Isadora’s performance used the first four stanzas of Rouget de Lisle’s text, and a version of the music officially selected by the French government in 1887, which is a bit different from the version we hear today. My next challenge was locating a recording of the music that would be appropriate for the Duncan technique and musicality. I began to become comfortable projecting an understanding of the type of movements and motivations Isadora may have employed in her choreography. From all of this research and training, I had confidence in my ability to imbue my version with authenticity and truly personal expression. From these dances and training, I came to understand how Isadora might have expressed this particular heroic, militaristic aesthetic in her choreography, and the musicality connecting those movements. I have danced her Schubert Symphony #9 Finale, Tchaikovsky Pathetique Symphony, Amazons, and March Militaire as passed through Duncan Dance Masters Lori Belilove, Julia Levien, Hortense Kooluris, Sima Leake, and later Jeanne Bresciani. I let myself consider her images in the same way.Īn additional resource was my own experience with and knowledge of other known Isadora choreographies. I knew from earlier research that Isadora studied the precondition and post-effect of images, and used that as a resource in her dance. The bas relief images from the Arc D’Triomphe and the figure of Marianne from “Liberty Leading the People” were particularly inspirational for me. What I learned there led me to study the sources of inspiration for Isadora. I began the process by researching all that had been written about Isadora’s improvisation, from her own account in her autobiography to articles written in newspapers after the event. I wanted to complete the commission, but how could I to stand in Isadora’s place and pretend to have actually recreated what has been called the tour de force of her career? I found courage in Isadora’s own urging that to perform her work all dancers must try to “breathe its life, to recreate it in one’s self, with personal inspiration.” Resultantly, the Marseillaise was not passed down as the rest of the repertory that we have today. Isadora re-danced the Marseillaise at the Trocadero in Paris, and on tour in South America, but again, her troupe of dancers were not with her, and so did not have a chance to learn the piece. The dance vanished into the ether as she performed, and when she finished, it was gone. The first performance of the Marseillaise was performed in New York without any of the Isadorables present, and it was improvised, so no one could even have watched a rehearsal. But they also watched and studied Isadora’s own solos, mainly from the wings while performing with her. While Isadora was alive, the Isadorables learned the group dances that Isadora set on them. The “Isadorables” as they were dubbed by the French press, they performed and trained extensively with Isadora. The choreographies and technique that have been passed down from Isadora Duncan are actually the work of Isadora’s primary pupils. How is that possible, when so little documentation exists? Yet today, over 200 ‘authentic’ Duncan choreographies are still performed. Isadora Duncan died suddenly in a tragic car accident in 1927, without filming a single one of her dances (even though the technology was available). The problem was that The Marseillaise is a lost choreography! There are no pictures or video from performance. Her dance was described as “imperious, with proud, wide gestures, beckoning to a great unseen army that seemed to fill the stage at her magnetic command.”Ī few years ago, soon after 9/11, when patriotism was high in America, and countries around the world, including France, were rallying to our support, I was asked by a non-profit organization to dance The Marseillaise – Isadora’s Marseillaise – at one of their events. In descriptions of the event, Isadora’s movements were described as evoking some of the greatest images in French art and history, including the bas reliefs on the Arc de Triomphe, Marianne in Delacroix’s “Liberty Leading the People,” and the Statue of Liberty. Standing ovations, un-abashed weeping, singing, cheering, and applause for minutes on end. The audience response to Duncan’s dance, according to press accounts, was nothing less than staggering. In 1915, Isadora Duncan improvised a dance to the French National Anthem as a “call to the boys of America to stand up, and defend the greatest civilization of our epoch” (meaning France.) The dance was an impromptu offering performed on the stage of the Metropolitan Opera House in New York City. How do you go about recreating the work of a genius? I undertook that daunting and humbling task in remounting one of Isadora Duncan most legendary works, The Marseillaise.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |