. Retrieved 28 July 2013.
  2. ^ Birth data: Astrodatabank
  3. ^ Scolieri, Paul A. (2019-11-01). Ted Shawn: His Life, Writings, and Dances. Oxford University Press. pp. 59–63, 77. ISBN 978-0-19-933108-6.
  4. ^ Schlundt 1998, p. 583
  5. ^ Schlundt 1998, p. 585
  6. ^ Nolan, Cynthia (1994). Outback and Beyond. Sydney: Angus & Robertson. pp. 50, 51.
  7. ^ The International Encyclopedia of Dance. oxfordreference.com: Oxford University Press. 1998. ISBN 978-0-19-517369-7.
  8. ^ Foulkes 2002, pp. 85–86
  9. ^ Foulkes 2002, pp. 84–85
  10. ^ Cohen-Stratyner, Barbara N. (1982). Biographical Dictionary of Dance. New York: Schirmer Books. p. 811.
  11. ^ Benbow-Niemer 1998, p. 716
  12. ^ Kassing, Gayle (2007). History of dance: an interactive arts approach. pp. 187–9. ISBN 9780736060356.
  13. ^ Weinert, Adam. "The Reaccession of Ted Shawn". Retrieved September 9, 2014.
  14. ^ Scherr, Apollinaire (August 19, 2014). "Downtown Dance Festival, Wagner Park, Lower Manhattan, New York". Financial Times. Archived from the original on 2022-12-11. Retrieved September 9, 2014.

Further reading

  • Dreier, Katherine S.; Hawkins, Ralph (1933). Shawn the Dancer. Berlin: Drei Masken Verlag.
  • Terry, Walter (1976). Ted Shawn: The Father of Modern Dance. New York: Dial Press. ISBN 0-8037-8557-7.
  • Shelton, Suzanne (1981). Divine Dancer: A Biography of Ruth St. Denis. New York: Doubleday.
  • Jordan, Stephanie (1984). "Ted Shawn's Music Visualizations". Dance Chronicle. 7 (1).
  • Bentivoglio, Leonetta (1985). Danza Contemporanea. Milan: Longanesi.
  • Benbow-Niemer, Glynis (1998). "Shawn, Ted". In Benbow-Pfalzgraf, Taryn (ed.). International Dictionary of Modern Dance. Detroit: St. James Press.
  • Foulkes, Julia L. (2002). Modern Bodies: Dance and American Modernism From Martha Graham to Alvin Ailey. Chapel Hill, NC: The University of North Carolina Press.
  • Schlundt, Christena L. (1998). "Shawn, Ted". In Cohen, Selma J. (ed.). International Encyclopedia of Dance. Vol. 5. New York: Oxford University Press.

External links

Media

Archive footage
  • Ted Shawn's Men Dancers performing in Finale from The New World in 1936 at Jacob's Pillow Dance Festival
  • Ted Shawn performing Nobody Knows the Trouble I've Seen from Four Dances Based on American Folk Music in 1938 at Jacob's Pillow
  • Ted Shawn's Men Dancers performing Kinetic Molpai in 1937 at Jacob's Pillow
  • Jacob's Pillow Men Dancers rehearsing Kinetic Molpai with Barton Mumaw in 1992 at Jacob's Pillow
  • Ted Shawn's Men Dancers performing in Sixth Prelude from The Well Tempered Clavichord in 1933 at Jacob's Pillow Dance Festival
  • Barton Mumaw performing Ted Shawn's O Brother Sun and Sister Moon (A Study of St. Francis) in 1981 at Jacob's Pillow Dance Festival
Photographs
  • Photograph of Ted Shawn by James Walter Collinge (10th picture in gallery)

