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No Fixed Points: Dance in the Twentieth Century by Nancy Reynolds — book cover

No Fixed Points: Dance in the Twentieth Century

by Nancy Reynolds, Malcolm McCormick
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Overview

This book chronicles one hundred years of dramatic developments in ballet, modern, and experimental dance for stage and screen in Europe and North America. The volume is magisterial in scope, encompassing the history of theatrical dance from 1900 through 2000. Beginning with turn-of-the-century dancer-choreographers like Loie Fuller, Isadora Duncan, Michel Fokine, and a bit later Vaslav Nijinsky, and proceeding through the profusion of dance styles performed today, the book provides an unparalleled view of dance in performance as it changed and grew in the twentieth century. Nancy Reynolds and Malcolm McCormick set dance in broader cultural and historical contexts, examine specific dance works, and explore the contributions of outstanding choreographers, performers, visual artists, impresarios, composers, critics, and other figures. They discuss the breakaway barefoot dance of the early 1900s and demonstrate its links with later forms and styles. With unusual detail, fascinating illustrations, and wide-ranging insights, this book is an indispensable guide to the transformations in the dance scene of the twentieth century."There is simply no other history of twentieth-century dance that is as detailed, comprehensive, and readable as No Fixed Points. Much thought has gone into it, along with prodigious research."-Lynn Garafola, co-editor of The Ballets Russes and Its World

Author Biography: Nancy Reynolds is director of research for the George Balanchine Foundation and a former member of the New York City Ballet. She has written widely about ballet and modern dance and is the author of Repertory in Review, among other books. Malcolm McCormick is a former professional dancer and costume designer who was a member of the dance faculty at the University of California, Los Angeles, and guest lecturer at other universities for many years.

Synopsis

This book chronicles one hundred years of dramatic developments in ballet, modern, and experimental dance for stage and screen in Europe and North America. The volume is magisterial in scope, encompassing the history of theatrical dance from 1900 through 2000. Beginning with turn-of-the-century dancer-choreographers like Loie Fuller, Isadora Duncan, Michel Fokine, and a bit later Vaslav Nijinsky, and proceeding through the profusion of dance styles performed today, the book provides an unparalleled view of dance in performance as it changed and grew in the twentieth century. Nancy Reynolds and Malcolm McCormick set dance in broader cultural and historical contexts, examine specific dance works, and explore the contributions of outstanding choreographers, performers, visual artists, impresarios, composers, critics, and other figures. They discuss the breakaway barefoot dance of the early 1900s and demonstrate its links with later forms and styles. With unusual detail, fascinating illustrations, and wide-ranging insights, this book is an indispensable guide to the transformations in the dance scene of the twentieth century."There is simply no other history of twentieth-century dance that is as detailed, comprehensive, and readable as No Fixed Points. Much thought has gone into it, along with prodigious research."-Lynn Garafola, co-editor of The Ballets Russes and Its World

Author Biography: Nancy Reynolds is director of research for the George Balanchine Foundation and a former member of the New York City Ballet. She has written widely about ballet and modern dance and is the author of Repertory in Review, among other books. Malcolm McCormick is a former professional dancer and costume designer who was a member of the dance faculty at the University of California, Los Angeles, and guest lecturer at other universities for many years.

The New Yorker

This masterly history presents a grand, old-fashioned narrative of the development of ballet, modern dance, and postmodern choreography. Synthesizing a century’s worth of observation and opinion, Reynolds and McCormick chart the pendulum swing of styles and isolate individual contributions in a way that is both comprehensive in its coverage and assured in its handling of the smallest details. They highlight the significance of factors as large as government funding and as small as the depth of Baryshnikov’s demi-plié. Where tastes differ, they generally present both sides, yet their tone, fluctuating from awestruck (Balanchine) to archly dismissive (Pina Bausch), makes clear that the authors—both former dancers—care too much about their subject to be impartial.

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Editorials

The New York Times

Sometimes more is more. The length, the depth, even the heft of this new book on dance -- No Fixed Points: Dance in the Twentieth Century, by Nancy Reynolds and Malcolm McCormick -- are crucial to the role it is going to play in the dance community for the foreseeable future. Forget the disposable title, which no one will remember anyway, and focus on the subtitle. This is, indeed, the story of dance in the last century -- and it really is a story. Although everyone will be using the book for reference, Reynolds and McCormick have produced a work that is completely unlike a standard reference book; you don't just look things up in it -- you read it. Here is a coherent, reasoned and entertaining chronicle of dance performance in the West over the hundred years that are unquestionably the fullest and most complicated in the long history of this fragmented and elusive art. — Robert Gottlieb

The New Yorker

This masterly history presents a grand, old-fashioned narrative of the development of ballet, modern dance, and postmodern choreography. Synthesizing a century’s worth of observation and opinion, Reynolds and McCormick chart the pendulum swing of styles and isolate individual contributions in a way that is both comprehensive in its coverage and assured in its handling of the smallest details. They highlight the significance of factors as large as government funding and as small as the depth of Baryshnikov’s demi-plié. Where tastes differ, they generally present both sides, yet their tone, fluctuating from awestruck (Balanchine) to archly dismissive (Pina Bausch), makes clear that the authors—both former dancers—care too much about their subject to be impartial.

Library Journal

The story of 20th-century dance is as compelling as the history of the time period itself, complete with revolutions, national movements, and sweeping social changes. In this carefully written and impeccably researched work, Reynolds and McCormick, dance scholars with backgrounds as dancers and teachers, do not aim to detail 100 years' worth of steps but to provide "an account of the major developments, idioms, styles and artists that have transformed Western theatrical dance in those one hundred years." They bring their firsthand experience, the knowledge and traditions handed down to them by their teachers, and the insights and observations of historians and critics of note. Here, "theatrical dance" refers not only to ballet and modern dance but also tap, ballroom, chorus lines, minstrelsy, musical theater, and dance in the movies. The history of the acceptance of dance as a distinct art form and the importance of the choreographer's role in that art form are the authors' underlying themes. Studded with original cast photographs of many of the works described, this will be the jewel of any dance history collection. Students and dance enthusiasts alike will find much to read and revel in. Highly recommended.-Carolyn M. Mulac, Chicago P.L. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

Book Details

Published
October 1, 2003
Publisher
Yale University Press
Pages
928
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780300093667

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