Dancing the Fairy Tale: Producing and Performing The Sleeping Beauty
In Dancing the Fairy Tale, Laura Katz Rizzo claims that The Sleeping Beauty is both a metaphor for ballet itself, and a powerful case study for examining ballet and its production and performance. Using Marius Petipa and Pyotr Tchaikovsky's classical dance—specifically as it was staged in Philadelphia over nearly 70 years—Katz Rizzo looks at the gendered nature of women staging, coaching, and reanimating this magnificent ballet, and well as the ongoing push-pull between tradition and innovation within the art form.
 
Using extensive archival research, dance analysis, and American feminist theory, Dancing the Fairy Tale places women at the center of a historical narrative to reveal how the production and performance of The Sleeping Beauty in the years between 1937 and 2002 made significant contributions to the development and establishment of an American classical ballet. Katz Rizzo highlights not only what women have done not only behind the scenes, as administrators, producers, or directors of ballet companies and schools, but also as active interpreters embodying the ballet's title role.
 
In the process, Katz Rizzo also emphasizes the importance of regional sites outside of locations traditionally understood as central to the development of ballet in the United States.
"1119405912"
Dancing the Fairy Tale: Producing and Performing The Sleeping Beauty
In Dancing the Fairy Tale, Laura Katz Rizzo claims that The Sleeping Beauty is both a metaphor for ballet itself, and a powerful case study for examining ballet and its production and performance. Using Marius Petipa and Pyotr Tchaikovsky's classical dance—specifically as it was staged in Philadelphia over nearly 70 years—Katz Rizzo looks at the gendered nature of women staging, coaching, and reanimating this magnificent ballet, and well as the ongoing push-pull between tradition and innovation within the art form.
 
Using extensive archival research, dance analysis, and American feminist theory, Dancing the Fairy Tale places women at the center of a historical narrative to reveal how the production and performance of The Sleeping Beauty in the years between 1937 and 2002 made significant contributions to the development and establishment of an American classical ballet. Katz Rizzo highlights not only what women have done not only behind the scenes, as administrators, producers, or directors of ballet companies and schools, but also as active interpreters embodying the ballet's title role.
 
In the process, Katz Rizzo also emphasizes the importance of regional sites outside of locations traditionally understood as central to the development of ballet in the United States.
23.95 In Stock
Dancing the Fairy Tale: Producing and Performing The Sleeping Beauty

Dancing the Fairy Tale: Producing and Performing The Sleeping Beauty

by Laura Katz Rizzo
Dancing the Fairy Tale: Producing and Performing The Sleeping Beauty

Dancing the Fairy Tale: Producing and Performing The Sleeping Beauty

by Laura Katz Rizzo

Paperback

$23.95 
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Overview

In Dancing the Fairy Tale, Laura Katz Rizzo claims that The Sleeping Beauty is both a metaphor for ballet itself, and a powerful case study for examining ballet and its production and performance. Using Marius Petipa and Pyotr Tchaikovsky's classical dance—specifically as it was staged in Philadelphia over nearly 70 years—Katz Rizzo looks at the gendered nature of women staging, coaching, and reanimating this magnificent ballet, and well as the ongoing push-pull between tradition and innovation within the art form.
 
Using extensive archival research, dance analysis, and American feminist theory, Dancing the Fairy Tale places women at the center of a historical narrative to reveal how the production and performance of The Sleeping Beauty in the years between 1937 and 2002 made significant contributions to the development and establishment of an American classical ballet. Katz Rizzo highlights not only what women have done not only behind the scenes, as administrators, producers, or directors of ballet companies and schools, but also as active interpreters embodying the ballet's title role.
 
In the process, Katz Rizzo also emphasizes the importance of regional sites outside of locations traditionally understood as central to the development of ballet in the United States.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781439911228
Publisher: Temple University Press
Publication date: 02/15/2015
Pages: 212
Product dimensions: 5.40(w) x 8.20(h) x 2.30(d)

About the Author

Laura Katz Rizzo is Program Coordinator of the Bachelor of Fine Arts Program in Dance at Temple University, as well as a frequent guest speaker, choreographer, and pedagogue at universities and ballet companies across the United States.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments

Introduction/Prologue
1 • Women Creating Ballet: The Case of The Sleeping Beauty
2 • From Saint Petersburg to Philadelphia: Reviving and Reanimating Classicism in America
3 • Catherine Littlefield and The Sleeping Beauty’s American Premiere (1937)
4 • Aurora Streamlined and Accelerated: Barbara Weisberger and the Second U.S. Production (1965)
5 • Aurora Speaks: What Ballerinas Have to Say about The Sleeping Beauty
6 • The Power of Dance Technique and the Agency of the Ballerina 
Conclusion/Curtain Call

Appendix: Plot and Stage Action
Notes
Index
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