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Test your basic knowledge |
Dance History
Start Test
Study First
Subjects
:
performing-arts
,
dance
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. HIV - choreographed Still Here - organized survivor workshops
Bill T. Jones
Lincoln Kirstein
Ronald Brown
Joe Goode
2. Founded the Gus Solomons Company/Dance - whose repertoire consisted of detailed and analytical compositions that were conceived as 'melted architecture' - drawing from experience as an architecture student at MIT
Daughter of the Pharaoh
Alwin Nikolais
Gus Solomons Jr
Anton Dolin
3. Started in NYC by Robert Joffrey - small company - repertoire was eclectic and contemporary - reconstructed works from Diaghilev's Ballets Russes - Financially weak - often folded - moved to LA then chicago
Jitterbug
Joffrey Ballet
Talley Beatty
Grand Pas de Deux
4. Most important figure in Russia in immediately pre-Romantic days. Did much to improve the repertory and teaching. 20 ballets - raised standards. Flying wires - pointe works.
Jean Coralli
Charles Didelot
Judson Church
Nicholas Brothers
5. Hungarian choreographer who developed Labanotation (1879-1958); Established the Choreographic Institute in Zurich - Founded branches across Europe - Kinetographie Laban=labanotation - primary movement - notation stilled used today in dance - Conte
Rudolph Laban
Grand Pas de Deux
Louis Horst
Gus Solomons Jr
6. Considered one of the greatest of African American choreographers - and also bears the titles dancer - educator - and dance company director. After studying under Katherine Dunham and Martha Graham - went on to do solo work and choreograph his own wo
Talley Beatty
19th Amendment
Moscow - Bolshoi Theater
Schizophrenia
7. Embraces conflict - polyrhythmic - pelvis off centered - high affect juxtaposition (intenseness of feeling) - ephebism (power - vitality) - cool (intensity) - improvisation
Les Sylphides
August Bournonville
Giselle - 1841
Africanist Aesthetic
8. In 1989 - became the first African American to lead a major national political party when He was elected chairman of the Democratic Party.
Prince of Wales
Middle Class
Swan Lake - 1895
Ronald Brown
9. Was inspired by a cigarette poster featuring the Egyptian goddess Isis to begin investigation Asian art and dance - Founded the Denishawn School of dancing and Related Arts with her husband Ted Shawn in 1915 in Los Angeles - California - Believed tha
Jitterbug
Ruth St. Denis
Fall and Recovery
Afternoon of a Faune - 1912
10. Music by Stravinsky - ancient Greek contest debate between forces.
Agon - 1957
Les Noces - 1923
Jules Perrot
Giselle - 1841
11. African American social dance in the 1920s; spurred the Jitter Bug
Lindy Hop
Deeply There - 1998
Tsar
Le Train Bleu - 1924
12. Based on Bill T. Jones' seminar workshops; swirling with arms out to side - spinning - stomping feet - flying
Postmodern Dance
Still/Here - 1994
Dr. Louis Vernon
Harlem
13. Inspired by Gautier's novel The Story of the Mummy - very complicated - spectacular - successful ballet - Aspica is the daughter - English Lord in sand storm goes into tomb & gets put into an opium dream where he becomes Tahor and saves Aspico from a
Daughter of the Pharaoh
Paul Taylor
Gus Solomons Jr
Petipa Styles of Movement
14. About a group of friends and neighbors during a final decline of a man
Deeply There - 1998
Swan Lake - 1895
Cachucha
Judson Church
15. A diversion or amusement; a short ballet or other entertainment performed between the acts of a play
Acts of Light - 1981
Margaret Sanger
Ballet Russes
Divertissement
16. Choreographed by Paul Taylor; Modern dance work in one act with choreography by Taylor - music by Handel - and lighting by T. Skelton. Premiered 4 Aug. 1962 at Connecticut College - New London - by the Paul Taylor Dance Company with Taylor - Elizabet
Nijinsky
Still/Here - 1994
