Making Dances: Seven Post-Modern Choreographers

Making Dances: Seven Post-Modern Choreographers (1980)


  • Genre: Documentary
  • Release Date: 1980-10-01
  • Runtime: 1h 29min
  • Language: English
  • Production Company: Michael Blackwood Productions
  • Director: Michael Blackwood

Summary

Made in 1980, this film explores the contemporary dance scene through the work of seven New York-based choreographers. They discuss the nature of dance and the evolution of their own work. Filmed at rehearsals, performances, and during interviews, the film is a unique primary source. The artistic roots of these seven artists can be found in Martha Graham's concern with modern life as a subject for dance and in Merce Cunningham's emphasis on the nature of movement. In the 1960s, the interaction of art forms generated choreographic innovations. Especially influential was John Cage, whose radical ideas served as a point of departure for much of the new choreography. Each of the choreographers in Making Dances draws inspiration from the Graham/Cunningham tradition, yet each makes a highly distinctive statement. Structure, movement in non-fictive time and space, and the nature of movement itself are recurring themes.

Making Dances: Seven Post-Modern Choreographers Trailer

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  • Trisha Brown

    as
  • Lucinda Childs

    as
  • Douglas Dunn

    as
  • David Gordon

    as
  • Kenneth King

    as
  • Meredith Monk

    as
  • Sara Rudner

    as
Camera Mead Hunt Director of Photography
Directing Michael Blackwood Director
Editing Peter Adair Editor
Sound Rick Dior Sound Mixer
Camera David Waterston Assistant Camera
Production Michael Blackwood Producer
Camera Mark Trottenberg Assistant Camera
Sound Ned Bastille Sound Recordist

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