shawn, born, edwin, myers, shawn, october, 1891, january, 1972, male, pioneer, american, modern, dance, created, denishawn, school, together, with, wife, ruth, denis, after, their, separation, created, male, company, dancers, with, innovative, ideas, masculine. Ted Shawn born Edwin Myers Shawn October 21 1891 January 9 1972 was a male pioneer of American modern dance He created the Denishawn School together with his wife Ruth St Denis After their separation he created the all male company Ted Shawn and His Men Dancers With his innovative ideas of masculine movement he was one of the most influential choreographers and dancers of his day He was also the founder and creator of Jacob s Pillow Dance Festival in Massachusetts and was knighted by the King of Denmark for his efforts on behalf of the Royal Danish Ballet 1 Ted ShawnTed Shawn c 1918 photographed by Arthur F KalesBornEdwin Myers Shawn 1891 10 21 October 21 1891Kansas City Missouri U S DiedJanuary 9 1972 1972 01 09 aged 80 OccupationDancerSpouseRuth St Denis m 1914 died 1968 wbr Contents 1 Ted Shawn and the creation of Denishawn 2 Style and technique 3 Ted Shawn and His Male Dancers 4 Jacob s Pillow 5 Writings 6 Legacy 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External links 10 1 MediaTed Shawn and the creation of Denishawn Edit Ted Shawn with dancer and wife Ruth St Denis in 1916 Ted Shawn and Ruth St Denis in Egyptian Ballet Ted Shawn was born in Kansas City Missouri on October 21 1891 2 Originally intending to become a minister of religion he attended the University of Denver While attending the university he caught diphtheria at the age of 19 causing him temporary paralysis from the waist down It was during his physical therapy for the disease that Shawn was introduced to dance by way of studying with Hazel Wallack in 1910 a former dancer with the Metropolitan Opera In 1912 Shawn relocated to Los Angeles where he became part of an exhibition ballroom dance troupe with Norma Gould as his partner 3 It wasn t until moving to New York in 1914 that Shawn realized his true potential as an artist upon meeting Ruth St Denis The two were married within 2 months on August 13 1914 4 St Denis served not only as a partner but an extremely valuable creative outlet to Shawn Both artists believed strongly in the potential for dance as an art form becoming integrated into everyday life The combination of their mutual artistic vision as well as Shawn s business knowledge led to the couple opening the first Denishawn School in Los Angeles California in 1915 with the goal being to meld dance together with the body mind and spirit Notable performances choreographed by him during Denishawn s 17 year run include Invocation to the Thunderbird 1917 the solo Danse Americaine performed by Charles Weidman 1923 Julnar of the Sea Xochitl performed by Martha Graham 1920 and Les Mysteres Dionysiaques 5 In addition to spawning the careers of Weidman and Graham the Denishawn school also housed Louise Brooks and Doris Humphrey as students Style and technique EditTogether Shawn and Ruth St Denis established an eclectic grouping of dance techniques including ballet done without shoes and movement that focused less on rigidity and more on the freeing of the upper body To add to St Denis mainly eastern influence Shawn brought the spirit of North African Spanish American and Amerindian influence to the table The Denishawn Company founded by Shawn and St Denis in 1914 ushered in a new era of modern American dance Breaking with European traditions their choreography connected the physical and spiritual often drawing from ancient indigenous and international sources St Denis s and Shawn s Orientalism and cultural appropriation raise questions of imperialism colonization and racism citation needed Ted Shawn and His Male Dancers EditI believe that dance communicates man s deepest highest and most truly spiritual thoughts and emotions far better than words spoken or written attributed to Ted Shawn in Outback and Beyond 6 Due to Shawn s marital problems and financial difficulties Denishawn closed in the early 1930s Subsequently Shawn formed an all male dance company of athletes he taught at Springfield College with the mission to fight for acceptance of the American male dancer and to bring awareness of the art form from a male perspective 7 citation needed The all male company was based out of a farm that Shawn purchased near Lee Massachusetts On July 14 1933 Ted Shawn and His Men Dancers had their premier performance at Shawn s farm which would later be known as Jacob s Pillow Dance Festival Shawn produced some of his most innovate and controversial choreography to date with this company such as Ponca Indian Dance Sinhalese Devil Dance Maori War Haka Hopi Indian Eagle Dance Dyak Spear Dances and Kinetic Molpai Through these creative works Shawn showcased athletic and masculine movement that soon would gain popularity The company performed in the United States and Canada touring more than 750 cities in addition to international success in London and Havana Ted Shawn and His Men Dancers concluded at Jacob s Pillow on August 31 1940 with a homecoming performance Shawn had a romantic relationship with one of his dancers Barton Mumaw from 1931 to 1948 One of the leading stars of the company Barton Mumaw would emerge onto the dance industry and be considered the American Nijinsky While with Shawn Mumaw began a relationship with John Christian a