Home of an Art Form
In July 1934, the small town of Bennington, Vermont, became the unexpected
scene of another American revolution. It was a revolution that managed
to change irreversibly the face of American art.
At the time, four of its leaders—Martha Graham, Hanya Holm,
Doris Humphrey, and Charles Weidman—were known only to a small
number of fiercely devoted and partisan fans. Their art was in its infancy.
Money was scarce; there was no government and little private support
of the arts in those days, especially for modern dance. Even with those
daunting truths, Bennington College in Bennington, Vermont was soon
to become the epicenter of the modern dance world.
The Bennington School of Dance—the precursor of the American
Dance Festival—was the desperately needed laboratory in which
four of the five great modern dance second-generation pioneers (Helen
Tamiris being the fifth) could experiment, train students, and create
the early works that made modern dance one of the great cultural triumphs
of the twentieth century.
The Festival, directed by Martha Hill and Mary Josephine Shelly, remained
in Bennington until 1942 (with a one-year sojourn to Mills College,
California, in 1939). Despite the onset of World War II, Martha Graham
spent the summers of 1943–1945 in residence in Bennington, and
in 1946 José Limón brought his first company to Bennington.
In 1947, Martha Hill initiated a pilot program at Connecticut College
in New London, Connecticut, for dance teachers, college dance groups,
and young dancers. Due to the success of that pilot program, the Connecticut
College School of Dance/American Dance Festival opened officially in
1948. For the 1969 season the name became simply the American Dance
Festival, and has been directed by Charles L. Reinhart ever since.
In the fall of 1977 ADF took over the sprawling green lawns, studios, offices,
and dormitories of Duke University in Durham, North Carolina.
The Festival Today
Today the ADF has grown to more than 400 students from all over the
world and a faculty of 50. The curriculum has expanded to include classes
in dance medicine and the body therapies, as well as repertory, composition
and all the major dance techniques. There are also professional workshops
offered in teaching and performance, as well as a special program for
younger dance students. In 1996, ADF expanded its programs to include
a series of classes and choreographic workshops in New York City. The
first endowed faculty chair in dance, the Balasaraswati/Joy Ann Dewey
Beinecke Chair for Distinguished Teaching, was established in 1991.
Performances by professional dance companies, from the most experimental
to the most established, remain at the heart of the Festival. Since
its founding in 1934, ADF has been the scene of 598 premieres
by artists such as Martha Graham, José Limón, Merce Cunningham,
Paul Taylor, Erick Hawkins, Alwin Nikolais, Alvin Ailey, Twyla Tharp,
Pilobolus, Laura Dean, Meredith Monk, Martha Clarke, Mark Morris, Bill
T. Jones, and Eiko and Koma, among others.
In 1981, the Samuel H. Scripps American Dance Festival Award was established,
to honor choreographers who have made a significant lifetime contribution
to the field of modern dance. In 1998, ADF established the annual Doris
Duke Awards for New Work and implemented the three-year Doris Duke Millennium
Awards for Modern Dance & Jazz Music Collaborations, offered in
partnership with the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts.
It has commissioned works from modern giants such as Merce Cunningham,
Paul Taylor and Twyla Tharp, as well as encouraged young talent through
programs like its Young Choreographers and Composers in Residence Program
and its Emerging Generation Program.
International Activities
The 1980s were marked by the ADF's move onto the global stage. As worldwide
recognition of American modern dance grew, the ADF assumed an active
international role. In 1984, it created the International Choreographers
Residency Program, through which more than 400 choreographers from around
the world have studied and choreographed at ADF to date. That program's
success led to the creation of the International Choreographers Commissioning
Program (ICCP) in 1987, which offers especially talented international
choreographers a chance to create new works using ADF dancers during
a six-week residency. In 1999, ADF initiated a new residency program
designed to enhance choreographers' skills in arts management.
The scene of the American debut of Japanese Butoh in 1982 and French
modern dance in 1983, the ADF subsequently hosted the first North American
engagements by major dance companies from Argentina, China, Costa Rica,
Ecuador, Finland, Indonesia, India, Italy, Korea, Venezuela and Zaire.
In 1984 ADF held its first international modern dance festival as part
of its 50th anniversary celebration and most recently for its 70th anniversary.
In 1984, ADF took off in an even more surprising direction—temporarily
re-rooting itself offering classes, workshops and performances with
world-renowned dance companies and faculty. These mini-ADFs have included
ADF/Japan (1984 and 1986); ADF/Korea (1990, 1991, 1992, 1994, 1996,
2000, 2002, 2004); ADF/India (1990); ADF West (Salt Lake City, Utah,
1992); and ADF/Russia (1992, 1997, 2000).
