{"title":"丽莎·詹纳罗的《制作百老汇舞蹈》和菲比·拉姆斯的《体现怀旧:20世纪早期的社交舞蹈和百老汇音乐剧的编舞》(评论)","authors":"Ray Miller","doi":"10.1353/tj.2024.a950312","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<span><span>In lieu of</span> an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:</span>\n<p> <span>Reviewed by:</span> <ul> <li><!-- html_title --> <em>Making Broadway Dance</em> by Liza Gennaro, and: <em>Embodied Nostalgia: Early Twentieth Century Social Dance and The Choreographing of Broadway Musical Theatre</em> by Phoebe Rumsey <!-- /html_title --></li> <li> Ray Miller </li> </ul> <em>MAKING BROADWAY DANCE</em>. By Liza Gennaro. New York: Oxford University Press, 2022; pp. 239. <em>EMBODIED NOSTALGIA: EARLY TWENTIETH CENTURY SOCIAL DANCE AND THE CHOREOGRAPHING OF BROADWAY MUSICAL THEATRE</em>. By Phoebe Rumsey. Routledge Advances in Theatre & Performance Studies Series. London: Roudedge, 2024; pp. 241. <p>While there has been an increasing number of excellent articles on aspects of musical theatre dance in recent years, there are few overall histories on dance in the US American musical, let alone histories that interrogate the dances themselves in substantive ways. The first was Richard Kislan's <em>Hoofing on Broadway: A History of Show Dancing</em> (1987), then Robert Emmet Long's <em>Broadway, the Golden Years: Jerome Robbins and the Great Choreographer-Directors, 1940 to the Present</em> (2001), and now, Liza Gennaro's <em>Making Broadway Dance</em> has arrived some twenty years later. Throughout this same period, there have been excellent overview musical theatre histories written by historians from Gerald Bordman and Ethan Mordden to Sheldon Patinkin and Larry Stempel. Many other scholars have offered in-depth critiques and theorizations of musical theatre, such as Scott Miller, Scott McMillin, Jack Viertel, Raymond Knapp, John Bush Jones, and Bruce Kirle. In other words, there is hardly a paucity of musical theatre history scholarship generally.</p> <p>Since the 1980s, there have been numerous articles on dance in specific musicals and on the work of selected choreographers in publications like <em>Studies in Musical Theatre, Theatre Journal</em>, and <em>Dance Research Journal</em>. There have also been important book-length examinations on the work of selected choreographers like Glenn Loney's <em>Unsung Genius: The Passion of Dancer-Choreographer Jack Cole</em> (1984), Deborah Jowitt's <em>Jerome Robbins: His Life, His Theater, His Dance</em> (2004), John Anthony Gilvey's <em>Before the Parade Passes By: Gower Champion and the Glorious American Musical</em> (2005), Kara Anne Gardner's <em>Agnes De Mille: Telling Stories in Broadway Dance</em> (2016), and Kevin Winkler's <em>Big Deal: Bob Fosse and Dance in the American Musical</em> (2018). While not as frequent, there are also examples of dancer-choreographers writing their own autobiographies, including Agnes de Mille's landmark <em>Dance to the Piper</em> (1951), Tommy Tune's <em>Footnotes: A Memoir</em> (1997), Donald McKayle's <em>Transcending Boundaries: My Dancing Life</em> (2002), and Bob Avian and Tom Santopietro's <em>Dancing Man: A Broadway Choreographer's Journey</em> (2020). However, there have been few book-length examinations that offer a broader perspective on the contributions of dance to the US American musical. Liza Gennaro is one of the few \"to illuminate the role of the choreographer and choreography in Broadway musicals\" (8).