Sharon Skeel’s biography of Catherine Littlefield underlines the fragility and ephemeral nature of dance careers, schools and companies. During the course of her short life, Littlefield, building on work begun by her mother, became Philadelphia’s foremost ballerina, teacher and choreographer. She headed up her own ballet company, the Philadelphia Ballet, which toured widely in North America and even to Paris, Brussels and London, and her school provided several dancers for Balanchine’s inaugural class at School of American Ballet. Since she died aged 46 in 1951, her contribution to the development of ballet in the United States has largely faded from memory. (more…)
September 2020
Monthly Archive
September 2, 2020
Catherine Littlefield: a Life in Dance, by Sharon Skeel – Maggie Watson reviews
Posted by susiecrow under Dance and Academia, reviews | Tags: American ballet history, C. Ellwood Carpenter, Catherine Littlefield, Catherine Littlefield: a Life in Dance, George Balanchine, Littlefield School, Lubov Egorova, Luigi Albertieri, Maggie Watson, Oxford University Press, Philadelphia Ballet, Philadelphia Operatic Society, Sharon Skeel, Zelda Fitzgerald |[4] Comments