2. AFRICAN AMERICANS
Originated from the African
American vernacular
dances of the late 1800s to
mid 1900s
Modern jazz dance
appeared on the scene
which was rooted in
Caribbean traditional
dance and had a very
different style
Until the 1950s, the term
jazz dancing was often
used to refer to tap
dancing.
Cakewalk, Charleston,
Black Bottom, Jitterbug,
Boogie Woogie and Swing
3. JACK COLE
PIONEER OF JAZZ DANCE
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Cole was one of the first jazz
choreographers.
He evolved jazz “theatre
dance” with choreography and
director credits in productions
or movies such as Some Like it
Hot, Man of La Mancha,
There’s No Business Like
Show Business, Gilda, Kismet
and The Merry Widow
4. JACK COLE
PIONEER OF JAZZ DANCE
He merged the modern dance
motivation for movement with
popular jazz dance steps to
make a more technical and
artistic jazz dance. He also took
from his modern dance training,
the idea of being "low to the
ground". He incorporated a very
low plie into much of the
movement he developed. This
redefined his style, which turned
into a bonafide technique. This
gave jazz movement a sense of
power and gravity. Jack was also
extremely interested in the
aspect of isolation and
syncopation, all which are a huge
part of jazz today.
5. COUNT BASSIE
THE SWING JAZZ KING
CLICK ON ANY IMAGE
TO SEE AND HEAR
VARIOUS JAZZ ICONS
AND LEGENDS
6. JAZZ
Now that you have heard the music,
what do the dances look like?
How did this music inspire a movement
of Broadway shows?
Who is Fosse? How did he inspire a
new fresh modern Dance Theatre?
7. JAZZ
Let's start with the dances:
− The Charleston
The Charleston dance became popular after
appearing along with the song, "The
Charleston," by James P. Johnson in the
Broadway musical Runnin' Wild in 1923.
Although the origins of the dance are obscure,
the dance has been traced back to blacks who
lived on an island off the coast of Charleston,
South Carolina (which is why the dance is
called "Charleston"). The Charleston dance had
been performed in black communities since
1903, but did not become internationally
popular until the musical debuted in 1923.
8. THE CHARLESTON
The music for the Charleston is
ragtime jazz, in quick 4/4 time with
syncopated rhythms.
The dance uses both swaying arms
and the fast movement of the feet. To
begin the dance, one first moves the
right foot back one step and then
kicks backwards with the left foot
while the right arm moves forward.
Then both feet and arms are
replaced to the start position and the
right foot kicks forwards while the
right arm moves backwards. This is
done with a little hop in between
steps. *CLICK THE PICTURE
9. THE BLACK BOTTOM
The Black Bottom (aka Swanee Bottom) was originally from New
Orleans, later worked its way to Georgia and finally New York.
The Black bottom was basically a solo challenge dance.
Predominately danced on the "Off Beat" and was the prototype
for the modern Tap dance phrasing. The Dance featured the
slapping of the backside while hopping forward and backward,
stamping the feet and gyrations of the torso and pelvis/Hips like
the Grind, while occasionally making arm movements to music
with an occasional 'Heel-Toe Scoop' which was very erotic in
those days. The dance eventually got refined and entered the
ballroom with ballroom couples doing the dance.
The dance is said to be a copy of a bossy cow's hind legs mirred
in mud (12-14-1926 - Danville Bee Newspaper) other
newspapers state that Mrs. Esther Gagnet from Texas states that
the dance came from Sumaria (2/18/1927 Lancaster Daily Eagle
Newspaper) and other newspapers say it is of the Mississippi
Negroe trying to dance in the sticky mud (2/12/1927 - Davenport
Democrat and Leader).
10. THE CAKE WALK
The Cakewalk had its origins in slavery. Peering through the windows
at the spectacles hosted by white planters, enslaved blacks would
then prance and preen in imitation of whites at their own dances,
using exaggerated movements, curtsys and bows to and adopting
“high-toned” clothing to mock. In performance, couples would line up
to form an aisle, down which each pair would take a turn at a high-
stepping promenade through the others. The irony was extended
when white planters began to host and judge Cakewalk competitions,
awarding a cake of some kind to the winning couple.
The meaning of the dance was lost on white minstrel performers,
who added the exaggerated, over-the-top dance to their repertoire to
portray the bumbling attempts of poor blacks to mimic the manners
of whites. No longer was the Cakewalk a dance of satire; minstrels
and their audience genuinely thought it signified blacks wanting to be
like whites. By the turn of the century, the Cakewalk was used by
both black and white minstrel performers far from its original
intentions, and when the musical comedy gained prominence in
theatre, the Cakewalk was transferred from the circuit theatre to
Broadway.
11. MODERN JAZZ
CHOREOGRAPHERS
Katherine Dunham
In 1937, Katherine Dunham, a
former student of ballet and
modern dance, formed the Negro
Dance Group after returning from
academic study in the Caribbean.
The group incorporated African
and Caribbean dance movements
with more traditional dance forms.
Dunham's fusion of modern, ballet
and ethnic dance is an important
component of modern jazz dance.
Jerome Robbins
In the 1950s and 60s, New York
City Ballet associate artistic
director, Jerome Robbins was a
hugely influential and successful
theatrical jazz dance
choreographer as well as a ballet
choreographer. Dance historians
credit Robbins with the refinement
of the jazz gesture--and the
melding of ballet and jazz for a
more lyrical and dramatic form of
jazz dance. In addition to his
ballets for NYCB, Robbins
choreographed Broadway
musicals like "West Side Story,"
"The King and I" and "Fiddler on
the Roof."
12. MODERN JAZZ
CHOREOGRAPHERS
Bob Fosse
Influenced heavily by choreographers Jack Cole and Jerome Robbins,
Bob Fosse expanded on the use of the isolation and gesture--
sometimes moving only a finger or a hip as part of his choreography.
Fosse's physical limitations--turned in knees and hunched shoulders--
became part of his dance vocabulary. Bowler hats, canes and chairs
became standard props in jazz dance thanks to Fosse. Fosse's original
production of the musical "Chicago" opened in 1975. A new production,
with his choreography, opened in 1996 and, as of 2010, is still running.