</p> <p>Beginning with the work of choreographers and dance directors of the 1920s like Ned Wayburn, Sammy Lee, and Seymour Felix, Gennaro proceeds to tell a 100-year story of dance in musical theatre that takes us up to the work of Andy Blankenbuehler, Steven Hoggett, and Camille A. Brown, just before the Broadway productions closed in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Gennaro does not attempt an exhaustive history on the subject; rather, she carefully selects the work of choreographers who profoundly influenced the development of musical theatre dance, such as Agnes de Mille and Jerome Robbins. She juxtaposes the unique contributions of these more seminal artists with those who either challenged or extended their work, such as Bob Fosse, Donald McKayle, Graciela Daniele, and Bill T. Jones.</p> <p>Gennaro selects particular dance works from musicals to detail how a specific choreographer came to create that piece. While the obligatory dissection of the dream ballet in <em>Oklahoma!</em> is included, it is her examination and contextualization of the \"The Civil War Ballet\" from <em>Bloomer Girl</em> that not <strong>[End Page 579]</strong> only provides a look into the construction of this unique dance by de Mille but also foreshadows an approach that would continue to influence choreographers up to today.</p> <p>Although her analysis of <em>Bloomer Girl</em> is indicative of the real strengths of the volume, <em>Making Broadway Dance</em> is not without its shortcomings. Her chapters on the work of Jerome Robbins are exhaustive, yet there is only one chapter, for example, devoted...</p> </p>","PeriodicalId":46247,"journal":{"name":"THEATRE JOURNAL","volume":"15 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.8000,"publicationDate":"2025-01-28","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Making Broadway Dance by Liza Gennaro, and: Embodied Nostalgia: Early Twentieth Century Social Dance and The Choreographing of Broadway Musical Theatre by Phoebe Rumsey (review)\",\"authors\":\"Ray Miller\",\"doi\":\"10.1353/tj.2024.a950312\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<span><span>In lieu of</span> an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:</span>\\n<p> <span>Reviewed by:</span> <ul> <li><!-- html_title --> <em>Making Broadway Dance</em> by Liza Gennaro, and: <em>Embodied Nostalgia: Early Twentieth Century Social Dance and The Choreographing of Broadway Musical Theatre</em> by Phoebe Rumsey <!