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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. Major 20th C composer - Three famous ballets The Firebird - Petrushka - The Rite of Spring
Lion King - 1998
Charles Didelot
Parade - 1917
Stravinsky
2. 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
New York City Ballet
Gus Solomons Jr
Busby Berkeley
Romantic Era
3. United States choreographer (1930-1988) - reconstructed pieces of ballet russes in America died of aids
Rose Adagio
Dr. Louis Vernon
Robert Joffrey
AIDS
4. Means 'The Wedding' - arranged Russian Stravinsky wedding
Denishawn
Fanny Elssler
Loie Fuller
Les Noces - 1923
5. Called the most poetical of ballets of the 20th century. Premiered during first ballet russes season (1909)
Les Sylphides
Grand Pas de Deux
August Bournonville
Avant-Garde
6. Robert Joffrey - 59 - Alvin Ailey - 58 - Christopher Gillis - 42 - Rudolph Nureyev - 54 - Ulysses Dove - 49
Industrial Revolution
Three-Cornered Hat - 1919
Prince of Wales
Choreographers who died of AIDS
7. Contemporary of Duncan's. Design orientation. Known for manipulation of costumes that would make flowing patterns and dance was non-emotional. Also did light design.
Loie Fuller
Petrouchka - 1911
Prince of Wales
Anton Dolin
8. American composer - 'chance music' - music not expressive or communicative because it says nothing - invented prepared piano
Robert le Diable
John Cage
The Nutcracker - 1892
Fokine
9. Innovative United States dancer and choreographer (born in 1941)
Avant-Garde
Twyla Tharp
Merce Cunningham
Marius Petipa
10. (1819-1899) -Italian ballerina -Leading role in Giselle -Combined techniques of Taglioni & Elssler -Known for strength & lightness
Moscow - Bolshoi Theater
Carlotta Grisi
Margaret Sanger
Arthur Saint Leon
11. 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
Divertissement
Talley Beatty
Industrial Revolution
August Bournonville
12. The protection granted by a nation to someone who has left his native country as a political refugee.
Merce Cunningham
The Sleeping Beauty - 1890
Political Asylum
Cleopatre -1909
13. Martha Graham explored use of breath to contract & releases the muscles of the pelvis to create a powerful - grounded - percussive - angular dance
Pelvic contraction and release
Petipa Styles of Movement
Buddy Dean Show
Bill T. Jones
14. Danced in - - raw emotion - stark - harsh - disturbing - medieval themes - dance with masks - really started working with time - space - and energy - taught Hanya Holm
Giuseppina Bozzacchi
Tchaikovsky
Jose Limon
Mary Wigman
15. 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
Acts of Light - 1981
Coppelia
Four Temperaments - 1946
Cleopatre -1909
16. High energy act of two African american brothers - Fayard and Harold - had a 'flash act' consisting of an acrobatic tap style - were in movies - only African Americans encouraged to mingle with audience (by audeince demand)
Postmodern Dance
Nicholas Brothers
Busby Berkeley
Debussy
17. 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
Joe Goode
Dr. Louis Vernon
Schizophrenia
Talley Beatty
18. Amendment to the U.S. Constitution (1920) extended the right to vote to women in federal or state elections.
19th Amendment
Les Sylphides
Sleeping Beauty - 1921
Carlotta Grisi
19. An African American section of New York City. Many A/A writers and artists gathered in Harlem
The Sleeping Beauty - 1890
Harlem
The Art of Making Dances
Jeux - 1913
20. Taglioni's rival -Her dancing was 'warm and passionate' -Dance was earthy - temperamental - fiery - vuluptuous -Labeled Pagan -Danced folk dances - most famous was Cachucha - Spanish using castanet - twists and turns; Known for her flair and theatric
Fanny Elssler
The Art of Making Dances
Gas-lighting and curtain
George Balanchine
21. Peter the Great wants respect from the west and imports fashion and dance from France
Buddy Dean Show
Imperial Russian Ballet
Katherine Dunham
Scheherezade
22. 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
Martha Graham
Monkshood Farewell - 1974
Merce Cunningham
Judson Church
23. Sharp powerful movement; angle
August Bournonville
Robert Joffrey
Percussive Movement
Martha Graham
24. Student of Mary Wigman. Opened a Wigman school in NYC in 1931 - brought German modern to U.S. but Americanized her technique. Choreographed Broadway musicals- 'Kiss Me Kate' based on Shakespeare's Taming of the Shrew
Lindy Hop
Rose Adagio
Scheherezade
Hanya Holm
25. In Moscow - very flamboyant & expressive (opposite of Kirov Theater)
Coppelia
Moscow - Bolshoi Theater
Loie Fuller
Africanist Aesthetic
26. Inspired by afro-carribean movement and anthropolgy - dancer - choreographer - anthropologist - teacher - and writer; founded Ballet Negro; 20th century
Eleo Pomare
Nijinska
Katherine Dunham
Anton Dolin
27. Created the well-known Denishawn school with his wife Ruth St. Denis. They taught dancers diverse styles - With his wife they set up the foundations for the principal of Musical Visualization 'a concept that called for movement equivalents to the tim
