Baroque dance is dance of the Baroque era in Europe (roughly 1600–1750), closely linked with Baroque music, theater and opera.
Primary sources include more than three hundred choreographies in Beauchamp-Feuillet notationLittle, Meredith Ellis and Marsh, Carol G. La Danse Noble, An Inventory of Dances and Sources, (Broude Brothers Ltd, 1992) ISBN 0-8450-0092-6Lancelot, Francine, La Belle Dance: Catalogue Raisonné, (Van Dieren Editeur, 1996) ISBN 2-911087-02-X, as well as manuals by Raoul Auger Feuillet and Pierre Rameau in France, Kellom Tomlinson and John Weaver in England, and Gottfried Taubert in Germany. This wealth of evidence has allowed modern scholars and dancers to recreate the style, although areas of controversy still exist. The standard modern introduction is HiltonHilton, Wendy, Dance and Music of Court and Theater: Selected Writings of Wendy Hilton (Pendragon Press, 1997) ISBN 0-945193-98-x.
French dance types include:
Many of these dance types are familiar from classical music, perhaps most spectacularly in the stylized suites of J. S. BachLittle, Meredith and Jenne, Natalie. Dance and the Music of J.S. Bach (Indiana University Press, 1991, 2001) ISBN 0-253-21464-5. Note however, that the allemandes, that occur in these suites do not correspond to a French dance from the same period.
Perhaps best known among these pioneers was Britain's Melusine Wood, who published several books on historical dancing in the 1950's.Wood, Melusine, More Historical Dances, (Imperial Soc. Dancing, 1956) ISBN 0-9004-8412-8. Miss Wood passed her research on to her student Belinda Quirey, and also to Pavlova Company ballerina & choreographer Mary Skeaping (1902-1984). The latter became well known for her reconstructions of baroque ballets for London's "Ballet for All" company in the 1960's.
The leading figures of the second generation of historical dance research include french choreographer Francine Lancelot (1929-2003) who put her research into practice when she founded the baroque dance company Ris et Danceries in 1980. Her work in choreographing the landmark 1986 production of Lully's 1686 tragedie-lyrique "Atys" with William Christie's Les Arts Florissants is well known. Wendy Hilton (1931-2002), a student of Belinda Quirey supplemented the work of Melusine Wood with her own research into original sources. A native of Britain, Hilton arrived in the U.S. in 1969 joining the faculty of the Juilliard School in 1972 and establishing her own baroque dance workshop at Stanford University in 1974 which endured for more than 25 years.
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