Research Catalog
Interview with Theodora Wiesner
- Title
- Interview with Theodora Wiesner [sound recording].
- Author
- Wiesner, Theodora.
- Publication
- 1971.
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Status | Vol/Date | Format | Access | Call Number | Item Location |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Available - Can be used on site. Please visit New York Public Library - Performing Arts Research Collections to submit a request in person. | two discs in one case | Audio | Supervised use | *MGZTL 4-2547 two discs in one case | Performing Arts Research Collections - Dance |
Details
- Additional Authors
- Description
- 2 sound discs (ca. 62 min.) : digital, stereo; 4 3/4 in.
- Summary
- Disc 1 (ca. 32 min.). Theodora Wiesner speaks with Don McDonagh about attending New York University and taking dance lessons from Martha Graham; early Graham classes in the 1930s that were Denishawn inspired; the frequency of performances; her first transcontinental tour, consisting of 6 weeks with 3 performances per week; Graham's original dance trio; Graham as soloist; the need for students to have supplemental jobs in order to continue dancing without pay; the average size of Graham's dance classes; Merle Armitage's role in the Graham company tours; the first piece she danced in, Heretic; her favorite Graham dances, including Primitive mysteries and Letter to the world; the style of Graham's movement and the tension created; the difficulty younger dancers have in learning Graham pieces; Merce Cunningham and Erick Hawkins, and their respective influence on the Graham company; Bennington school and Mills College, and the summer dance programs; attending Bennington; the layout of the Bennington campus, including dorms, studios, etc.; dancing in Panorama, and the effect that had; Alexander Calder's sculpture used at Bennington for the dance, Panorama; Louis Horst's influence on Graham.
- Disc 2 (ca. 30 min.). Theodora Wiesner speaks with Don McDonagh about the avant garde in music and dance, and Louis Horst's contribution; Martha Graham as Miss Hush and the local radio contest; dance tours, and the gymnasium circuit; Geordie Graham, and dancing with Graham; ways in which Graham would work with composers, scores and choreography; Graham's choreography in the 1950s, including Seraphic dialogue; public sentiment regarding Graham and her dancers; audience's inability to understand Graham's choreography; the change in audience response and gradual approval; the changes in art, dance, and music, and the contemporary attitudes toward visual arts, especially the avant garde; politics of the 1940s and 1950s; McCarthyism and links to communism; adventurousness viewed as communist [abrupt end].
- Subjects
- Graham, Martha
- Martha Graham Dance Company
- Panorama (Choreographic work : Graham)
- Martha Graham School of Contemporary Dance
- Wiesner, Theodora > Interviews
- Graham, Martha > Seraphic dialogue
- Bennington School of the Dance
- Avant garde
- Heretic (Choreographic work : Graham)
- Mills College > Department of Education
- Horst, Louis
- Note
- Interview with Theodora Wiesner conducted by Don McDonagh on Dec. 11, 1971.
- Each disc ends abruptly.
- Open as of August 22, 2012.
- Funding (note)
- Recording was preserved through a grant from the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation.
- Source (note)
- Don McDonagh;
- Call Number
- *MGZTL 4-2547
- OCLC
- 262558957
- Author
- Wiesner, Theodora. Interviewee
- Title
- Interview with Theodora Wiesner [sound recording].
- Imprint
- 1971.
- Funding
- Recording was preserved through a grant from the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation.
- Local Note
- Archive orig. : *MGZTCO 3-2547Dubbing master : *MGZTD 4-2547, nos. 1-2
- Source
- Gift; Don McDonagh; 2007
- Added Author
- McDonagh, Don. InterviewerMcDonagh, Don. DonorDoris Duke Charitable Foundation.
- Research Call Number
- *MGZTL 4-2547 sound disc