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Encyclopedia > Free dance

Free dance is a 20th century dance form that preceded Modern dance.


Rebelling against the rigid constraints of Classical ballet, Loie Fuller, Isadora Duncan and Ruth St. Denis developed their own styles of free dance and laid the foundations of American modern dance with their choreography and teaching. In Europe Rudolf Laban, Emile Jaques-Dalcroze and Francois Delsarte developed their own theories of human movement and methods of instruction that lead to the development of European modern and Expressionist dance.


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Context was important in her performances; the ballets often reflected a mixture of regional dancing, drumming, costuming, and speech, and she insisted that her dancers understand the social and religious underpinnings of each dance.
Her influence, and that of African and Afro-Caribbean dance, are traced in Free to Dance, and so is the influx of other influences fresh from Africa.
Free to Dance grew out of a series of projects by the American Dance Festival, which has been a force in American dance since its founding by Martha Graham, Hanya Holm, Doris Humphrey, and Charles Weidman in 1934.
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