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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
The Art of Making Dances
Bill T. Jones
Bill 'Bojangles' Robinson
Four Temperaments - 1946
2. 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
Le Spectre de la Rose - 1911
Deeply There - 1998
John Cage
Pablo Picasso
3. A Colombian-American modern dance choreographer known for his politically-charged productions depicting the black experience - notable productions include Missa Luba in 1965 - Blues for the Jungle in 1966 (portraying life in Harlem) - Las Desenamorad
Deeply There - 1998
Eleo Pomare
Louis Horst
D-Man in the Water - 1989
4. French for 'big dance for two' - Entrae - Adagio duet - Male solo - Female solo - Coda - plot structure of Petipa
Grand Pas de Deux
Gus Solomons Jr
Hip-hop
Rite of Spring - 1913
5. The protection granted by a nation to someone who has left his native country as a political refugee.
Coppelia
Political Asylum
Robert Joffrey
Schizophrenia
6. Broke color barrier - developed stair dance - danced with Shirley Temple - made 'honorary mayor of Harlem' -
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7. Performed by fanny elssler in jean corallis le diable - was Spanish and had some obscene gestures - colorful dress worn by elssler
Fanny Elssler
George Balanchine
Industrial Revolution
Cachucha
8. 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
Ruth St. Denis
Sleeping Beauty - 1921
Fall and Recovery
La Sylphide - 1832
9. Peter the Great wants respect from the west and imports fashion and dance from France
Swan Lake - 1895
Bill T. Jones
Imperial Russian Ballet
Afternoon of a Faune - 1912
10. Actress - singer and tap dancer successful in early musicals...... '42nd Street'
Alwin Nikolais
Ruby Keeler
Four Temperaments - 1946
Savoy Ballroom
11. Ballet premeried in 1870 - comic variation of La Sylphide and Giselle. Choreographed by Arthur Saint-Laon
Arthur Saint Leon
Aureole - 1962
Coppelia
Pilobolus
12. In 1989 - became the first African American to lead a major national political party when He was elected chairman of the Democratic Party.
Ronald Brown
Romantic Era
Political Asylum
Still/Here - 1994
13. Major 20th C composer - Three famous ballets The Firebird - Petrushka - The Rite of Spring
La Sylphide - 1832
Marius Petipa
Africanist Aesthetic
Stravinsky
14. Russian ballet impresario who founded the Russian ballet and later introduced it to the West (1872-1929)
Hanya Holm
Jitterbug
The Sleeping Beauty - 1890
Diaghilev
15. Concerts organized by Dunn continued here until 1968; concert in 1962 considered to have begun the postmodernist movement
Judson Church
Philip Taglioni
Acts of Light - 1981
Alwin Nikolais
16. Radically new or original
Hanya Holm
Avant-Garde
Tchaikovsky
St. Petersburg to Leningrad to St. Petersburg
17. Inspired by afro-carribean movement and anthropolgy - dancer - choreographer - anthropologist - teacher - and writer; founded Ballet Negro; 20th century
Katherine Dunham
Alwin Nikolais
Rite of Spring - 1913
Margaret Sanger
18. (1931-1989) A New York City dancer who created an American Dance Theater which trains dancers and performs worldwide; most famous work was Revelations and piece named Cry - in honor of his mother; lost battle to AIDS in 1989
Ronald Brown
Louis Horst
Alvin Ailey
Agon - 1957
19. In Moscow - very flamboyant & expressive (opposite of Kirov Theater)
Scheherezade
Moscow - Bolshoi Theater
Giuseppina Bozzacchi
Stravinsky
20. 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
Loie Fuller
Fanny Elssler
Parade - 1917
21. Star male dancer of Ballets Russes; became chief choreographer for one year - 1913 - Afternoon of a Faun - Rite of Spring - and Jeux. Rite caused a riot
American Ballet Theater
Political Asylum
Diaghilev
Nijinsky
22. Child actress could dance and sing very well - was able to keep up with Bill Robinson in tap dancing - was seen as the hope during the Great Depression.
