Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Modern dance in the United States" ¶ 7
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Katherine and dancer
* 1909 – Katherine Dunham, American dancer ( d. 2006 )
1950 ) jazz dance was profoundly influenced by Caribbean and other Latin American dance styles which were introduced by anthropologist and dancer Katherine Dunham.
Ginger Rogers ( born Virginia Katherine McMath ; July 16, 1911 – April 25, 1995 ) was an American actress, dancer, and singer who appeared in film, and on stage, radio, and television throughout much of the 20th century.
In 1941, Deren wrote and suggested a children's book on dance to African American dancer and choreographer Katherine Dunham and later became her personal secretary.
He moved to United States in the fifties to join in a world tour with the Afroamerican dancer Katherine Dunham and her Dance Company.
Moreau was born in Paris, the daughter of Katherine ( Buckley ), a dancer who performed at the Folies Bergère, and Anatole-Désiré Moreau, a restaurateur .< ref >
Katherine Dunham ( June 22, 1909 – May 21, 2006 ) was an American dancer, choreographer, and company director as well as an author, educator, and social activist.
The Performing Arts Training Center was opened by world-renowned African American dancer Katherine Dunham in 1967 in East St. Louis, Illinois.
Miriam Katherine McDonald ( born July 26, 1987 ) is a Canadian actress and occasional dancer.
Its first stars and plaques were installed in 1989 ; the inductees that year were musician Chuck Berry, dancer and choreographer Katherine Dunham, bridge builder James B. Eads, poet T. S. Eliot, ragtime composer Scott Joplin, aviator Charles Lindbergh, baseball player Stan Musial, actor Vincent Price, newspaper publisher Joseph Pulitzer and playwright Tennessee Williams.
The performance was directed by noted African-American dancer Katherine Dunham and conducted by Robert Shaw, one of the first major American conductors to hire both black and white singers for his chorale.
After spending five years at the Cornish School, Fort decided to pursue her dance career in Los Angeles, and in 1939 her neighbor, black composer William Grant Still, introduced Fort to dancer Katherine Dunham.

Katherine and anthropologist
* Katherine Dunham, an anthropologist, choreographer, and pioneer in Black theatrical dance.
Samples were collected for DNA profiling by Dr. Katherine Taylor, who is with the King County, Washington Medical Examiner Office and also is a UW forensic anthropologist faculty affiliate, and sent as forensic evidence with the remains to law enforcement agencies in Washington state and Michigan.

Katherine and originally
David Hume, originally David Home, son of Joseph Home of Chirnside, advocate, and Katherine Falconer, was born on 26 April 1711 ( Old Style ) in a tenement on the north side of the Lawnmarket in Edinburgh.
He also had four half-siblings by Katherine Swynford, originally his sisters ' governess, then his father's longstanding mistress, and later his third wife.
Katherine Swynford, Duchess of Lancaster ( also spelled Synford ), née ( de ) Roet ( also spelled ( de ) Rouet, ( de ) Roët, or ( de ) Roelt ) ( probably 25 November 1350 – 10 May 1403 ), was the daughter of Sir Payne ( or Paen / Pain / Paon ) ( de ) Roet ( also spelled ( de ) Rouet, ( de ) Roët or ( de ) Roelt ), originally a Flemish herald from County of Hainaut, later knighted.
These entries were originally published by the Tribune Company in 1923 under the title Tribune Tower Competition and later in The Chicago Tribune Tower Competition: Skyscraper Design and Cultural Change in the 1920s by Katherine Solomonson and Richard A. Etlin, 2001.
The part was originally offered to Katherine Heigl, but due to prior commitments to Under Siege 2: Dark Territory ( 1995 ) had to turn it down.
It is based on the Mumfie novels by Katherine Tozer, which were originally published in 1936.
* The British actress Katherine Kelly, best known for her role as Becky McDonald in the ITV soap opera Coronation Street, is the daughter of John Kelly, who originally hails from Castleisland.
In most of its Western forms, Karin was originally a Swedish form of Katherine, but in English speaking countries is usually thought of as merely a variant spelling for Karen ( from Danish variant ).
" The Little Drummer Boy " ( originally known as " Carol of the Drum ") is a popular Christmas song written by the American classical music composer and teacher Katherine Kennicott Davis in 1941.
These settlers, with farming skills vastly more suitable than those of the Anglophones due to their experience with farming on the Germanic low lands and Asian steppes, came originally from the Neatherlands ( their place of origin ), moving to East Germany in the 17th century, than Russia under the protection of Katherine the Great, before finally migrating and landing at the nearby junction of the Red and Rat rivers, making their way east to what was known as the East Reserve, essentially a gift of land from the Canadian government.
Dana Delany, who eventually was cast as Katherine Mayfair, was originally chosen for the role but turned it down, saying it was too similar to her role in Pasadena.

