Margaret Morris (dancer)
Margaret Morris | |
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Morris in the 1920s, photographed by Fred Daniels | |
Born |
1891 Kensington |
Died |
29 February 1980 (aged 89) Glasgow, Scotland |
Occupation | Choreographer and dancer |
Spouse(s) | John Duncan Fergusson |
Margaret Morris (1891 in Kensington, London, England – 29 February 1980 in Glasgow, Scotland) was a British dancer, choreographer and teacher. She was the first proponent of the Isadora Duncan technique in Great Britain. She founded the Margaret Morris Movement, Celtic Ballet, and two Scottish National Ballets in Glasgow (1947) and in Pitlochry (1960).[1]
Early life
Although Morris was born in London, she lived with her parents until the age of five in France.[2] She had no formal academic education, but went to dancing classes. In 1894 she began reciting professionally in French and later in English, at parties, smoking concerts and court drawing rooms. In 1899 she had her first stage engagement in pantomime - Little Red Riding Hood at the Theatre Royal, Plymouth, playing First Fairy 'Twinkle Star' with solo dances and recitations before a front drop.
In 1900 she joined the Ben Greet Shakespearian Company and played 'Puck' in A Midsummer Night's Dream in the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. She remained with the company for three years, acting and dancing. In 1903 she played child parts in Drury Lane melodramas and in The Water Babies at The Garrick Theatre. Between tours she studied dancing with John D'Auban, ballet master at Drury Lane. She began to compose dances of her own and at the age of twelve reacted against the limitation of the Italian classical ballet technique. She began creating more natural exercises but realised also that a basic training was necessary. In 1907 she joined the Benson Shakespearian Company as 'Ingenue Principal Dancer' and understudy to Lady Benson.
In 1909 Morris met Raymond Duncan, the brother of Isadora Duncan, who taught her the six Classical Greek dance positions. She adapted and used these as the basis of her own system of movement. In 1910 she choreographed the dances for Gluck's Orpheus and Eurydice which was staged by Marie Brema at the Savoy Theatre in London. She trained the dancers in her new technique for a month before rehearsals. She also designed the costumes and decor. The Daily Express said "The triumph of the production is Miss Morris's Dance of the Furies, nothing like it has ever been seen on the London stage". That year she also played Water in The Blue Bird by Maeterlinck at the Haymarket Theatre. She also produced the dances for Sir Herbert Tree's production of Henry VIII.
Margaret Morris Movement
In 1913, Morris met John Galsworthy who encouraged her to open her own school in St. Martin's Lane, London. That same year she toured with her own company, first called "Margaret Morris and her Dancing Children". In 1911 she was the choreographer and principal dancer for The Little Dream, a fantasy by John Galsworthy, at Annie Horniman's Gaiety Theatre, Manchester. She also created the dancing scenery for Rutland Boughton's Opera The Birth of Arthur at the Winter Gardens, Bournemouth.
In 1912 she created the part of Guinevere Megan in The Pigeon by John Galsworthy at the Royal Theatre, acting with Gladys Cooper and Dennis Eadie. That same year she had a season at The Royal Court Theatre, London where she performed such ballets as Callisto by Maurice Hewlett and The Little Dreams by John Galsworthy. She started the first small theatre in London - Kings Road, Chelsea - giving Christmas Seasons for Children performed by children, including Angela and Hermione Baddeley and Phyllis Calvert. She won acclaim from the press as the first woman 'actor, manager' and the youngest, as she was only 21. In 1913 she took a troupe to Paris to dance at the Théâtre Marigny on the Champs Elysees. In 1915, she produced at her theatre an interpretation of Beethoven's 7th Symphony, costumes designed by J D Fergusson and subsequently performed with full orchestra at Bournemouth Winter Gardens and at Harrogate.
In 1917 Morris started the first Summer School at Devon which has since been held annually to the present date except for the war years. In 1922 she started the first 'Educational School' in England to combine normal educational subjects with educational training in dancing and acting. John Duncan Fergusson became the art director of all her schools. Painting and design became an integral part of the students curriculum which already included acting, dance composition and improvisation, normal educational subjects and her system of Dance Notation.
