Georgetown University home page Search: Full text search Site Index: Find a web site by name or keyword Site Map: Overview of main pages Directory: Find a person; contact us About this site: Copyright, disclaimer, policies, terms of use Georgetown University home page Home page for prospective students Home page for current students Home page for alumni and alumnae Home page for family and friends Home page for faculty and staff Georgetown University Search: Full text search Site Index: Find a web site by name or keyword Site Map: Overview of main pages Directory: Find a person; contact us About this site: Copyright, disclaimer, policies, terms of use
Navigation bar Navigation bar
spacer spacer spacer spacer
border
spacer spacer spacer
border
spacer spacer

ARTM-038 Music and Dance in America 1932-1962

ARTM-038 Music and Dance in America 1932-1962
Fall only
Faculty:
  • Stilwell, Robynn
  • This course covers one of the most vital periods of music and dance in America. Ballet, modern dance, theatrical dance, dance in the movies, and social dance were all undergoing great changes as well as burgeoning popularity; and there was significant overlap between types that are today considered quite distinct. Ballet pioneer George Balanchine and modern dance choreographer Agnes de Mille not only innovated within "serious" theatrical dance but also made dances for Broadway and the movies; Fred Astaire brought social dance to a highly polished theatrical level with both his sister Adele and Ginger Rogers; football and hockey player Gene Kelly turned down a position with the Ballets Russes and went on to revolutionize dance on film; tap dance was, like rock and roll, an product of American racial interaction. This was also a period in which social dancing was a major shaping force of popular culture, from the swing of the 1930s through the jive of the 1940s and a string of Latin dance crazes, culminating in perhaps the greatest dance revolution of the century, the Twist. Other key figures include Martha Graham, Bill Robinson, Shirley Temple, Sonja Henie, the Nicholas Brothers, Eleanor Powell, and composers Aaron Copland, Richard Rodgers, and Elliott Carter.
    Fulfills the Humanities and Writing II requirement
    Credits: 3
    Prerequisites: None
    Other academic years
    There is information about this course number in other academic years:
    More information
    Look for this course in the schedule of classes.

    The academic department web site for this program may provide other details about this course.
    spacer spacer
    Navigation bar Navigation bar