Katherine and ballet
After experimenting with various diving actions and stunts in the water, Katherine Curtis started one of the first water ballet clubs at the University of Chicago, where the team began executing strokes, " tricks ," and floating formations.
Dunham opened a school in New York ( 1945 ) where she taught Katherine Dunham Technique, a blend of African and Caribbean movement ( flexible torso and spine, articulated pelvis and isolation of the limbs and polyrhythmic movement ) integrated with techniques of ballet and modern dance.
The dream ballet, in which dancers Marc Platt, Katherine Sergava, and George Church doubled for the leading actors, successfully integrated dance into the musical's plot.

Katherine and she
Katherine was staying at a convent, and her mother felt that, as Thompson himself seems to have suggested, she might eventually stay there.
Katherine Douglas King '' The invitation was accepted and other letters followed, in which she spoke of her concern for his health and her delight in seeing him so much at home among the crippled children she served.
* In the 2008 HBO television movie Recount, Florida Secretary of State Katherine Harris ( portrayed by Laura Dern ) compares herself to Queen Esther, of whom she says " was willing to sacrifice herself to save the lovely Jewish people.
Katherine Duncan-Jones accepts a 1600 – 1 attribution for the date Hamlet was written, but notes that the Lord Chamberlain's Men, playing Hamlet in the 3000-capacity Globe, were unlikely to be put to any disadvantage by an audience of " barely one hundred " for the Children of the Chapel's equivalent play, Antonio's Revenge ; she believes that Shakespeare, confident in the superiority of his own work, was making a playful and charitable allusion to his friend John Marston's very similar piece.
Many of the ideas about the links between rhymes and historical persons, or events, can be traced back to Katherine Elwes's book The Real Personages of Mother Goose ( 1930 ), in which she linked famous nursery-rhyme characters with real people, on little or no evidence.
Katharine maintained she had remained a virgin for the six months of her first marriage, allowing Julius to issue the dispensation, as church law would have forbidden the union if Katherine had admitted to sleeping with Arthur.
Accompanied by two girls from California that she ’ d never met, Katherine Norton and Elizabeth Atsatt, she traveled through France, Switzerland, Italy, Germany, and England for one year, having the opportunity of various home stays throughout the trip.
In 2003 screenwriter Katherine Fugate was approached for the project, and was quoted saying that she expects the start of production to be three to five years away, which suggested a release sometime between 2006 and 2009.
In 1987, she was criticised when it emerged that two of her nieces, Katherine Bowes-Lyon and Nerissa Bowes-Lyon, had both been committed to a psychiatric hospital because they were severely handicapped.
On 2 February 1503, she gave birth to a girl named Katherine, but the child died a few days afterwards.
Katherine Bell Hunter earned a master's degree from Wake Forest University and a PhD from the University of Alberta ; she later taught botany at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas.
Katherine Howard was said to have had an affair with Francis Dereham before she came to court, in addition to committing adultery with Thomas Culpeper, and all three were executed.
In 2005, BBC One broadcast an adaptation for the ShakespeaRe-Told series, written by Sally Wainwright and directed by Dave Richards, which set the story in modern-day Britain, with Katherine ( played by Shirley Henderson ) as an abrasive career politician who is told she must find a husband if she wants to become the party leader.
To put him off, Bianca announces that she will not marry until her sister is married ( as she believes Katherine will never marry ).
She appears briefly in Katherine by Anya Seton, as well as in The King's Mistress, by Emma Campion, where she is a friend of the main character, Alice Perrers.
While Mary Katherine pretended to be asleep, she watched the abduction, and later gave these statements as to what happened:
* Although Mitchell spoke to Elizabeth quietly, Mary Katherine thought Mitchell's voice seemed somehow familiar, but she couldn't pinpoint where or when she had heard it.
By listening to the creaking floor as Elizabeth and Mitchell walked, Mary Katherine thought she could tell where Mitchell and Elizabeth were.
After several months, a breakthrough came in October 2002, when Mary Katherine suddenly remembered where she had heard Mitchell's voice, telling her parents " I think I know who it is: Emmanuel.
During the 1930s, she appeared in a large number of plays in London's West End, playing roles such as Ophelia, opposite John Gielgud's legendary Hamlet, and Katherine, opposite Laurence Olivier's Henry V. In the 1930s, she also worked in a couple of British films.

0.683 seconds.