-- /html_title --></li> <li> Ray Miller </li> </ul> <em>MAKING BROADWAY DANCE</em>. By Liza Gennaro. New York: Oxford University Press, 2022; pp. 239. <em>EMBODIED NOSTALGIA: EARLY TWENTIETH CENTURY SOCIAL DANCE AND THE CHOREOGRAPHING OF BROADWAY MUSICAL THEATRE</em>. By Phoebe Rumsey. Routledge Advances in Theatre & Performance Studies Series. London: Roudedge, 2024; pp. 241. <p>While there has been an increasing number of excellent articles on aspects of musical theatre dance in recent years, there are few overall histories on dance in the US American musical, let alone histories that interrogate the dances themselves in substantive ways. The first was Richard Kislan's <em>Hoofing on Broadway: A History of Show Dancing</em> (1987), then Robert Emmet Long's <em>Broadway, the Golden Years: Jerome Robbins and the Great Choreographer-Directors, 1940 to the Present</em> (2001), and now, Liza Gennaro's <em>Making Broadway Dance</em> has arrived some twenty years later. Throughout this same period, there have been excellent overview musical theatre histories written by historians from Gerald Bordman and Ethan Mordden to Sheldon Patinkin and Larry Stempel. Many other scholars have offered in-depth critiques and theorizations of musical theatre, such as Scott Miller, Scott McMillin, Jack Viertel, Raymond Knapp, John Bush Jones, and Bruce Kirle. In other words, there is hardly a paucity of musical theatre history scholarship generally.</p> <p>Since the 1980s, there have been numerous articles on dance in specific musicals and on the work of selected choreographers in publications like <em>Studies in Musical Theatre, Theatre Journal</em>, and <em>Dance Research Journal</em>. There have also been important book-length examinations on the work of selected choreographers like Glenn Loney's <em>Unsung Genius: The Passion of Dancer-Choreographer Jack Cole</em> (1984), Deborah Jowitt's <em>Jerome Robbins: His Life, His Theater, His Dance</em> (2004), John Anthony Gilvey's <em>Before the Parade Passes By: Gower Champion and the Glorious American Musical</em> (2005), Kara Anne Gardner's <em>Agnes De Mille: Telling Stories in Broadway Dance</em> (2016), and Kevin Winkler's <em>Big Deal: Bob Fosse and Dance in the American Musical</em> (2018). While not as frequent, there are also examples of dancer-choreographers writing their own autobiographies, including Agnes de Mille's landmark <em>Dance to the Piper</em> (1951), Tommy Tune's <em>Footnotes: A Memoir</em> (1997), Donald McKayle's <em>Transcending Boundaries: My Dancing Life</em> (2002), and Bob Avian and Tom Santopietro's <em>Dancing Man: A Broadway Choreographer's Journey</em> (2020). However, there have been few book-length examinations that offer a broader perspective on the contributions of dance to the US American musical. Liza Gennaro is one of the few \\\"to illuminate the role of the choreographer and choreography in Broadway musicals\\\" (8).</p> <p>Beginning with the work of choreographers and dance directors of the 1920s like Ned Wayburn, Sammy Lee, and Seymour Felix, Gennaro proceeds to tell a 100-year story of dance in musical theatre that takes us up to the work of Andy Blankenbuehler, Steven Hoggett, and Camille A. Brown, just before the Broadway productions closed in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Gennaro does not attempt an exhaustive history on the subject; rather, she carefully selects the work of choreographers who profoundly influenced the development of musical theatre dance, such as Agnes de Mille and Jerome Robbins. She juxtaposes the unique contributions of these more seminal artists with those who either challenged or extended their work, such as Bob Fosse, Donald McKayle, Graciela Daniele, and Bill T. Jones.