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Mary Clarke and Clement Crisp, Making a Ballet (1974), offers observations on the different relationships between choreographers and dancers, designers, and composers, and their Design for Ballet (1978) is a lavishly illustrated survey of costume and set design. Merle Armitage (ed.), Martha Graham, the Early Years (1937, reprinted 1978); and Le Roy Leatherman, Martha Graham: Portrait of the Lady as an Artist (1966), explore the nature of this prominent choreographer’s work. See also David Vaughan, Frederick Ashton and His Ballets (1977); and Merce Cunningham, Changes: Notes on Choreography, edited by Frances Starr (1969). For the analysis of technical components of dance as theatre, see Elizabeth R. Hayes, Dance Composition and Production for High Schools and Colleges (1955, reissued 1981); Cyril W. Beaumont and Stanislas Idzikowski, A Manual of the Theory and Practice of Classical Theatrical Dancing (Classical Ballet) (Cecchetti Method), rev. ed. (1977); and articles on the technical aspects of the art in Dance Chronicle: Studies in Dance and the Related Arts (quarterly). Ballet

Development of the ballet as a theatre art is reflected in the early writings of some dancing masters such as Cesare Negri Milanese, Nuove inventioni di balli: opera vaghissima (1604; reissued in 1969 as Le gratie d’amore), a richly illustrated treatise. See also Claude François Ménestrier, Des Ballets anciens et modernes selon les régles du théâtre (1682, reprinted 1972), the first printed history of the ballet; Deryck Lynham, The Chevalier Noverre: Father of Modern Ballet (1950, reprinted 1972), a biographical history; and Théophile Gautier, The Romantic Ballet as Seen by Théophile Gautier, trans. from French by Cyril W. Beaumont (1932, reprinted 1980). Lincoln Kirstein, Dance: A Short History of Classic Theatrical Dancing (1935, reprinted 1970), and Movement & Metaphor (1970, reissued as Four Centuries of Ballet, 1984), are brilliant analyses of the component parts of ballet and its developments, based on a wide survey of works. An authoritative historical study is Joan Lawson, A History of Ballet and Its Makers (1964, reprinted 1976). Selma Jeanne Cohen, Next Week, Swan Lake: Reflections on Dance and Dances (1982), is a witty and illuminating discussion of some basic issues in dance criticism. For the analysis of ballet techniques, see Jean-Georges Noverre, Letters on Dancing and Ballets (1930, reissued 1966; originally published in French, rev. ed. 1803–04), a reformer’s statement of the principles of ballet techniques, which are still valid; and Carlo Blasis, An Elementary Treatise upon the Theory and Practice of the Art of Dancing (1944; originally published in French, 1820), a book by an Italian dancer and choreographer who codified the techniques of classic ballet. For the librettos of most famous ballets, see Cyril W. Beaumont, Complete Book of Ballets: A Guide to the Principal Ballets of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, rev. ed. (1949, reprinted 1956), supplemented with his Ballets of Today (1954), and Ballets, Past & Present (1955); and Walter Terry, Ballet Guide: Background, Listings, Credits, and Descriptions of More Than Five Hundred of the World’s Major Ballets (1982). Contributions of the Russian ballet are discussed by Richard Buckle, Diaghilev (1979, reprinted 1984), and Nijinsky, 2nd ed. (1975); and by Natalia Roslavleva, Era of the Russian Ballet (1966, reprinted 1979). Modern dance

Various aspects of modern dance and its forms are studied in Walter Terry, The Dance in America, rev. ed. (1971, reprinted 1981); Walter Sorell, The Dance Has Many Faces, 2nd ed. (1966); and John Martin, Introduction to the Dance (1939, reissued 1965), especially good on the theory of the early modern dance. Also see Selma Jeanne Cohen (ed.), The Modern Dance: Seven Statements of Belief (1966, reprinted 1973), a collection of essays by important choreographers; Sally Banes, Terpsichore in Sneakers: Post-Modern Dance (1980), a survey of the subject; and Joseph H. Mazo, Prime Movers: The Makers of Modern Dance in America (1977), which contains useful analyses of many choreographers’ works. Current research in choreography is presented in the periodicals Dancing Times (monthly); Dance Research Journal (semiannual); and Dance Magazine (monthly). Indian classical dance

Analysis of regional dancing is found in Kay Ambrose, Classical Dances and Costumes of India, 2nd ed. (1983), a well-documented description of basic forms and styles; Beryl De Zoete, The Other Mind: A Study of Dance in South India (1953, reissued 1960); and Rina Singha and Reginald Massey, Indian Dances: Their History and Growth (1967), a well-illustrated guide. Folk and social dance

Folk dance is the subject of Cecil J. Sharp and A.P. Oppé, The Dance: An Historical Survey of Dancing in Europe (1924, reprinted 1972); and Joan Lawson, European Folk Dance (1953, reprinted 1980). Periodicals include Arabesque: A Magazine of International Dance (bimonthly); American Square Dance (monthly); and Square Dancing (monthly). Social and ballroom dances are analyzed in Arthur H. Franks, Social Dance: A Short History (1963); and Philip J.S. Richardson, The Social Dances of the Nineteenth Century in England (1960). Judith R. Mackrell