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Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

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CLASSICAL MYTHOLOGY IN MUSIC, DANCE, AND FILM 739<br />

The following are more examples of classically inspired Denishawn dances,<br />

choreographed by Shawn: 43<br />

• Diana and Endymion (part 4 of Grecian Suite), 1914.<br />

• Pan and Syrinx and The Pipes of Pan, 1914. Music by Delibes.<br />

• Gnossienne or A Priest of Knossos, 1919. Music by Erik Satie. Shawn, as a<br />

priest of ancient Crete, danced a ritual at the altar of the snake-goddess.<br />

• Death of Adonis (or Adagio Pathétique), 1924. Music by Godard. "He performed<br />

nude (except for fig leaf), his body made up to simulate marble<br />

as he moved through a plastique." 44<br />

• Death of a God, 1929. Music by Debussy. Shawn and fourteen dancers.<br />

• Les Mystères Dionysiaques, 1920. Music by Massenet.<br />

• Orpheus, 1928. Music by Liszt.<br />

• Prometheus Bound, 1929. Shawn's "Prometheus is man of any age seeking<br />

to free himself of bondage." 45<br />

• Death of the Bull God, 1929. Music by Griffes.<br />

• Orpheus Dionysus (with Margarete Wallman, choreographer), 1930. Music<br />

by Gluck.<br />

• O, Libertad, 1937 (after Denishawn). Ted Shawn and his Men Dancers. Music<br />

by Jess Meeker. A kind of history of the United States with a section<br />

on the Olympic Games. 46<br />

MARTHA GRAHAM<br />

Martha Graham (1894-1991) was one of the most original and American innovators<br />

in modern dance; she preferred to call it contemporary dance because<br />

"modern dance dates so quickly," as she observed in her autobiography, Blood<br />

Memory. 47 She explained her early and abiding fascination with Greek myth: "I<br />

remember how father used to recite stories to us from Greek mythology. My<br />

days would be filled with these tales, these word paintings. ..." Eventually two<br />

preoccupations dominated her career: "My interest was in America and the<br />

women of classical Greece." 48 In 1914, while still in high school, she first saw<br />

Ruth St. Denis dance and she became enamored of this "goddess figure." In 1919<br />

she enrolled in the Denishawn school in Los Angeles and made her debut, at<br />

age twenty-two, in the Denishawn dance pageant of Egypt, Greece, and In<strong>dia</strong>.<br />

In 1923 she left Denishawn to accept a role in the Greenwich Village Follies, and<br />

from there went on to evolve her own persona as an artist and a dancer. "I felt<br />

I had to grow and work within myself. I wanted, in all my arrogance, to do<br />

something in dance uniquely American." 49 Graham has influenced many important<br />

dancers, among them Doris Humphrey, nicknamed "Doric" Humphrey<br />

by the composer Louis Horst "because she was always doing Greek dances." 50

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