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Correspondence, writings, music, publicity and production materials, programs, teaching materials, business papers, scrapbooks, news clippings, publications, costume and set designs, photographs, drawings, and sound recordings documenting the workings of the Lester Horton Dance Theater and the personal and professional life of choreographer, dancer, and teacher Lester Horton.
Individuals represented include Alvin Ailey, William Bowne, Merce Cunningham, Carmen De Lavallade, Frank Eng, Lelia Goldoni, Judith Hamilton, Michio Itō, Bella Lewitzky, Margaret Lloyd, Don Martin, Joyce Trisler, James Truitte, and Larry Warren.
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Subjects
Stage-setting and scenery, Costume design, Choreography, Modern dance, Dance companies, Dance, Photographs, Music, Archives, Dance teachers, Correspondence, Dance schools, Choreographers, Dancers, Study and teaching, Lester Horton Dance Theater, Production and direction, ManuscriptsPeople
William Bowne, Alvin Ailey, Merce Cunningham, James Truitte, Lelia Goldoni, Judith Hamilton composer, Frank Eng, Juan Carlos Paz (1897-1972), Michio Itō (1893-1961), Carmen De Lavallade (1931-), Joyce Trisler (1934-1979), Lester Horton (1906-1953), Don Martin (1931-), Bella Lewitzky, Margaret Lloyd, Larry WarrenPlaces
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Book Details
Edition Notes
Open to research.
Lester Horton Dance Theater Collection, Music Division, Library of Congress.
Certain restrictions to use or copying of materials may apply.
Access Advisory: Not all materials in this collection may be readily accessible; please request accessibility information well in advance of your visit http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.music/perform.contact
Purchase; 1995.
Acquisition; Larry Warren; 1996.
transferred to Library of Congress Motion Picture, Broadcasting and Recorded Sound Division.
Lester Horton and several partners founded the Dance Theater, a modern dance company, in Hollywood, Calif., in 1946. Throughout Horton's career, he combined dance and drama into a total theatrical experience. He was intimately involved in creating all aspects of a production: the costumes, sets, lighting, and music as well as the scenarios and choreography. His fascination with ethnic dance, human sensuality, and cultural history was expressed in a prodigious body of work with themes ranging from the classics to melodrama, social concerns to farce. Horton's "choreodramas" were built on a movement technique that is still taught and used in dance schools and companies. The Dance Theater closed its doors in 1960.
Finding aid available in the Library of Congress Performing Arts Reading Room and at http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.music/eadmus.mu005003
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