stage manager for the company Mumaw introduced Shawn to Christian Later Shawn formed a partnership with Christian with whom he stayed from 1949 until his death in 1972 8 Jacob s Pillow Edit Ted Shawn resting on the Jacob s Pillow RockWith this new company came the creation of Jacob s Pillow a dance school retreat and theater The facilities also hosted teas which over time became the Jacob s Pillow Dance Festival 9 10 Shawn also created The School of Dance for Men around this time which helped promote male dance in colleges nationwide Shawn taught classes at Jacob s Pillow just months before his death at the age of 80 11 In 1965 Shawn was a Heritage Award recipient of the National Dance Association Shawn s final appearance on stage in the Ted Shawn Theater at Jacob s Pillow was in Siddhas of the Upper Air where he reunited with St Denis for their fiftieth anniversary Saratoga Springs is now the home of the National Museum of Dance the United States only museum dedicated to professional dance Shawn was inducted into the museum s Mr amp Mrs Cornelius Vanderbilt Whitney Hall of Fame in 1987 Writings EditTed Shawn wrote and published nine books that provided a foundation for Modern Dance 12 1920 Ruth St Denis Pioneer and Prophet 1926 The American Ballet 1929 Gods Who Dance 1935 Fundamentals of a Dance Education 1940 Dance We Must 1944 How Beautiful Upon the Mountain 1954 Every Little Movement a Book About Francois Delsarte 1959 Thirty three Years of American Dance 1960 One Thousand and One Night Stands autobiography with Gray Poole Legacy EditIn the 1940s Shawn bestowed his works to the Museum of Modern Art The museum subsequently deaccessed these works giving them to New York Public Library for the Performing Arts and Jacob s Pillow archive while Shawn was still alive Dancer Adam Weinert saw this as a violation of MoMA s policy not to sell or give away works by living artists and created The Reaccession of Ted Shawn digital augmented reality performances of Shawn s works to be displayed in MoMA 13 14 See also EditList of dancersReferences Edit Ted Shawn Jacob s Pillow Dance jacobspillow org Retrieved 28 July 2013 Birth data Astrodatabank Scolieri Paul A 2019 11 01 Ted Shawn His Life Writings and Dances Oxford University Press pp 59 63 77 ISBN 978 0 19 933108 6 Schlundt 1998 p 583 Schlundt 1998 p 585 Nolan Cynthia 1994 Outback and Beyond Sydney Angus amp Robertson pp 50 51 The International Encyclopedia of Dance oxfordreference com Oxford University Press 1998 ISBN 978 0 19 517369 7 Foulkes 2002 pp 85 86 Foulkes 2002 pp 84 85 Cohen Stratyner Barbara N 1982 Biographical Dictionary of Dance New York Schirmer Books p 811 Benbow Niemer 1998 p 716 Kassing Gayle 2007 History of dance an interactive arts approach pp 187 9 ISBN 9780736060356 Weinert Adam The Reaccession of Ted Shawn Retrieved September 9 2014 Scherr Apollinaire August 19 2014 Downtown Dance Festival Wagner Park Lower Manhattan New York Financial Times Archived from the original on 2022 12 11 Retrieved September 9 2014 Further reading EditDreier Katherine S Hawkins Ralph 1933 Shawn the Dancer Berlin Drei Masken Verlag Terry Walter 1976 Ted Shawn The Father of Modern Dance New York Dial Press ISBN 0 8037 8557 7 Shelton Suzanne 1981 Divine Dancer A Biography of Ruth St Denis New York Doubleday Jordan Stephanie 1984 Ted Shawn s Music Visualizations Dance Chronicle 7 1 Bentivoglio Leonetta 1985 Danza Contemporanea Milan Longanesi Benbow Niemer Glynis 1998 Shawn Ted In Benbow Pfalzgraf Taryn ed International Dictionary of Modern Dance Detroit St James Press Foulkes Julia L 2002 Modern Bodies Dance and American Modernism From Martha Graham to Alvin Ailey Chapel Hill NC The University of North Carolina Press Schlundt Christena L 1998 Shawn Ted In Cohen Selma J ed International Encyclopedia of Dance Vol 5 New York Oxford University Press External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ted Shawn Works by or about Ted Shawn at Internet Archive Ted Shawn at IMDb John Willis Collection of Ted Shawn at the Harry Ransom Center Shawn the Dancer The Stowitts Museum amp Library Archived from the original on 2011 07 19 Ted Shawn papers Jerome Robbins Dance Division New York Public Library for the Performing Arts Ted Shawn papers Additions Jerome Robbins Dance Division New York Public Library for the Performing Arts Shawn Ted 2005 Chaque petit mouvement a propos de Francois Delsarte Editions Complexe ISBN 280480030X ISSN 1761 1695 The Reaccession of Ted Shawn danced by Adam WeinertMedia Edit Archive footageTed Shawn s Men Dancers performing in Finale from The New World in 1936 at Jacob s Pillow Dance Festival Ted Shawn performing Nobody Knows the Trouble I ve Seen from Four Dances Based on American Folk Music in 1938 at Jacob s Pillow Ted Shawn s Men Dancers performing Kinetic Molpai in 1937 at Jacob s Pillow Jacob s Pillow Men Dancers rehearsing Kinetic Molpai with Barton Mumaw in 1992 at Jacob s Pillow Ted Shawn s Men Dancers performing in Sixth Prelude from The Well Tempered Clavichord in 1933 at Jacob s Pillow Dance Festival Barton Mumaw performing Ted Shawn s O Brother Sun and Sister Moon A Study of St Francis in 1981 at Jacob s Pillow Dance FestivalPhotographsPhotograph of Ted Shawn by James Walter Collinge 10th picture in gallery Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ted Shawn amp oldid 1132158432, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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