Robert Ellis Dunn
Aureole - 1962
17. Created the role of Swanilda at age 16 - she died from a fever @ age 17
Grand Pas de Deux
Giuseppina Bozzacchi
Ruby Keeler
George Balanchine
18. Called the most poetical of ballets of the 20th century. Premiered during first ballet russes season (1909)
Le Train Bleu - 1924
Three-Cornered Hat - 1919
Les Noces - 1923
Les Sylphides
19. Radically new or original
Bill 'Bojangles' Robinson
Imperial Russian Ballet
Avant-Garde
Robert Joffrey
20. Any of several psychotic disorders characterized by distortions of reality and disturbances of thought and language and withdrawal from social contact; Nijinsky had this illness
Schizophrenia
Louis Horst
Ballroom Dance
Pablo Picasso
21. United States choreographer (1930-1988) - reconstructed pieces of ballet russes in America died of aids
Ted Shawn
Robert Joffrey
Joffrey Ballet
Fokine
22. Petipa & Tchaikovsky - was not successful at the time it came out - no trace of sensible dramatic action
The Nutcracker - 1892
Denishawn
Lincoln Kirstein
Philip Taglioni
23. From its very beginning the ballet was entirely dependent upon this individual; it was his ballet - under the direct supervision and guidance of a court minister appointed by this individual and answerable to him
Political Asylum
Arthur Saint Leon
Tsar
Stravinsky
24. Robert Joffrey - 59 - Alvin Ailey - 58 - Christopher Gillis - 42 - Rudolph Nureyev - 54 - Ulysses Dove - 49
Tap Dance
HIV+
Choreographers who died of AIDS
Hanya Holm
25. Nijinsky's sister - choreographer - dancer - became leading dancer and choreographer in diaghliev's company
Middle Class
Monkshood Farewell - 1974
Merce Cunningham
Nijinska
26. Opened in 1948 - artistic director Balanchines. Distinguished choreographers: Tudor - Frederick Ashton - Robbins...Permanent home New York State Theater at Lincoln Center
Louis Horst
Joe Goode
New York City Ballet
Rite of Spring - 1913
27. Performed with New York City Ballet under Balanchine - later founded Dance Theatre of Harlem - first African American principle dancer
Arthur Mitchell
Les Noces - 1923
Rose Adagio
John Cage
28. Different names but same theater under different political influences
Avant-Garde
Maryinsky Theater to Kirov Theater
Tsar
Black Swan Pas de Deux
29. By Martha Graham - focuses on technique - used technique as her own language - inspired by when she moved to Santa Barbara as a child - choneo - straight out of technique class - running on the cliffs of Santa Barbara and the development of her techn
George Balanchine
New York City Ballet
Acts of Light - 1981
Pablo Picasso
30. French for 'big dance for two' - Entrae - Adagio duet - Male solo - Female solo - Coda - plot structure of Petipa
Fall and Recovery
Jitterbug
Bill 'Bojangles' Robinson
Grand Pas de Deux
31. Means 'The Wedding' - arranged Russian Stravinsky wedding
Agon - 1957
Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers
The Sleeping Beauty - 1890
Les Noces - 1923
32. Alwin Nikolais - had a lot of ribbons - very involved in the sounds - wearing skin colored clothes - drum music - elastic ropes and strings - all across stage
HIV+
Tensile Involvement - 1953
Tchaikovsky
Judson Church
33. 1957 TV show (similar to the Corny Collins show from Hairspray) - Lindy Hop dance; segregated; eventually shut down due to refusal to fully integrate; presented black music and dance on TV
Rite of Spring - 1913
Ivanov
Buddy Dean Show
Theophile Gautier
34. Concerts organized by Dunn continued here until 1968; concert in 1962 considered to have begun the postmodernist movement
Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers
Judson Church
Rite of Spring - 1913
Ted Shawn
35. Reform Russian Ballet - choreographed Dying Swan 1905 for Anna Povlova (2 minutes long) - accused of being influenced by Isadora Duncan - teacher & choreographer rather than a refined dancer
