Description
Book SynopsisThe private and performance lives of five female dancers in Western dance history
Trade Review"Eliot . . . chronicles the lives of five female 'underdog' dancers . . . focusing on such details as their social and economic status, education, dance training and how they came to dance professionally. Amusing anecdotes abound. . . . Eliot's Dancing Lives shines a spotlight on the lives of five lesser-known dancers."--Dance Teacher
"This accessible resource offers less experienced scholars of dance easy entry into studying dance as cultural history. Recommended."--Choice
"She has enriched our understanding of dance history. . . . Recommended."--
Library Journal"An engaging read for all those who enjoy the ephemeral qualities of dance."--
ForeWord"Eliot’s writing is a labor of love, and her affection toward her subjects is inspiring."--
Time Out Chicago"Eliot embarks on a wide-ranging meditation on each of five dancers, evoking the nature of her talent and artistry, her teachers, her repertory, her peers, the social and economic constraints under which she labored, the aesthetics of the period, and what she contributed to the choreography she danced and to the art in general. In each chapter a new world unfolds, opening doors to the dance history of the period, teasing out what it meant to be a dancer at distinct historical moments, and placing the performer--the female performer--at the center of an art that since the Romantic era has been to a considerable extent a mediation on the nature of femininity."--Lynn Garafola, professor of dance, Barnard College, and author of
Dance for a City: Fifty Years of the New York City Ballet"Uniting a uniquely embodied knowledge of the dancing body with historic social and aesthetic concerns, Karen Eliot's
Dancing Lives creates a gallery of fresh and compelling portraits of women who dance. Eliot illuminates the hidden dimensions of their emotional and psychological lives in her focus on developments in ballet and modern dance since the eighteenth century. In writing that is clear, accessible, and gently affectionate, this dance historian and former member of the Merce Cunningham Dance Company makes the persuasive argument that a close and careful look at the full lives of past dancers affords a unique view of world history, cultural evolutions, and historical dance events."--Janice Ross, author of
Anna Halprin: Experience as DanceTable of ContentsAcknowledgments ix
Introduction 1
1. Giovanna Baccelli 7
2. Adele Dumilatre 33
3. Tamara Karsavina 60
4. Moira Shearer 91
5. Catherine Kerr 119
Epilogue 143
Notes 149
Bibliography 173
Index 181
Illustrations follow page 90