“These words were written in 1976, but their message and call to arms is just as necessary and urgent today.This note refers to the television show “I Love Lucy.” “On December 12, 1952, ‘Lucy is Enceint’(French for pregnant, which the CBS censor would not allow) aired.” Karin Adir, The Great Clowns of American Television (London: McFarland, 1988),14. See also TV ACRES Website: “Censorship and Scandals – Lucy’s Pregnancy,” http://tvacres.com/censorship_lucy.htm.
This note refers to the television show, “A Baby Story.” See Pie Town Television Productions, “A Baby Story – Show Info,” http://www.pietown.tv/shows/babystory.html.
George Balanchine, quoted in Allegra Kent, Once a Dancer, (New York: St. Martin’s Griffin, 1997), 187.
Stanton Welch (director of Houston Ballet Company), quoted in Erika Kinetz, “Belly Dancing,” New York Times, Arts and Leisure section, April 10, 2005.
“Among mothers ages 15 to 44 who do not have infants, 74% are in the labor force.” U.S. Census Bureau, “Women by the Numbers,” http://www.factmonster.com/spot/womencensus1.html.
Adrienne Rich, Of Woman Born: Motherhood as Experience and Institution (New York: W.W. Norton, 1976), 44.
Ibid.,46.
“While still in Russia, Nijinska had also separated from her husband and was raising two children and supporting an aged mother on her own while running her school.” Sally Banes, Dancing Women: Female Bodies on Stage (London: Routledge, 1998), 120.
“It seemed as if Isadora had at last found everything she needed in life: a great career on the stage, funds at last to establish and keep going the school of her dreams, two adorable and beautiful children, recognition in the country of her birth and in the great capitals of Europe and a lover who would give her anything she asked for.” Walter Terry, Isadora Duncan: Her Life, Her Art, Her Legacy (New York: Dodd, Mead & Company, 1963), 48.
“Humphrey’s own life as a wife and working mother were unconventional for her time. Devoted to her art and her career, Humphrey refused serious relationships with men until at the age of 36 she married Charles Woodford, a seaman who was away on duty most of the time. Pregnant at 38, Humphrey worked the entire term, and she even induced labor early, so as not to miss a concert date. She was never inclined toward domesticity, and often her colleagues and even her colleagues’ relatives helped care for her child, sometimes taking him on trips while Humphrey worked.” Banes, Dancing Women, 145. See also Doris Humphrey, Doris Humphrey: An Artist First (Middletown, CT: Wesleyan University Press, 1972) , 122-153 and Marcia B. Seigel, Days on Earth: The Dance of Doris Humphrey (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1987), 130-205.
“In a way, Jesse (her son) conducted rehearsals as we all took turns changing diapers and feeding the baby.” Twyla Tharp, Push Comes to Shove (New York: Bantam Books, 1992), 158.
Molly Glenzer, “Baby Boom: Motherhood Gets an Ovation,” Dance Magazine, April 2004, 35.
“’The Look’ as dancers refer to this idealization of the thinnest of the thin, is, most critics and dancers concur, a concession to taste, taste that has largely been formed by one man. That man is George Balanchine – America’s chief arbiter of ballet style and aesthetics.” Suzanne Gordon, “Ballet in America: The Art and The Anguish,” GEO, January 1981, 46.
Ann Daly, “The Balanchine Woman: Of Hummingbirds and Channel Swimmers,” from chapter 3, “Theorizing Gender” in Critical Gestures: Writings in Dance and Culture (Middletown, CT: Wesleyan University Press, 2002), 286.
Ibid., 83.
Ashley, Dancing for Balanchine, 62.
Patricia Neary, quoted in Glenzer, “Baby Boom,” 35.
Ashley, Dancing for Balanchine, 121.
Hayden, in discussion with the author.
“And so the choice is to stand up for ourselves, our security, out financial security, or to give second place to such values and act on respect, devotion, love and deep belief in one man. Balanchine is more important and valuable than we are individually. If personal security is our primary aim, dancing is not the career for us.” Bentley, Winter Season, 88.
“City Ballet offers 21sick days, followed by a brief disability leave and up to three months of unpaid leave.” Kinetz, “Belly Dancing.”
Collective Bargaining Agreement between Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater and American Guild of Musical Artists: June 1,2002 through May 31, 2005, http://www.musicalartists.org/HomePage.htm, 35.
Ibid., 42,43.
O’Reilly, From Motherhood to Mothering, 11.
Dunning, Alvin Ailey, 244.
Ibid.
Judith Jamison, Dancing Spirit: An Autobiography (New York: Doubleday, 1993), 244.
Ibid.,172.
“Members of American Ballet Theater receive four weeks of sick leave, at full pay; when that’s used up, they are eligible for state disability pay for up to eight weeks and an additional $400 a week in disability from the company for up to a year.” Kinetz, “Belly Dancing.”
“Lucia Chase…is both the hub and foundation of American Ballet Theatre. For almost thirty years since its inception she not only took the most active part in its overall artistic direction, but was its major source of financial support, diminishing her own private fortune to keep the company alive.” Franklin Stevens, Dance as Life: A Season with American Ballet Theatre (New York: Harper and Row, 1976), 87.
Payne, American Ballet Theatre, 23.
Ibid., 48.
Frank Smith (former ABT soloist), in discussion with the author, October 2005.
Ibid.
Ibid.
Warren Conover (former ABT soloist), in discussion with the author, September, 2005.
Glentzer, “Baby Boom,” 38.
Kinetz, “Belly Dancing.”
Ariel Gore and Bee Lavender, eds., Breeder: Real Life Stories from the New Generation of Mothers (Seattle, WA: Seal Press), xiii.
Rich, Of Woman Born, 285-286.