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In Ruth Page: The Woman in the Work, the Chicago ballerina emerges as a highly original choreographer who, in her art, sought the iconoclastic as she transgressed boundaries of genre, gender, race, class, and sexuality. Author Joellen A. Meglin shows how her works were often controversial and sometimes censored even as she succeeded in roles usually reserved for men in the ballet world: choreographer, artistic director, and impresario. From extensive dramaturgical analysis of her most famous ballets La Guiablesse, Frankie and Johnny, Billy Sunday, Revenge, The Merry Widow, Camille, Carmina Burana, and Alice to embodied re-imagining of an avant-garde solo performed in a "sack" designed by Isamu Noguchi, this biography follows the global reach of Ruth Page's career spanning the greater part of the twentieth century. In the process of discovering the woman in the work, one encounters with an international cast of dancers (Anna Pavlova, Harald Kreutzberg, Frederic Franklin, Alicia Markova), composers (William Grant Still, Aaron Copland, Jerome Moross, Darius Milhaud), visual artists (Noguchi, Pavel Tchelitchew, Antoni Clavé), and companies (Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo, Ballets des Champs-Elysées, London Festival Ballet). Disrupting notions that New York was the only cradle of the American ballet, and George Balanchine, its exponent to eclipse all others, Ruth Page explores the woman's unique sensibility, corporeal praxis, and collaborative ethos to reveal her Chicago-centered network of creativity.
Joellen A. Meglin, long-time editor of Dance Chronicle: Studies in Dance and the Related Arts and professor emerita of Dance at Temple University, has published extensively on Ruth Page and American ballet. Her re-imagination of Page's solo Expanding Universe was recently presented at the 92nd-Street Y and the Noguchi Museum in New York.
Dedication Acknowledgments Overture PART I: INTERNATIONAL STIRRINGS 1. From Pavlovita to Première Danseuse 2. World Travelers: Chicago Allied Arts and Beyond 3. "Gone Modern": Skyscrapers, Sacks, and Sticks 4. A Surprising Partnership: Page/Kreutzberg PART II: BALLET AMERICANA 5. White She-Devil in an Otherwise Black-Cast: La Guiablesse 6. "Jungle Jazz": A Murder Trial in Ballet 7. "Ghosts of Harlem": A Blues Ballet 8. America's First Feminist Ballet: An American Pattern 9. Embodying "Lowlife" in High Art: Frankie and Johnny 10. Victory Garden: Danced Poems in the Time of War 11. Postwar Anomie: The Bells 12. Bible Stories Meet Music Hall: Billy Sunday PART III: COSMOPOLITAN CHOREOGRAPHIES 13. The Remaking of the Choreographer: Revenge and the European Market 14. A Woman's Will: The Merry Widow 15. The Woman Who Could Not Sleep 16. Grand Finale Key to Endnote AbbreviationsEndnotes Index Poetry Credit Lines