Write An Essay On Jose Limón's Dancing

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José Limón left more to the dance community than a collection of marvelous dances and the memory of his own powerful performance. He developed a technique, a specific style of dancing, that could be passed on to future generations of dancers and choreographers. Throughout his career, José touched hundreds of audiences with dances that expressed a profound understanding and respect for the joy and pain of the human experience. In his own words, he sought “demons, saints, martyrs, apostates, foods and other impassioned visions” to shape his choreography. To him, dance was more than a series of well-executed and ingeniously shaped movements; it was the inevitable expression of the human spirit. Limón’s dancers were taught to transcend their rigorous technical training in order to find their own dramatic and emotional motivations for …show more content…

Men in particular responded to José’s dancing because they saw in it freedom, a male passion and strength, that ventured because the partnering role that was found in ballet and had a depth that was conspicuously absent from most Broadway show dancing. Limón’s choreography sought a complete range of expression for both the male and the female body - from strength and sheer physicality to tenderness and gentleness. When José Limón began to choreograph his own pieces, he brought to his work all the abandon of a twenty-year old trying to find out what his body could and could not do. It was a raw style that came quite simply out of the process of his own discovery of dance, before he learned the technical “craft” of dancing; that is, before he learned how to point his feet or straighten his legs in the air. He threw himself into everything he did, without worrying about his balance, shape, or what dancing was supposed to look like - and audiences were enchanted

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