</p> <p>Gennaro selects particular dance works from musicals to detail how a specific choreographer came to create that piece. While the obligatory dissection of the dream ballet in <em>Oklahoma!</em> is included, it is her examination and contextualization of the \\\"The Civil War Ballet\\\" from <em>Bloomer Girl</em> that not <strong>[End Page 579]</strong> only provides a look into the construction of this unique dance by de Mille but also foreshadows an approach that would continue to influence choreographers up to today.</p> <p>Although her analysis of <em>Bloomer Girl</em> is indicative of the real strengths of the volume, <em>Making Broadway Dance</em> is not without its shortcomings. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
代替摘要,这里是内容的简短摘录:由:莉莎·詹纳罗的《百老汇舞蹈》和菲比·拉姆西·雷·米勒的《体现怀旧:二十世纪早期的社交舞蹈和百老汇音乐剧的编舞》评论。丽莎·詹纳罗著。纽约:牛津大学出版社,2022;239页。体现怀旧:二十世纪早期的交际舞和百老汇音乐剧的编舞。菲比·拉姆齐著。《劳特利奇戏剧进展》性能研究系列。伦敦:罗德奇,2024;241页。近年来,关于音乐剧舞蹈方面的优秀文章越来越多,但美国音乐剧中关于舞蹈的整体历史却很少,更不用说以实质性的方式对舞蹈本身进行质疑的历史了。第一个是理查德·基斯兰的《百老汇的流浪:表演舞蹈的历史》(1987),然后是罗伯特·埃米特·朗的百老汇,黄金年代:杰罗姆·罗宾斯和伟大的编舞导演,1940年至今(2001),现在,丽莎·詹纳罗的《制作百老汇舞蹈》在大约20年后问世。在同一时期,从杰拉尔德·博德曼和伊森·莫登到谢尔登·帕廷金和拉里·斯坦普尔,历史学家们都写了优秀的音乐剧概览史。许多其他学者对音乐剧提出了深入的批评和理论,如斯科特·米勒、斯科特·麦克米林、杰克·维尔特尔、雷蒙德·纳普、约翰·布什·琼斯和布鲁斯·基尔。换句话说,一般来说,音乐剧历史研究并不缺乏。自20世纪80年代以来,在《音乐剧研究》、《戏剧杂志》和《舞蹈研究杂志》等出版物上,出现了大量关于特定音乐剧中的舞蹈和选定编舞家的作品的文章。对入选编舞家的作品也进行了重要的书级考试,如格伦·朗尼的《未被歌颂的天才:舞蹈编舞家杰克·科尔的激情》(1984)、黛博拉·乔维特的《杰罗姆·罗宾斯:他的生活、他的戏剧、他的舞蹈》(2004)、约翰·安东尼·吉尔维的《在游行经过之前:高尔冠军和辉煌的美国音乐剧》(2005)、卡拉·安妮·加德纳的《艾格尼丝·德·米勒:在百老汇舞蹈中讲述故事》(2016)和凯文·温克勒的《大交易》。鲍勃·福斯和舞蹈在美国音乐剧(2018)。虽然不常见,但也有舞蹈编舞家自己写自传的例子,包括阿格尼丝·德·米勒的里程碑式的《对吹笛者的舞蹈》(1951年),汤米·Tune的《脚注:回忆录》(1997年),唐纳德·麦凯勒的《超越界限:我的舞蹈生活》(2002年),以及鲍勃·艾维恩和汤姆·桑托皮耶特罗的《跳舞的人:百老汇编舞家的旅程》(2020年)。然而,很少有书本长度的考试能从更广泛的角度来看待舞蹈对美国音乐剧的贡献。莉莎热内罗是为数不多的“照亮编排和编排的角色在百老汇音乐剧”(8)。从1920年代的舞蹈编导和舞蹈董事的工作像Ned Wayburn,萨米李,西摩Felix,热内罗所得告诉100年的舞蹈在音乐剧的故事,把我们的工作Andy Blankenbuehler Steven Hoggett和卡米尔·a·布朗,在百老汇作品于2020年关闭由于COVID-19大流行。詹纳罗并没有试图详尽地描述这个问题的历史;相反,她会精心挑选对音乐剧舞蹈发展产生深远影响的编舞家的作品,比如Agnes de Mille和Jerome Robbins。她将这些更具开创性的艺术家的独特贡献与那些挑战或扩展他们作品的人并列,如鲍勃·福斯、唐纳德·麦凯勒、格拉西拉·丹尼尔和比尔·t·琼斯。詹纳罗从音乐剧中挑选特定的舞蹈作品,详细说明特定的编舞是如何创作出那件作品的。而俄克拉何马州的梦幻芭蕾必须解剖!她对《布卢默女孩》(Bloomer Girl)的《内战芭蕾舞》(the Civil War Ballet)的考察和语境化,不仅让我们看到了德·米勒这一独特舞蹈的构造,而且预示了一种直到今天仍将继续影响编舞家的方法。虽然她对布卢姆女孩的分析表明了这本书的真正优势,但《百老汇舞蹈》也不是没有缺点。她关于杰罗姆·罗宾斯作品的章节非常详尽,但只有一章专门讨论了……
Making Broadway Dance by Liza Gennaro, and: Embodied Nostalgia: Early Twentieth Century Social Dance and The Choreographing of Broadway Musical Theatre by Phoebe Rumsey (review)
In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:
Reviewed by:
Making Broadway Dance by Liza Gennaro, and: Embodied Nostalgia: Early Twentieth Century Social Dance and The Choreographing of Broadway Musical Theatre by Phoebe Rumsey
Ray Miller
MAKING BROADWAY DANCE. By Liza Gennaro. New York: Oxford University Press, 2022; pp. 239. EMBODIED NOSTALGIA: EARLY TWENTIETH CENTURY SOCIAL DANCE AND THE CHOREOGRAPHING OF BROADWAY MUSICAL THEATRE. By Phoebe Rumsey. Routledge Advances in Theatre & Performance Studies Series. London: Roudedge, 2024; pp. 241.