Shirley Temple
Robert le Diable
Ruby Keeler
Tensile Involvement - 1953
23. Workers who earned enough money to be able to become consumer of art and material goods following the Industrial Revolution; escapism became a huge hit when the Depression hit to escape harsh reality
Pablo Picasso
Middle Class
Buddy Dean Show
Jitterbug
24. Classical - Character - Demi-Character - Mime
Massine
Leon Bakst
Duet - 1957
Petipa Styles of Movement
25. This is a dynamic way to use the space of the dance floor to a fuller extent
Les Noces - 1923
Shirley Temple
Gas-lighting and curtain
Fall and Recovery
26. 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
Talley Beatty
Rudolph Laban
August Bournonville
Nijinsky
27. 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`
Hip-hop
Marie Taglioni
Jules Perrot
Diaghilev
28. Any of a variety of social dances performed by couples in a ballroom
Isadora Duncan
Ballroom Dance
Tensile Involvement - 1953
Denishawn
29. Choreography is famous for its speed - force and eroticism; died of AIDS at the age of 49
Romantic Era
Ulysses Dove
Cleopatre -1909
Tap Dance
30. Choreography Deeply There
Shirley Temple
Mikhail Baryshnikov
Joe Goode
Judson Church
31. 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
Anna Pavlova
Aureole - 1962
Arthur Mitchell
Buddy Dean Show
32. French cabaret singer who became a famous designer - costumes - color pink (patented)
Moscow - Bolshoi Theater
Anton Dolin
Coca Chanel
Tchaikovsky
33. Embraces conflict - polyrhythmic - pelvis off centered - high affect juxtaposition (intenseness of feeling) - ephebism (power - vitality) - cool (intensity) - improvisation
Denishawn
Africanist Aesthetic
Imperial Russian Ballet
Scheherezade
34. Danced in - - raw emotion - stark - harsh - disturbing - medieval themes - dance with masks - really started working with time - space - and energy - taught Hanya Holm
AIDS
Mary Wigman
Lincoln Kirstein
Milhaud
35. One of the major figures in the development of modern dance - an American dancer - choreographer and teacher who created more than 150 works on a wide range of subjects from ancient Greek to modern American; contraction and release
Ruth St. Denis
Leon Bakst
Alwin Nikolais
Martha Graham
36. United States choreographer (1930-1988) - reconstructed pieces of ballet russes in America died of aids
Stravinsky
Robert Joffrey
Percussive Movement
Ted Shawn
37. 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
Four Temperaments - 1946
Joffrey Ballet
Coca Chanel
Tensile Involvement - 1953
38. Human Immunodeficiency Virus - the virus that causes AIDS
Judson Church
HIV+
Lion King - 1998
Cachucha
39. The transformation from an agricultural to an industrial nation; industrialization allowed for stable incomes and allowed for centralized support of art in cities
Jose Limon
Merce Cunningham
Ballroom Dance
Industrial Revolution
40. Performed with New York City Ballet under Balanchine - later founded Dance Theatre of Harlem - first African American principle dancer
Parade - 1917
Arthur Mitchell
Katherine Dunham
Jules Perrot
41. Nijinsky choreographed - means 'games' - about a trio (2 women - 1 man) - relief sexual tension through tennis
Duet - 1957
Busby Berkeley
Percussive Movement
Jeux - 1913
42. Designer. Influenced by Greek and Asian art. Costumes and sets full of bold colors. Decorative motifs that employed perspective painting. Successful with ballet. 'sophisticated eclecticism'. Teacher.
Leon Bakst
Loie Fuller
Acts of Light - 1981
Buddy Dean Show
43. Choreographer of Parade & Three-Cornered hat - known for symphonic ballet - comedy satire - character dancing - and color
Massine
Bill 'Bojangles' Robinson
Coppelia
American Ballet Theater
44. In charge of new Paris Opera; under his direction - Paris Opera made a profit for the only time in its existence; slashed salaries of ballerinas to force them into mistresshood for fellow Jockey's
Joffrey Ballet
Moscow - Bolshoi Theater
Dr. Louis Vernon
Theophile Gautier
45. Pilobolus - human jousting horses
Monkshood Farewell - 1974
Robert Joffrey
Afternoon of a Faune - 1912
Milhaud
46. Ballet with music by Erik Satie and a one-act scenario by Jean Cocteau. The ballet was composed 1916-1917 for Serge Diaghilev's Ballets Russes. The ballet premiered on Friday - May 18th - 1917 at the Thaa
Leon Bakst
Denishawn
Carlotta Grisi
Parade - 1917
47. A serious (often fatal) disease of the immune system transmitted through blood products especially by sexual contact or contaminated needles
AIDS
Imperial Russian Ballet
Judson Church
Nijinska
48. 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
Coppelia
Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers
Marius Petipa
George Balanchine
49. End of ACT I - Aurora partnered with 4 different princes - en pointe a rose is exchanged. Difficult.
Fanny Elssler
Ruby Keeler
Franco-Prussian War
Rose Adagio
50. American composer - 'chance music' - music not expressive or communicative because it says nothing - invented prepared piano
Jitterbug
Coca Chanel
Rudolph Nureyev
John Cage