St. Petersburg to Leningrad to St. Petersburg
Fokine
Anton Dolin
Africanist Aesthetic
36. One of the artistic giants of the twentieth century. Helped found the Cubist and Abstract movements. During his life - 1881-1973 - he worked in various media and is noted for scores of important works. His painting Guernica is one of the most powerfu
Pablo Picasso
Donald McKayle
Margaret Sanger
Sleeping Beauty - 1921
37. Famous for her incredible technique - lightness - and ethereal presence -(1804-1884) -Introduced new costume design (bare neck/shoulders - tutu) -Perfected dancing en pointe -La Sylphide`
Alvin Ailey
Marie Taglioni
Gus Solomons Jr
Savoy Ballroom
38. Petipa's assistant that takes over - choreographs Snowflakes Act I of the Nutcracker - dies in 1901 - didn't produce anything more of importance except Swan Lake
Jean Jacques Rousseau
Lindy Hop
Ivanov
Twyla Tharp
39. Marius Petipa - 4 fairies for Aurora - did not invite the evil fairy - put a spell on Aurora @ 16 she would prick her finger on a spindle & fall asleep for 100 years - End of Act I pricks her finger - Act III is the wedding (divertissement - Grand Pa
Jeux - 1913
Rudolph Laban
Charles Didelot
The Sleeping Beauty - 1890
40. A serious (often fatal) disease of the immune system transmitted through blood products especially by sexual contact or contaminated needles
AIDS
Pelvic contraction and release
August Bournonville
Jose Limon
41. Previous member of Denishawn (left late 1920's) - developed a comedic mime aesthetic - shared a school with Humphrey for years - pioneer of modern dance
Leon Bakst
19th Amendment
Charles Weidman
Deeply There - 1998
42. Were top musical stars of the '30s; appeared in musicals that were considered old-fashioned when they were made; displaced their characters' sexual desire into fighting with each other
Jockey Club
Romantic Era
Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers
Cleopatre -1909
43. Interrupted first flush of success of Coppelia and the included the siege of Paris - which also led to the early death of Giuseppina Bozzacchi - on her 17th birthday - but eventually it became the most-performed ballet at the Opera Garnier.
Divertissement
Tensile Involvement - 1953
Ted Shawn
Franco-Prussian War
44. About 1815 to 1848 - reaction against rationalism of Enlightenment - YOUR interpretations - religious nature - UNIQUE individual
Harlem
Romantic Era
Milhaud
Carlotta Grisi
45. Any of a variety of social dances performed by couples in a ballroom
Jeux - 1913
Coca Chanel
Industrial Revolution
Ballroom Dance
46. Confirmed that Balanchine was an experimentalist - Africanist principles in his rhythmic scores - turns not resolved as in ballet - they just stop - take 'one' counts rather than 'and' counts
Apollo - 1928
Martha Graham
Nijinska
Marius Petipa
47. 1896-1976 - American - Choreographer - Developed 1930's film fantasy with his daredevil and genius dance design - developed the stage style musical film into a more involved multi-shot fantasy film style with overhead shots - use of tiered set desig
Buddy Dean Show
Shirley Temple
Agon - 1957
Busby Berkeley
48. Capitals of Russia during various times of political influence; Leningrad during Bolsheviks and USSR - return to St. Petersburg pax-USSR
St. Petersburg to Leningrad to St. Petersburg
Percussive Movement
Bill 'Bojangles' Robinson
Jeux - 1913
49. Arthur Mitchell founder and artistic director -1st black dancer to break color barrier for classical ballet -America's 1st outstanding ballet company of black dancers -started school with Karel Shook -shaped by Balanchine -Dancers known for warmth an
Dance Theater of Harlem
Divertissement
Eleo Pomare
HIV+
50. Was listed as the choreographer because He was widely respected - was known Perrot (more gifted) was collaborating with him; Choreographed the corps for Giselle
Merce Cunningham
Alvin Ailey
Jean Coralli
Avant-Garde