Friday 20 January 2012

Modern Dance's Principal Dancers - Loie Fuller

Born in Chicago in 1862, Loie Fuller began her stage career as a child actress. During her twenties, she performed as a skirt dancer on the burlesque circuit. In 1891 she went on tour with a melodrama called "Quack MD," playing a character who performed a skirt dance while under hypnosis. Fuller began experimenting with the effect the gas lighting had on her silk skirt and received special notice in the press. Her next road tour, in a show called "Uncle Celestine," featured this new version of the skirt dance. By emphasizing the body was transformed by the artfully moving silk. One reviewer described the effect as "unique, ethereal, delicious...she emerges from darkness, her airy evolutions now tinted blue and purple and crimson, and again the audience...insists upon seeing her pretty piquant face before they can believe that the lovely apparition is really a woman." (1975)

  • Fuller was an inventor and stage craft innovator who held many patents for stage lighting, including the first chemical mixes for gels and slides and the first use of luminescent salts to create lighting effects. She was also an early innovator in lighting design, and was the first to mix colours and explore new angles. Fuller was well respected in the French scientific community, where she was a close personal friend of Marie Curie and a member of the French Astronomical Society.
  • Fuller had a school and a company beginning in 1908, where she taught natural movement and improvisational techniques. She did not, however, teach them her lighting and costuming "tricks."
  • Fuller was the first ex patriot American dancer, and introduced Isadora Duncan to Parisian audiences.



Accessed - 20/01/12
Chapter 2 - The solo dancers; Loie Fuller

1 comment:

  1. Loie Fuller was born in Chicago in 1862 and died in 1928. She was originally an actress and no body had ever seen this type of dancing before so they thought it was spectacular but very bizarre. She rebelled against the rules by taking her shoes off when dancing; so she danced bare feet. She thought it was essential to the Modern Dance so the dancer could feel the bare soul touching the earth for alignment.

    Loie wore a floaty white dress, that when stood on a gas light underneath her, it changed colour.

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