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*[http://www.dance.utah.edu/people/faculty/Lee.html Prof. Mary Ann Lee, University of Utah, Virginia Tanner Creative Dance Institute]
*[http://www.dance.utah.edu/people/faculty/Lee.html Prof. Mary Ann Lee, University of Utah, Virginia Tanner Creative Dance Institute]
*[http://arts.utah.gov/services/educator_resources/artist_roster/artists/tina_misaka.html Tina Misaka, Utah Arts Council artists roster]
*[http://arts.utah.gov/services/educator_resources/artist_roster/artists/tina_misaka.html Tina Misaka, Utah Arts Council artists roster]
[http://library.uncg.edu/depts/archives/mss/html/Mss081.htm]

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{{DEFAULTSORT:Tanner, Virginia}}



Revision as of 18:52, 20 February 2008

Virginia Tanner (born April 25, 1915 in Salt Lake City, Utah) began her formal dance training at the University of Utah. She studied with Doris Humphrey in New York City before returning to Salt Lake City in the early 1940s to establish her school for creative dance for children.

Virginia Tanner[1]

Virginia Tanner began teaching children at the McCune School of Music and Art in Salt Lake City in 1941, where she was director of the dance program. She went on to establish her own school within the University of Utah’s continuing education program, which survives today under the direction of Mary Ann Lee and is part of the University of Utah Dance Department. In 1943, she formed the Modern Dance Theatre, a company that she co-directed with local dancer Barry Lynn. In 1949, she formed the Children’s Dance Theatre.

In 1953, the Children’s Dance Theatre performed at the Jacob's Pillow Dance Theatre in Massachusetts, the American Dance Festival in Connecticut, and New York University's summer camp in upstate New York to critical acclaim. Following the 1953 performances, the Children’s Dance Theatre performed throughout the United States, including the Seattle World’s Fair in 1962 and the John F. Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C., in 1975. Ms. Tanner and her students were featured in Life, Newsweek and Dance magazines and on national television.

In 1960, Miss Tanner was instrumental in gaining a grant from the Rockefeller Foundation to bring great choreographers to Salt Lake City to set work on dancers at the University of Utah. In 1966, through her efforts, a larger grant from the Foundation[2][3][4][5] was awarded to the University to establish the Utah Repertory Dance Theatre.

Miss Tanner taught extensively throughout the United States through the National Endowment for the Arts’ Artist-in-the-School program. She was a contributing author to the Self-Expression and Conduct – The Humanities book series, published by Harcourt Brace Jovanovich in the 1970s.

Miss Tanner is the recipient of numerous awards, including an honorary Doctorate of Fine Arts from the University of Utah and a Plaudit award for inspired teaching from the National Dance Association.

Creative Dance Program

The Virginia Tanner Creative Dance Program has been under the direction of Mary Ann Lee since Tanner's death in 1979. The University of Utah dance program was founded in 1940 by Elizabeth Roths Hayes. At the time of writing Elizabeth Hayes is 96 years old; and in April of 2007 Bill Evans restaged in her honor For Betty at the University's Department of Modern Dance alumni concert, a work that he had choreographed to music of Antonio Vivaldi in 1970 for Repertory Dance Theatre at her request to see something "joyful and exuberant."[6]

Repertory Dance Theatre

Utah Repertory Dance Theatre, founded in 1966, is still in existence and is the oldest and most successful modern dance company of its kind.

Alumni

Alumni of Repertory Dance Theatre include:

University of Utah Children's Dance Theatre

Children's Dance Theatre was founded by Virginia Tanner in 1949 in conjunction with and remains an integral component of the University of Utah's Creative Dance Program, of which she was also founder and director.

Major performances

Major performances of Children's Dance Theatre:

Significant dancers and choreographers

Some significant dancers and choreographers from Children's Dance Theatre:

  • Cynthia Pepper, has own company in the Bay Area
  • Jacque Bell; independent Salt Lake City-based choreographer, teaches at University of Utah and Brigham Young University
  • Linda Smith, artistic director of Utah Repertory Dance Theatre
  • Lola Huth, danced with Jose Limon company
  • Mimi Silverstein, former Repertory Dance Theatre member
  • Tina Misaka, former Repertory Dance Theatre member

University of Utah Virginia Tanner Creative Dance Fine Arts Preschool faculty

  • Misha Bergman, director
  • Mimi Silverstein
  • Rachel Kimball
  • Tad Simonson

References

External links

[1]