Martha Graham When dance became modern : a life

Neil Baldwin, 1947-

Book - 2022

"A biography of the legendary dancer and choreographer"--

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Subjects
Genres
Biographies
Published
New York : Alfred A. Knopf 2022.
Language
English
Main Author
Neil Baldwin, 1947- (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xvii, 554 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 416-527) and index.
ISBN
9780385352321
  • Introduction: the legacy begins
  • Pittsburgh
  • Santa Barbara
  • Ruth St. Denis and Ted Shawn: the Denishawn Dancers
  • Horst
  • Schopenhauer and Nietzsche
  • Kandinsky and Isadora Duncan
  • The Eastman School
  • From Mariarden to John Martin
  • Neighborhood Playhouse
  • Heretic
  • Dance Repertory Theatre and Lamentation
  • Introducing: Isamu Noguchi
  • Northwest to Southwest
  • Know the land
  • Primitive Mysteries
  • From Deremonials to Radio City Music Hall
  • The American rhythm
  • Airborne
  • Erick Hawkins and Lincoln Kirstein
  • Interlude: Chronicle
  • American Document
  • Every Sould Is a Circus
  • Deaths and Entances: ten characters in search of a dance
  • Interlude: Appalachian Spring
  • Dark Meadow
  • Serpent Heart
  • The "break-up"
  • Horst revisited
  • Eye of Anguish
  • The choice
  • Coda.
Review by Booklist Review

Just as she determined every element of her revolutionary modern-dance performances, Martha Graham hoped to control her life story by destroying letters and other materials, but seasoned biographer Baldwin, an emeritus professor of theater and dance, mined a trove of archival treasures to construct this enlightening, engrossing, and richly illustrated portrait. We meet Graham as a girl in Pittsburgh struck by her doctor-father's pronouncement: "Movement never lies," and as a teen in California enthralled by a performance by Ruth St. Denis. Vividly anchoring Graham and her singular achievements to the larger dance world, Baldwin profiles her numerous collaborators, beginning with composer Louis Horst, her most significant accompanist in art and life. Writing with dynamic clarity and fluid empathy, Baldwin details the creation of Graham's profound and trailblazing works, parsing the inspiration she found in the ancient Greeks, the pueblo dances of the Southwest, and literature, and elucidating her "gift for ferocity," "fanatical energy," and the stunning catharsis of her demanding choreography with its "economy of gesture" and "intensity and integrity of mood." He describes her grueling rehearsals, sleekly expressive costumes and sets, and notorious tantrums, and analyzes the critics' responses. By bringing down the curtain in this vital and defining biography as Graham faces age's first cruel salvo, Baldwin keeps the spotlight on her soulful, arresting, and indelible masterpieces, and rightly so.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Biographer Baldwin (Edison: Inventing the Century) reveals how the visionary Martha Graham (1894--1991) revolutionized dance and choreography, making them modern and free in this mesmerizing portrait. Born in Pittsburgh, Pa., Graham learned early on that "movement never lies." The shy bookworm began to blossom once she arrived in exotic Santa Barbara. Inspired after attending a recital by the passionate diva Ruth St. Denis, Graham "knew at that moment I was going to be a dancer." Studying first at the Cumnock School of Expression in Los Angeles, she trained under St. Denis and the innovative Ted Shawn, "coming to life" under his tutelage, and realizing "a dance must dominate me, completely, until I lose sense of anything else." Influenced by contemporaries like Isadora Duncan, Michio Itō , Wassily Kandinsky, and Rouben Mamoulian, Graham learned to "do things in a new way," emphasizing movement out of stillness and believing that "any great art is the condensation of a strong feeling." The trailblazing Graham seemingly sculpted modern dance out of thin air, creating indelible works like Heretic, Lamentation, and Primitive Mysteries, always looking to the future. Provocative and passionate as the dynamo herself, this richly detailed and insightful page-turner will delight dance aficionados. (Oct.