I first realised the absolute necessity of relating movement with form and colour when studying painting of the modern movement in Paris in 1913. From that time I incorporated it as one of the main studies in my school. In this connection I am deeply indebted to J D Ferguson, the painter, who for years has taught the painting design and sculpture in my school and who first made me realise the possibilities of theatrical work considered from the visual point of view, and the value of the study of form and colour as a means of education.[3]
The syllabus followed at her schools (as of 1925):
- The Margaret Morris method of physical culture and dancing
- Dance composition
- Theory of movement: Breathing
- Theory of practice of teaching
- Paining, design and sculpture
- Notation of movement
- Property and mask making
- Dressmaking
- Music training
- Class singing
- Musical composition
- Literature; study of words; writing of plays and poems; essays
- Diction and acting
- Lecturing and discussion
- Stage management, including lighting
- Production of play and ballets
- General organisation and business management
- Swimming
- Ballroom dancing
The Margaret Morris Movement was chosen to represent Britain at the 1931 Dance Festival in Florence, Italy.
Dancing as exercise
In 1922 Morris began an interest in the remedial aspects of movement. In 1925 she gave her first lecture demonstration to doctors in London on the remedial possibilities of her exercises. She took a course at St Thomas' Hospital in Physiotherapy which she passed with distinction in 1930. She had great value in the value of her system for the handicapped, believing that "the more normal you make people feel the normal they would become". She extended her exercises into sports training, writing a book with the tennis star Suzanne Lenglen, and tried to have her methods accepted in schools by the education authorities. Although she achieved only limited acceptance in this area, her influence was immense on the modern practice of physical education, on remedial work, and in choreographic innovation. In 1937, she became a founder member of National Advisory Council of Physical Training and Recreation.
Ballet
In 1940 she formed the Celtic Ballet Club and produced several big ballets for war charities. In 1947 she formed a small professional company - Celtic Ballet of Scotland - and toured in Glasgow and France. The Celtic Ballet utilised both Margaret's own technique and Scottish country and Highland dance movements.[4] In 1951, the Celtic Ballet had a season at the Theatre Royal, Glasgow. In 1954, the Celtic Ballet toured the United States and performed at Ted Shawn's Jacob's Pillow dance festival. Between 1958 and 1959 the Celtic Ballet performed at festivals in Russia, Austria and Czechoslovakia. In 1960 she formed the Scottish National ballet and appeared at the festival Theatre, Pitlochry.
Art work
As a daughter to an artist, Morris began to paint from an early age. The Third Eye Centre recognized her work in both dance and art with the exhibition catalog Margaret Morris: Drawings and Designs and the Glasgow Years.[5] In 1984 an exhibition of her work was held in Glasgow at the Cyril Gerber Fine Art Gallery.[5] The exhibition Color, Rhythm and Dance was shown in Scotland and in France in 1985.[5] In 1991, a centenary exhibition of her drawings and paintings was held at the Cyril Gerber Gallery.[5] The Fergusson Gallery features artefacts from all aspects of her career, including original costumes, costume designs, drawings from her childhood and adult career, paintings and sketchbooks.[6]
Personal life
Morris's personal life was colourful; she was bohemian in spirit.[7] She had an affair with the writer John Galsworthy as a young woman, and her long-term partnership with the Scottish artist John Duncan Fergusson did not rule out other liaisons.[7] She met Fergusson in Paris in 1913 and he later became her husband and was an important influence on her work. He introduced her to the Paris art world and with her in 1915 founded the Margarent Morris Club in Chelsea, which quickly became the focus for the remnants of the pre-war avant garde in London.[8] Members included Augustus John, Jacob Epstein, Katherine Mansfield, Ezra Pound, Siegfried Sassoon, Wyndham Lewis and Charles Rennie Mackintosh among others. This group, after the war, were involved in organising a Labour Party connected collective known as the 'Arts League of Service' which aimed to bring the arts into everyday life.