In 1987, ADF's first linkage program began in Guangzhou, China.
ADF sent faculty to teach modern dance classes to students and teachers
at the Guangdong Modern Dance Academy, and brought Chinese dancers/choreographers
to the U.S.. These dancers, trained in traditional dance and ballet,
were for the first time given the opportunity to express their own thoughts
and feelings in choreography and the freedom to develop new approaches
to dance that could be applied to their own heritage. The students who
participated in these teaching residencies went on to form China's first
modern dance company, the Guangdong Modern Dance Company which made
its US debut during the 1991 season and completed its first US tour
in the fall of 1997. In addition, a young artist from the company, Mr.
Shen Wei, was invited to participate in ADF's ICCP in 1995, and in 2000
he formed his own company at ADF. Each year since then, ADF has commissioned
him to create a new work which has been premiered at the Festival to
critical acclaim. Most recently, Mr. Shen Wei was selected by the MacArthur Foundation as recipient of the 2007 “genius" award, and will serve as choreographer of the openings ceremonies for the 2008 Beijing Olympics. In addition to China, ADF has developed specially
designed international collaborative projects with dance institutions
in Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Costa Rica, Cuba, Czech Republic, Ecuador,
Estonia, Ghana, Indonesia, Latvia, Lithuania, Mongolia, Mozambique,
Panama, Paraguay, Philippines, Poland, Romania, Russia, South Africa,
Uruguay, Venezuela and Zaire.
In 1996, the ADF initiated its annual Dancing for the Camera: International
Festival of Film and Video Dance, which provides a major survey of the
current trends and practices in video dance from throughout the global
dance community.
Projects in the Humanities
The ADF's Black Tradition in American Modern Dance project, directed
by Dr. Gerald E. Myers, was created in 1987 to preserve, celebrate,
and create access to classic dance works by African American choreographers.
To date, 23 works have been reconstructed on leading U.S. companies
and videotaped, often along with rehearsal footage and interviews with
the choreographer. Some works have also been Labanotated. Since 1992,
the Black Tradition in American Modern Dance project has toured the
country, presenting these works in conjunction with humanities presentations
on the topics of African American Perspectives in Modern Dance and Modern
Dance and Spiritual Life in America to ever-widening audiences.
As an outgrowth of this project, ADF produced the Emmy Award-winning
television series, Free to Dance: The African American Presence in Modern
Dance, on the crucial role played by African Americans in the development
of twentieth-century modern dance. The story is told with an ongoing
social and historical background, using dance as an illuminating window
on American history and culture. ADF’s companion performance program,
Dancing in the Light, aired on PBS Great Performances on June
20, 2007. The one-hour program is comprised of six dances: Asadata Dafora’s
Ostrich Dance, an excerpt of Katherine Dunham’s Barrelhouse Blues,
Pearl Primus’ Strange Fruit, Talley Beatty’s Mourners Bench,
Donald McKayle’s Rainbow ‘Round My Shoulder and the first
section of Bill T. Jones’s D-Man in the Waters – Section
1. The dances are introduced by actor/choreographer Taye Diggs.
ADF has issued a series of humanities publications, including Philosophical
Essays on Dance (1981), The Aesthetic and Cultural Significance of Modern
Dance (1984), The Black Tradition in American Modern Dance (1988), its
sequel, African American Genius In Modern Dance (1993), Dancing Across
Cultures (1995), Reflections on the Home of an Art Form (1998), and
Modern Dance, Jazz Music and American Culture (2000). In 2008, the ADF will publish a book by philosopher-in-residence, Dr. Gerald Myers, titled Who’s Not Afraid of Martha Graham?
ADF's Ongoing Mission
Today, the ADF remains committed to serving the needs of dance, dancers,
choreographers and professionals in dance-related fields. As the needs
of the field have changed and grown over the years, the Festival's programs
have been expanded and altered to help accommodate them. Remaining true
to the goals of its founding artists, ADF's programs are developed based
on its mission to:
- encourage and support the creation of new modern dance work by
both established and emerging choreographers
- preserve our modern dance heritage through continued presentation
of classic works, as well as through archival efforts
- build wider national and international audiences for modern dance
- enhance public understanding and appreciation of the art form and
its cultural and historical significance
- provide a sound scientific/aesthetic base for professional education
and training of young dancers and a forum for integrating and disseminating
information on dance education.