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Baldwin's (The American Revelation) comprehensive and engaging biography places choreographer Martha Graham and her athletic, furious, demanding, powerful dance technique in the milieu of music, art and poetry of the time. Graham founded her female dance company in 1926, to embody dance's dramatic potential, rather than feature the smooth elegance of ballet. Erick Hawkins, the first male dancer, joined the company more than 11 years later. Graham and her dancers incorporated audible breathing, flexed feet and dramatic contraction and release to show the effort dance required. Baldwin includes detailed descriptions of specific recitals, Graham's jersey-fabric dance wear, the lives of her dance colleagues (Ruth St. Denis; Ted Shawn; Lincoln Kirstein) and artists of the time (sculptor Isamu Noguchi; composer Aaron Copland). Side trips into Graham's sometimes-complicated personal life (she married musician Louis Horst, and later, dancer Hawkins) broaden the book's appeal. Almost 70 pages of research notes and a 40-page bibliography speak to Baldwin's dedicated and detailed forays into correspondence and dance notebooks, papers, film footage, reviews, and his consultations with archivists and special collection librarians. Photos add to interest. VERDICT A worthwhile addition to modern dance collections.--Maggie Knapp

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A noted biographer attempts to tell the story of an elusive pioneer of modern dance. When Martha Graham (1894-1991) was growing up in Pittsburgh, her physician father encouraged her to look closely at a drop of water under a microscope. She discovered wriggles in the seemingly pure droplet. "Just remember this all your life, Martha," he told her. "You must look for the truth," adding, "movement never lies." It's unlikely he expected his daughter would pursue that truth in the nascent world of modern dance. Baldwin, who has written bios of Man Ray and William Carlos Williams, among others, covers the first five decades of Graham's long life and career, including her "small-town origins [and] dogged quest for artistic integrity"; her early years as a member of the Denishawn dance company; her notable collaborators, from Louis Horst, her "first dedicated accompanist," to composers like Henry Cowell and Samuel Barber; and "her tumultuous marriage and tragic romance with a young dancer, Erick Hawkins." Baldwin astutely analyzes Graham's major dances, among them Primitive Mysteries, influenced by "American Indian life and rituals," and, most famously, Aaron Copland's Appalachian Spring. The author acknowledges that Graham, "my provocative angel," is a difficult subject. She burned letters, left behind few notebooks, and "vigorously discouraged" Don McDonagh's 1973 bio. This book suffers as a result, with much of it devoted to backstories of other figures in Graham's life. The narrative is at its best when Graham is in the spotlight and Baldwin shows how mercurial she could be. She was so prone to anger that she "was known to tear a pay phone from the wall or jump out of a moving cab." The night before the opening performance of Ceremonials in 1932, Graham decided the girls' costumes weren't right, so "she ripped the garments to shreds, pinning and refitting them on the dancers while the seamstress stood by trembling and the clock ticked." The book features a generous selection of photos. A passionate yet patchy biography of one of the 20th century's greatest artists. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

1 Pittsburgh The serried ranks of the glacier-scarred Appalachian Mountain Divide rise up, a broad, thickly wooded and granite-faced north-south fault line of ridges penetrated by the Tuscarora, Kittatinny, Blue Mountain, and Lehigh tunnels, long stretches of darkness breaking open into early-spring light diffused upon "the soft chain of hills . . . their shoulders tightly-bound into a provocative embrace" around the "vast amphitheater" of the Allegheny Plateau, the confluence of the Monongahela, Allegheny, and Ohio Rivers--Pittsburgh. Following in the footsteps of Alexis de Tocqueville, Mrs. Trollope, and Charles Dickens, popular biographer James Parton, on assignment from The Atlantic Monthly, visited the city in 1868, by which time it was known as a place where men carried "the obligatory extra white shirt" to work so "they [could] change around noon as the city's soot blackened their original attire." Parton's article concluded with a dark observation: "It is an unprofitable business, view-hunting, but if anyone would enjoy a spectacle as striking as Niagara," the author observed, "he may do so by simply walking up a long hill to Cliff Street in Pittsburg, and looking over into--hell with the lid taken off." Local historian Charles W. Dahlinger wrote in his romantic saga, Old Allegheny, that rivalrous Pittsburgh "cast longing eyes across the river at her smaller [and prosperous] sister. Several times she stretched out her arms yearningly to take her to her bosom." However, these advances, in the form of the Consolidation Act of 1867, were rebuffed by majority vote of the citizens of Allegheny. Three more times over the next forty years, the proud "North Siders" rejected the Iron City's annexation resolutions, "to take [their