Later years and legacy
In 1961, after the death of her husband, the Glasgow School was closed. In 1972, at the age of 81, Morris was asked to train the dancers in the hit musical Hair at the Metropole Theatre, Glasgow. In 1973 the 'Margaret Morris Movement' film was made by the Scottish Arts Council. Margaret Morris died in Glasgow on 29 February 1980, aged 89.
Morris made a unique contribution to the development and teaching of dance in England and abroad. Her original interest in creating her own exercise and dance movement was based on her desire to devise a technique that was more natural to perform than ballet. Over those early years the breadth of movement she created encompassed a diverse scope of exercise, dance and movement training with an extensive range of elements and levels designed to include all ages and abilities.[9]
From those pioneering roots, she became aware of the need for health education and the value of providing clear explanation to gain the most benefit from each exercise. She found that the body quickly responded to this precise systematic training and provide the students with strong lean toned bodies, increased thoracic capacity, bone density, mobility and heart rate. At the same time students’ posture, balance, concentration level and co-ordination improved. Free movement expression and composition were integrated throughout the technique providing the basis for choreography as well as many psychological benefits.[9]
Choreographed works
- The Forsaken Mermaid, music by Erik Chisholm (1940)
- The subject of this ballet is the old fairy-tale about a fisherman who falls in love with a mermaid, deserts her and is finally reunited to her at the bottom of the sea. It is the tale of Rimsky-Korsakov's fantasy work Sadko.[10]
- The Earth Shapers, music by Erik Chisholm (1941)
- The Hoodie Craw, music by Erik Chisholm (1948)
Writings
- Margaret Morris dancing (1925)
- The Notation of Movement (1928)
- Breathing Exercises (1935)
- Maternity and Post-Operative Exercises (1936)
- My Galsworthy Story (1967)
- My Life in Movement (1969) ISBN 0-7206-5208-1
- Creation in Dance and Life (1972)
- The Art of J D Fergusson (1974)
Films
- Dance of the Moods (1924) filmed by Claude Friese-Greene in early colour film process Bioscope
- Margaret Morris Movement (1973) film by Scottish Arts Council
Notes
- ↑ "Margaret Morris". National Portrait Gallery. Retrieved 14 March 2008.
- ↑ Group, Taylor & Francis; Hartley, Cathy; Leckey, Susan (2003). A Historical Dictionary of British Women. London: Europa Publications. ISBN 978-1-85743-228-2.
- ↑ Morris, Margaret (1925). "Margaret Morris dancing". Retrieved 15 March 2008.
- ↑ Carter, Alexandra (2004) Rethinking Dance History: A Reader
- 1 2 3 4 ed. Strang, Alice (2015). Modern Scottish Women - Painter and Sculptors 1885-1965. Edinburgh: National Galleries of Scotland. pp. 84–85.
- ↑ Kingdom, Pullar House, 35 Kinnoull Street, Perth, PH1 5GD, United. "Margaret Morris collection". www.pkc.gov.uk. Retrieved 2016-03-08.
- 1 2 Hirsch, Pam: Margaret Morris, a Life in Movement
- ↑ Getsy, David (2004) Sculpture and the Pursuit of a Modern Ideal in Britain, C. 1880-1930
- 1 2 History of Margaret Morris Technique
- ↑ L, E. (July 1943). "The Forsaken Mermaid. Ballet in 5 Scenes for 2 Pianos by Erik Chisholm". Music & Letters 24 (3): 185. JSTOR 727480.
Bibliography
- Simpson, Betty; Whitfield, Francis (1936). Notes on the Theory of Teaching Margaret Morris Movement.
External links
- Margaret Morris Movement: Historical Notes
- Ballets of Erik Chisholm
- Pathé film: Margaret Morris teaching in 1938
- The Fergusson Gallery: Margaret Morris collection
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