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Martha Graham: Choreographer as Consummate Individualist


Article # : 13915 

Section : THE ARTS
Issue Date : 2 / 1988  2,149 Words
Author : Don McDonagh
Don McDonagh is a dance writer and critic based in New York.

       Martha Graham became a professional dancer the year before the October 1917 revolution that brought the Soviets to power in Russia. Seventy years later, three artistic children of that revolution, Maya Plisetskaya, Mikhail Baryshnikov, and Rudolf Nureyev, performed works from her company's repertory to celebrate the gala opening of her most recent New York season. Their historic presence on stage honored Graham's seven decades of creative exploration and laid to rest any lingering traces of the "war" between ballet and modern dance.
       
        At ninety-four Graham no longer performs--she gave that up at seventy-five--but her artistic vision still dominates her company and she regularly adds new works to its repertory. In recent years she has also begun a program of revivals of her early dances that glowingly displays the development of her aesthetic concerns.
       
        For her newest work, Persephone, she chose Stravinsky's Symphony in C to accompany her retelling of the myth of Demeter's search for her daughter, Persephone, in the underworld. The first of three movements shows the barren earth after Persephone's abduction. Demeter, the goddess of the harvest, laments and seeks her so the earth may once again be fruitful. Her celebratory return in the last movement closes the cycle on an affirmative note.
       
        Underworld Inhabitants
       
        Halston's costumes for the grotesque inhabitants of the underworld make extensive use of stretch fabric to enclose groups of dancers moving in deformed clusters. Their menace arises from the unusual configuration the material assumes--depersonalizing dancers while at the same time allowing disembodied but recognizably human limbs to project clearly. The use of the fabric, which is so common today, was initiated for serious theatrical employment by Graham in the thirties. At one time, stretch jersey was dirt cheap and she was dirt poor. More importantly, Graham saw the expressive potential of the material and proceeded to demonstrate it in an eye-opening manner.
       
        Last year, in her company's sixtieth, anniversary season, she assembled "Denishawn/Graham Solos," a retrospective collection of five short dances that showed the inspiration for and the development of her own creative talent. Among the works selected was Lamentation. A seated woman is seen on a small bench. Her face, hands, and feet are visible; head and body are covered by a tube of stretch fabric. But while the woman's face remains gravely impassive, the
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