residential suburb] in by the heels," demonstrating the stubborn independence and fierce pride of place for which Allegheny is still known. The Pittsburgh, Fort Wayne and Chicago Railway's sprawling, sunken depot in the northwestern Allegheny City Second Ward included a roundhouse, a constellation of repair shops, a brass foundry, and a powerhouse. The company sold the adjacent land uphill and to the east across Marquis Way and Fremont Street to business owners and real estate speculators who put up rows of homes "on tightly-adjacent plots [. . . not as attached 'party-wall'] row houses." This enclave of two- and three-story, mansard-roofed long and narrow redbrick houses with modern conveniences, windows in front and back, close together with narrow alleys between them and with small patches of land as coveted yard space, sandwiched between earlier blue-collar Mexican War Streets further east (named for battles--Buena Vista and Palo Alto--and generals--Taylor, Sherman, and Jackson) and grander Victorian mansions of the Manchester region across the depot tracks to the west, evolved into a magnet for Allegheny's professional, independent wage-earning class. Today the area is designated as the California-Kirkbride/Old Allegheny Rows Historic District. Fremont Street, renamed Brighton Place, eight lots long, runs on a gentle slope between Freedmore (formerly Fillmore/Franklin) Street to the north and Mero Way to the south. Halfway down Fremont/Brighton, a stone's throw from where the railroad depot used to be, a faded stretch of lawn covers the gap where number 1531, the birthplace of Martha Graham, once stood. On Saturday, June 7, 2008, at ten in the morning, at the intersection of Brighton Road and California Avenue, the Allegheny City Society, in alliance with the Heinz History Center, the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission, and the Pennsylvania Humanities Council dedicated a "Historical Marker Honoring the Memory of Martha Graham (May 11, 1894-April 1, 1991)." In golden letters against a blue background, the plaque reads, "Born near here, dancer, choreographer and teacher Martha Graham created a modern and unique movement style. In 1927 [sic], she founded her School of Contemporary Dance, revolutionizing the art of modern dance with innovative works such as Frontier and Appalachian Spring." The place-name comes from native Indian origins; according to sixteenth-century mapmakers, there once roamed an isolated, itinerant tribe called Apalatchi, meaning "the People on the Other Side," because they hunted in the Great Path terrain along the northern banks of the thousand-mile Ohio River, "where virgin forest met the rushing waters." *  *  * Named after her Irish paternal grandmother born in Newburgh, New York, Martha was the eldest of four children of George Greenfield Graham, MD, thirty-eight years old, and Jane ("Jennie") Beers, fourteen years her husband's junior. Jane came from the rural borough of Mars in Butler County along Breakneck Creek, north of Allegheny. She was "a compact, little wren of a woman," the middle daughter of three: sister Annie was the older, and sister Mary (called "Auntie Re") was the youngest. Martha's sister, also named Mary (nicknamed "Mimi"), was born on May 15, 1896; followed by Georgia ("Geordie"), on March 1, 1900; and on April 26, 1906, finally the precious "boy-child," William Henry arrived. The who's who 1897 biography in Life Sketches of Leading Citizens of Pittsburg and the Vicinity (solemn frontispiece declaring that "biography is the home aspect of history"), claimed the "prominent and skilful physician . . . [as] a native of Allegheny," but Dr. Graham originally hailed from Washington County, Pennsylvania, center of the notorious 1791 Whiskey Rebellion. Dr. Graham's father, John Jr., of Pittsburgh, moved to a plantation outside Hannibal, Missouri, before the Civil War; afterward, he took the family back to Pennsylvania. Dr. Graham's paternal grandparents--John Sr. and Elizabeth--were Scottish. John Sr., beginning "in the hat trade," became president of the Bank of Pittsburgh and vice president of the board of Western Pennsylvania Hospital. After attending the University of Pennsylvania, George Greenfield Graham followed family tradition and embarked upon a short-lived business career before matriculating at the Baltimore College of Physicians and Surgeons in the fall of 1880. He earned an MD in mental disorders and was hired as a resident in the department of medicine and surgery at West Penn Hospital in Pittsburgh's Polish Hill district, the first chartered public Civil War veterans' hospital in town. In the spring of 1883, he joined the staff of the Dixmont State Hospital for the Insane as assistant physician. On a parklike hilltop overlooking