Martha Graham(1894-1991)
- Additional Crew
- Actress
- Writer
American dancer and choreographer Martha Graham was a revolutionary
artist of modern dance in the early 20th century. Born in Allegheny, a
suburb of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, in May 1894, her family moved to
California when she was 10. She was inspired at that early age to
become a dancer when she saw Ruth St. Denis perform her exotic "Epytia" modern
dance in 1914. After much study, Graham brought a different dynamics
and interpretation to modern dance, one of sharp angles and natural
motion. Graham's father was an "alienist," a term used at the turn of
the century describe a physician who specialized in human psychology.
Dr. Graham was interested in the way people used their bodies, and that
interest was passed on to his eldest daughter. Martha frequently
repeated her father's maxim of "Movement never lies." Her abstract
approach to dance and her minimal use of costumes and set decorations
was disconcerting to audiences accustomed to the lovely fluid movements
of modern dance introduced earlier by the likes of Isadora Duncan (many
critics accused Graham of making dance "ugly"). What Graham wanted to
evoke with her style of dance was a heightened awareness of life. She
eventually developed a strong following and won over the critics. Her
dance themes were inspired by America's past, biblical stories,
historical figures, classical mythology, primitive rituals, and
surprisingly, psychoanalyst Carl Jung's writings, Emily Dickinson's poems,
Georgia O'Keeffe's paintings, and Zen Buddhism. She danced with such a passion
that her presence on stage was electrifying. Graham founded the Dance
Repertory Theater in New York in 1930. She was the first dancer to
receive a Guggenheim fellowship in 1932. From 1931 to 1935, Graham
toured the United States in the production "Electra." She was
fascinated by different cultures, and her interest in Native Americans
of the southwest United States was first embodied in the production
"Primitive Mysteries." In 1937, she danced for President Franklin D. Roosevelt at the
White House. Her most famous dance, "Appalachian Spring," was first
performed in 1944. Graham gave her last stage performance in 1968, at
age 74. In all, she produced 181 original ballets. A year before her
death in 1990, she choreographed, at age 95, Scott Joplin's "Maple Leaf
Rag"; the show featured costumes by Calvin Klein.