Martha : the life and work of Martha Graham / by Agnes De Mille.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: New York : Vintage Books, 1992. Edition: 1st Vintage Books edDescription: xviii, 509 p. : ill. ; 21 cmISBN:
  • 0679741763(pbk.)
  • 9780679741763
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 20 792.8092 GRA
LOC classification:
  • GV1785.G7 D4 1992
Contents:
1. Enter the dancers -- 2. Beginnings -- 3. Ruthie Dennis -- 4. Denishawn -- 5. Pupil Martha -- 6. First concert -- 7. Forming techniques -- 8. Neighborhood Playhouse -- 9. Group -- 10. Rites of passage -- 11. Sunday-night recitals -- 12. The Mysteries -- 13. Personal life -- 14. Bennington -- 15. Frontier -- 16. Erick and Martha -- 17. Letter to the world -- 18. War -- 19. Potent land -- 20. Paris -- 21. After Erick -- 22. World tour -- 23. Queen bee -- 24. Episodes -- 25. Requiem -- 26. Decrescendo -- 27. Collapse -- 28. Notebooks -- 29. Phoenix -- 30. Way -- Appendices -- Notes -- Selected Bibliogrphy -- Index.
Summary: "When Martha Graham died at the age of 96, it was front page news around the world. For the revolutionary impact she had on her art, she was compared with Picasso and Stravinsky. While alive, she blocked every effort of those who would have written about her, preferring to leave a legend rather than a true picture of her life. In this critically acclaimed biography, renowned dancer and choreographer Agnes de Mille, who knew Graham for nearly sixty years, penetrates Graham's mask of privacy to capture her very essence. Visionart, tempestuous innovator, relentless taskmaster, Martha Graham was a women who would sacrifice everything - love, friendship, money - for the sake of her art. DE Mille's account of Martha Graham - a book twenty-five years in the writing - is impassioned yet discerning, engaging, always stylish - and paints an indelible portrait of the woman who in one lifetime virtually invented modern dance in America.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Notes Date due Barcode
Books Books Academy of Music & Performing Arts Library General Stacks Non-fiction 792.8092 GRA (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available Kindly donated by J. Dyson A06385

Originally published: New York : Random House, 1991.

Includes bibliographical references (p. [474]-475) and index.

1. Enter the dancers -- 2. Beginnings -- 3. Ruthie Dennis -- 4. Denishawn -- 5. Pupil Martha -- 6. First concert -- 7. Forming techniques -- 8. Neighborhood Playhouse -- 9. Group -- 10. Rites of passage -- 11. Sunday-night recitals -- 12. The Mysteries -- 13. Personal life -- 14. Bennington -- 15. Frontier -- 16. Erick and Martha -- 17. Letter to the world -- 18. War -- 19. Potent land -- 20. Paris -- 21. After Erick -- 22. World tour -- 23. Queen bee -- 24. Episodes -- 25. Requiem -- 26. Decrescendo -- 27. Collapse -- 28. Notebooks -- 29. Phoenix -- 30. Way -- Appendices -- Notes -- Selected Bibliogrphy -- Index.

"When Martha Graham died at the age of 96, it was front page news around the world. For the revolutionary impact she had on her art, she was compared with Picasso and Stravinsky. While alive, she blocked every effort of those who would have written about her, preferring to leave a legend rather than a true picture of her life. In this critically acclaimed biography, renowned dancer and choreographer Agnes de Mille, who knew Graham for nearly sixty years, penetrates Graham's mask of privacy to capture her very essence. Visionart, tempestuous innovator, relentless taskmaster, Martha Graham was a women who would sacrifice everything - love, friendship, money - for the sake of her art. DE Mille's account of Martha Graham - a book twenty-five years in the writing - is impassioned yet discerning, engaging, always stylish - and paints an indelible portrait of the woman who in one lifetime virtually invented modern dance in America.

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