the Ohio River in what is now suburban Kilbuck, eight miles northwest of Allegheny via the Pittsburgh, Fort Wayne and Chicago line, Dixmont Hospital opened its doors in 1862 responding to a plea from Dorothea Lynde Dix, the Maine-born nursing and lunacy reform movement pioneer: "I call your attention to the present state of Insane Persons confined within this [Pennsylvania] Commonwealth in cages, stalls, pens! Chained, naked, beaten with rods, lashed into obedience!" When "she closed her eyes in death--and awoke to joy forever" in the New Jersey state hospital in Morris Plains on July 19, 1887, Ms. Dix was eulogized by John Harper, president of the Dixmont Hospital Board, as having given up "the quietude of home, and . . . the fascinating pleasures of refined society . . . for the grand purpose of self-sacrifice on the altar of suffering humanity." Dr. Graham spent ten years on the staff of Dixmont as--in the parlance of the day--an alienist, rising through the administration to become a member of the Committee on Lunacy and acting assistant superintendent of the facility, expanded to house more than thirteen hundred patients. Resigning from Dixmont on the brink of a crippling recession in the spring of 1893, Dr. Graham married the dark-haired, petite "Miss Jennie" Beers, daughter of John--a carpenter--and Mary (Hamilton), and hung up a shingle announcing his private practice from a surgery-cum-library in the parlor of their house on Fremont Street. *  *  * Martha Graham's father emerges from fragmentary and occasionally lyric passages in her discursive Blood Memory as an array of vignettes. Of one thing we may be certain: "My whole life started with my father," Graham said in her seventies; "I think I was my father's favorite," she wrote toward the end of her life. George Greenfield Graham was the tall, elegant, golden-haired, blue-eyed guardian of his daughter's hermetic girlhood. He insisted that, as his eldest, the young lady must be the diligent figurehead for her younger siblings, representing what was best about the close-knit Presbyterian family. She had to be impeccably attired and groomed at all times, especially on Sundays for churchgoing--white gloves, white skirt neatly pleated, hair pulled back and tied with a ribbon. When in consultation with a patient, Dr. Graham expected quiet throughout the house and could not be disturbed; however, after visiting hours, or returning from house calls and rounds in the early-evening before dinner, he welcomed Martha into his lofty sanctum for Socratic conversation and introduced her to the enduring value of great books. When spoken to by an adult, she was expected to be courteous in deportment and hide her impulses. "A bit Olympian," stern and demanding, on occasion, Dr. Graham would give his recalcitrant daughter a slap but never raised his voice to chastise Martha, preferring to murmur that she "disappointed" him. Two incidents stand out from Martha's late-Victorian childhood--two of the physician's dicta--apocryphal or not. In the earlier memory, she was standing upon a pile of books next to her father's desk as he showed her a glass slide upon which he had placed a drop of water. Dr. Graham asked Martha what she saw, and she replied, "Pure water." He pulled down his microscope, placed the slide under the lens, beckoned Martha to peer through the viewfinder, and asked her to look more closely. "There are wriggles in it!" she cried. "Yes. It is impure," Dr. Graham said. "Just remember this all your life, Martha. You must look for the truth." She wrote, "I have never forgotten the vividness of that moment, which has presided like a star over my life." In the second episode, one of her father's patients, a teenaged girl, was invited to stay for supper with the family. Little Martha, "the small person of four or five, circled around her, looking, wondering, pondering, imitating . . ." Seated at table during the meal, Graham wrote, "[the girl] barely looked up from her plate, preferring to sit slightly slouched, bent into that awkwardness, as if folding herself into her own body." That night, after her father returned from escorting the girl home, Martha asked him "why she behaved this way . . . why she carrie[d] her head and mov[ed] her hands in a strange way." Dr. Graham replied that his patient was not well and her body was telling them so. Each of us, he said, speaks our story through our bodies. "Movement," he told Martha, "never lies." "Movement never lies--at four or five that was an admonition," Graham wrote decades later. " 'Lie' in a Presbyterian household was and still is a clanging word which sets whispering all the little fluttering guilts which seek to become consumed in the flame of one's conscience." The epiphany was reported by Martha Graham to Agnes de Mille as "Bodies never lie"; to Don McDonagh as "I can always tell from your movement if you lie"; and to an assembly of Juilliard students as "All that which you are comes out through movement . . . the body is a barometer of the soul's weather." Ernestine Stodelle transcribed Graham's recollection of the paternal incident thus: " 'Martha, you're not telling me the truth!' Wide-eyed, she stammered, 'How do you know?' 