Rite of Spring - 1913
Tensile Involvement - 1953
Ted Shawn
Robert Joffrey
28. End of ACT I - Aurora partnered with 4 different princes - en pointe a rose is exchanged. Difficult.
La Sylphide - 1832
Rose Adagio
Deeply There - 1998
Paul Taylor
29. Based on Bill T. Jones' seminar workshops; swirling with arms out to side - spinning - stomping feet - flying
Still/Here - 1994
Garth Fagan
Parade - 1917
Buddy Dean Show
30. 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`
Hanya Holm
Nijinska
Four Temperaments - 1946
Marie Taglioni
31. Comedy - has sport movements - about a train taken to the beach where a plane flies over - spoof about Frenchman who wants to be very shallow American
Debussy
Gus Solomons Jr
Le Train Bleu - 1924
Hanya Holm
32. French composer; uses harmony to reinforce stasis; Prelude to Afternoon of a Fawn (half man - half goat - simulated masturbation); concert work that became a ballet
Grand Pas de Deux
Debussy
Marius Petipa
Lion King - 1998
33. 1937 Founded by Ballet Russe's Mikhail Mordkin as Mordkin Ballet- Repertory company- features choreography of many artists such as Adolph Bolm - Michel Fokine - Leonide Massine - Bronislava Jijinska - Balanchine and Agnes de Mille
Gas-lighting and curtain
Les Sylphides
Avant-Garde
American Ballet Theater
34. Choreographed by Filippino Taglioni and performed by one of the greatest ballerinas of the 19th century Marie Taglioni. One of the most famous Romantic Ballets. - First true romantic ballet
Robert Joffrey
La Sylphide - 1832
Massine
Fokine's 5 Major Principles
35. This is a dynamic way to use the space of the dance floor to a fuller extent
Coca Chanel
Suzanne Linglor
Fall and Recovery
Acts of Light - 1981
36. Nijinsky choreographed - rustic - sacrifice a virgin by making her dance to death
Rite of Spring - 1913
Choreographers who died of AIDS
Cachucha
Jules Perrot
37. Published in London Times 1914 - want to make 'ballet a fully expressive art that mirrored life' - new movement for each dance - no mime (Petipa used so that the audience always understood) - use entire body (to be expressive) - no divertissement (no
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38. Concerts organized by Dunn continued here until 1968; concert in 1962 considered to have begun the postmodernist movement
Savoy Ballroom
Jean Jacques Rousseau
Tap Dance
Judson Church
39. A pioneer of modern dance - established importance of the male dancer - created masculine movement style - founded own company in 1947; died of prostate cancer
Jose Limon
Massine
Garth Fagan
Lindy Hop
40. Composer of Le Train Bleu - influenced by jazz
Milhaud
Jeux - 1913
Deeply There - 1998
Tensile Involvement - 1953
41. 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.
Schizophrenia
Shirley Temple
Robert le Diable
HIV+
42. Classical - Character - Demi-Character - Mime
Petipa Styles of Movement
Ballroom Dance
Imperial Russian Ballet
Jockey Club
43. A signature piece of Taylor's in which he and his pianist remain motionless for the duration of the music-less score by John Cage.
Deeply There - 1998
La Sylphide - 1832
Duet - 1957
Stravinsky
44. Studio behind the stage at the Paris Opera which is now used as a rehearsal stage and a reception venue but which was notorious in the 19th century (during the reign of Dr Varon) as the salon where members of the Jockey Club could meet dancers.
Foyer de la Danse
Ballet Russes
Sleeping Beauty - 1921
American Ballet Theater
45. 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
Dance Theater of Harlem
Ruth St. Denis
Fanny Elssler
Postmodern Dance
46. Created the role of Swanilda at age 16 - she died from a fever @ age 17
Ivanov
Giuseppina Bozzacchi
Leon Bakst
Nijinska
47. Russian ballet impresario who founded the Russian ballet and later introduced it to the West (1872-1929)
Diaghilev
Rose Adagio
Jean Jacques Rousseau
Le Train Bleu - 1924
48. A jerky American dance that was popular in the 1940s
Political Asylum
Jitterbug
Russian Revolution
Postmodern Dance
49. 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
Aureole - 1962
Schizophrenia
Arthur Mitchell
Jose Limon
50. About a group of friends and neighbors during a final decline of a man
Fall and Recovery
Diaghilev
Stravinsky
Deeply There - 1998