While there has been an increasing number of excellent articles on aspects of musical theatre dance in recent years, there are few overall histories on dance in the US American musical, let alone histories that interrogate the dances themselves in substantive ways. The first was Richard Kislan's Hoofing on Broadway: A History of Show Dancing (1987), then Robert Emmet Long's Broadway, the Golden Years: Jerome Robbins and the Great Choreographer-Directors, 1940 to the Present (2001), and now, Liza Gennaro's Making Broadway Dance has arrived some twenty years later. Throughout this same period, there have been excellent overview musical theatre histories written by historians from Gerald Bordman and Ethan Mordden to Sheldon Patinkin and Larry Stempel. Many other scholars have offered in-depth critiques and theorizations of musical theatre, such as Scott Miller, Scott McMillin, Jack Viertel, Raymond Knapp, John Bush Jones, and Bruce Kirle. In other words, there is hardly a paucity of musical theatre history scholarship generally.
Since the 1980s, there have been numerous articles on dance in specific musicals and on the work of selected choreographers in publications like Studies in Musical Theatre, Theatre Journal, and Dance Research Journal. There have also been important book-length examinations on the work of selected choreographers like Glenn Loney's Unsung Genius: The Passion of Dancer-Choreographer Jack Cole (1984), Deborah Jowitt's Jerome Robbins: His Life, His Theater, His Dance (2004), John Anthony Gilvey's Before the Parade Passes By: Gower Champion and the Glorious American Musical (2005), Kara Anne Gardner's Agnes De Mille: Telling Stories in Broadway Dance (2016), and Kevin Winkler's Big Deal: Bob Fosse and Dance in the American Musical (2018). While not as frequent, there are also examples of dancer-choreographers writing their own autobiographies, including Agnes de Mille's landmark Dance to the Piper (1951), Tommy Tune's Footnotes: A Memoir (1997), Donald McKayle's Transcending Boundaries: My Dancing Life (2002), and Bob Avian and Tom Santopietro's Dancing Man: A Broadway Choreographer's Journey (2020). However, there have been few book-length examinations that offer a broader perspective on the contributions of dance to the US American musical. Liza Gennaro is one of the few "to illuminate the role of the choreographer and choreography in Broadway musicals" (8).
Beginning with the work of choreographers and dance directors of the 1920s like Ned Wayburn, Sammy Lee, and Seymour Felix, Gennaro proceeds to tell a 100-year story of dance in musical theatre that takes us up to the work of Andy Blankenbuehler, Steven Hoggett, and Camille A. Brown, just before the Broadway productions closed in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Gennaro does not attempt an exhaustive history on the subject; rather, she carefully selects the work of choreographers who profoundly influenced the development of musical theatre dance, such as Agnes de Mille and Jerome Robbins. She juxtaposes the unique contributions of these more seminal artists with those who either challenged or extended their work, such as Bob Fosse, Donald McKayle, Graciela Daniele, and Bill T. Jones.
Gennaro selects particular dance works from musicals to detail how a specific choreographer came to create that piece. While the obligatory dissection of the dream ballet in Oklahoma! is included, it is her examination and contextualization of the "The Civil War Ballet" from Bloomer Girl that not [End Page 579] only provides a look into the construction of this unique dance by de Mille but also foreshadows an approach that would continue to influence choreographers up to today.
Although her analysis of Bloomer Girl is indicative of the real strengths of the volume, Making Broadway Dance is not without its shortcomings. Her chapters on the work of Jerome Robbins are exhaustive, yet there is only one chapter, for example, devoted...
期刊介绍:
For over five decades, Theatre Journal"s broad array of scholarly articles and reviews has earned it an international reputation as one of the most authoritative and useful publications of theatre studies available today. Drawing contributions from noted practitioners and scholars, Theatre Journal features social and historical studies, production reviews, and theoretical inquiries that analyze dramatic texts and production.