'I can tell by the way you are moving,' was [Dr. Graham's] candid retort." Over the years, this clinical observation was melded into Martha Graham's technique, the body as the vessel containing unadulterated truth, the movement of the dancer manifesting that truth, and the dancer disciplined against involuntary revelations of emotion. This necessary tension leading to artifice was cited by Émile Zola in his essay on Manet: To be an artist in any medium, Zola wrote, "You must abandon yourself bravely to your nature and try not to lie to yourself." *  *  * At the turn of the century, the Graham household was crowded. Besides the peripatetic, professional father; his indulged and fragile wife; three girls ages six, four, and a newborn--and a floppy-eared mutt terrier; Jennie's parents, John and Mary Beers, had moved in. Holding the family together as nanny, cook, and housekeeper in the three-story home on the right side of the tracks was the spirited Irish maid Elizabeth Prendergast ("Lizzie," or "Sizzie," the little ones called her). A typical middle-class family in 1900 Allegheny would employ a single "live-in" for all work; stalwart Lizzie was up to the task. A grateful former patient of Dr. Graham's, at twenty-seven, she arrived on the doorstep of 1531 Fremont when Martha was still in her mother's arms, and stayed with the family for three decades. "[A] wonderful lapsed Catholic who could never understand why she had to go to confession . . . [s]he was wise and she was utterly dedicated and devoted," Martha Graham recalled. "She dominated the house." In the second-floor nursery, Martha spent hours cross-legged on the floor "choreographing" complex cities out of building blocks. The sisters played dress-up, draping old veils and scarves, adorned themselves with "junky jewelry," put on improvised dramas, and sang songs, Lizzie doubling as audience and impresario. With Martha's father's encouragement--he was an accomplished piano player, favoring Gilbert and Sullivan and Strauss Viennese waltzes--she took lessons for a short time, although she never learned to read music fluently. When she tired of Lizzie's stories of "witches, wee folk, and the poetic mystery of things," and solitude beckoned, Martha withdrew into her bedroom, to read by the window in a "special wooden chair," an eclectic literary journey that began with stories from the Greek myths, moved on to Jules Verne's "fantastic voyages to the moon or under the sea," and alighted upon her constant favorite, poetry of all kinds, "and the imagination that poems inspired." Alfred, Lord Tennyson's work was most appealing: "I had my own world," Graham remembered, "and my own world was The Lady of Shalott." It is bewitching to pry open the square blue covers embossed with decorative gold leaf, page through Howard Pyle's color-saturated art nouveau lithographs for Shalott, and imagine, through Martha's impressionable eyes, the "embowered" barefoot damsel by the window combing her thick auburn hair as it cascades around her shoulders, weaving "the shadows of a world" in her mind's fantasy-web, longing for Sir Lancelot's love, gazing into her magical circular mirror like a pre-Raphaelite Lady Lilith, and, "robed in snowy white . . . singing her own death dirge" afloat upon the river toward Camelot. *  *  * Weekdays, Martha and Mary attended the integrated Second Ward Elementary School on Sherman Avenue, later named the Mary [Junkin Buchanan] Cowley School. Beloved social activist and kindergarten advocate, "Our Mrs. Cowley" was founder and director of the Allegheny Playground Association. "Each and every Sunday" morning, the Grahams prepared for the fifteen-minute walk to church, and Martha "smoothed out her dress, tying the sash just so, slipping into her best coat . . . putting on her most becoming bonnet, buttoning her gloves, lowering a little veil over her deep-set eyes." The route never varied. Stepping out the front door, backs to the railyard blacksmith shop and foundry, they descended the steps, turned right, and headed down Fremont, then one block east on Pennsylvania Avenue, and south one block along Irwin Avenue, bringing them to the northwest corner of the town commons, landscaped into Ober Park. Excerpted from Martha Graham: When Dance Became Modern by Neil Baldwin All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.