Dance Experimental: Kind. She Was Something Quite Different From Anyone or Anything Else
Dance Experimental: Kind. She Was Something Quite Different From Anyone or Anything Else
Dance Experimental: Kind. She Was Something Quite Different From Anyone or Anything Else
People called her a great artist—a Greek goddess— but she was nothing of the
kind. She was something quite different from anyone or anything else.
Gordon Craig
Isadora’s father deserted the family early on. and her mother struggled to
support the four children, two sons and two daughters, by teaching music. Of the
four, Isadora was the one who gained most from the combination of a Scottish
father and Irish mother; she had beauty of face and form, inherent musicality, a
generous heart, and all the compelling charm of the Irish that makes others follow
wherever they lead. As a child she had no hesitation in teaching her younger
playmates to dance, regardless of the fact that she knew next to nothing about it
herself. Later on it was only natural that the whole family would be swept off to
Chicago, New York, and Europe in pursuit of Isadora’s compulsion to dance in her
own way. She believed that Hellenic Greece held the key to that secret of
movement she desired, so, as soon as her initial impact on Europe had brought in a
small nest egg of money, the Duncan family continued via Venice, and thence,
following ecstatically but in considerable discomfort the route of Ulysses, to
Athens. It was 1903. Isadora had reached the age of twentyfive without
encountering love. She did not need it—her vitality and emotions were
entirely absorbed in her quest.
Their first Athenian dawn found all five Duncans ascending the Acropolis
and beholding with mystical reverence the overwhelming and lofty perfection of
the Parthenon. They had, in Isadora’s words, " gained that secret middle place from
which radiates in vast circles all knowledge and beauty.” Now her task was to
capture that beauty.
For the last jour months each day I have stood before this miracle of perfection
wrought of human hands . . . and I did not dare move, for I realized that of all the
movements my body had made none was worthy to be made before a Doric
Temple. And as I stood thus I realized that I must find a dance whose effect was to
be worthy of this Temple— or never dance again. . . . For many days no movement
came to me. Ami then one day came the thought: These columns which seem so
straight and still are not really straight, each one is curving gently from the base to
the height, each one is in flowing movement, never resting, and the movement of
each is in harmony with the others. And as I thought this my emus rose slowly
towards the Temple and I leaned forward— and then I knew I had found my dame,
and it was a Prayer.
Out of such immature ecstasy Isadora created her dance; it cannot be repeated
or imitated or taught, for, of all her pupils, only those she kept with her and
inspired herself learned anything—and then, human as she was above all else,
when they grew up to be successful on their own account and show some
independence, she was not too pleased!
In their first euphoric days on the Acropolis the Duncan family, as of one mind,
had decided to honour the ancient Greeks by building an arts commune where they
would live the homespun life, with their heads in lofty thought and their feet in
sandals. They threw themselves into this extraordinary and hopeless project with
typical fervour, scouring the region until they came upon a hill at Kopanos,
declared by Isadora’s brother Raymond, as he cast his staff to the ground, to be the
chosen site. Raymond drew' up ambitious plans to include a house, a small temple,
a Greek theatre, a library, and various outbuildings; sheep were to graze on the
slopes. Isadora bought the hill at considerable expense and likewise the special
stone, transported by donkey, to construct substantial walls for the house, which
was modelled on Agamemnon’s ancient palace at Mycenae—nothing less.
It gradually became clear that the Duncans' dream of reliving the artistic
glories of ancient Greece could not materialize. Isadora’s savings began to run low
and the modern Athenians showed no enthusiasm for being swept back to their
golden past by a family of eccentric Americans—the big hit of her performances
was her Viennese waltz. Discouraged, she went alone at midnight to dance in the
ruins of the Dionysus
Theatre and then, ever restless—but secretly relieved?—she headed for Paris,
Vienna, Budapest, Berlin, and Russia. She found romance, riches, fame, and
tragedy.
In her muddleheaded, instinctive Irish way she tried to do the impossible and a
lot of the time she succeeded. I don’t believe she fully understood what she was, or
the true quality of her affinity with Greece. She was the mythological Mother
Nature, the eternal woman. Her motivation, fixation, obsession was for children;
through every crisis she clung to her dream of a school where a thousand children
would live in joy and health in dance, and teach thousands more in everincreasing
numbers. She was not so much a liberated woman, in the rather narrow modern
sense, as an allembracing eternal earth mother. She was pure mother, not
housewife. No one ever heard of Mother Nature having a husband, and no more
could Isadora. In the end she married her wild Russian poet, Essenin, but not out of
a sudden conversion to respectability; it was only because she saw in his curly
golden head an image of her dead son as he would have grown up, and she could
refuse him nothing, least of all the possibility of a passport to leave Russia with
her.
The bizarrely simple and avoidable accident that had drowned her two children,
trapped in a car as it slipped into the Seme during a violent storm, was a
catastrophic tragedy. It tore her soul, left her not a second without pain and sorrow,
and destroyed her life. Neither dance, nor champagne, nor lovers gave her peace
ever more, until one day a long scarf, thrown unthinkingly around her neck, caught
in the wheel of her car—driven by a young man she had instinctively recognized as
a messenger of the gods—and took her swiftly to that place where her innocent
children awaited her.
The measure of our inability to recognize basic truths of nature when we see
them is that almost everything about Isadora’s turbulent life that seemed natural
and logical to her was sensational or scandalous to the civilized world.
Had Isadora as a young girl been able to see Anna Pavlova in her prime she
would have understood that the technique of a highly trained ballet dancer is no
more than absolute control of movement, the means by which the soul can be
released and the spirit shine forth. But Isadora was a year or two older, and by the
time she did see Pavlova she was so engrossed in earning the torch of natural dance
that she could not equate hersell in any way with ballet. Yet I think it undeniable
that in her free use of arm movements, Isadora influenced the ballet quite strongly.
Oddly enough I cannot really see that she was the "Mother of Modern Dance,” as
she is often called, except that by taking dance back to the beginning she made it
easier for others to start out again in new directions. To have some understanding
of how and why she was able, with little more than emotion and personality, to
make such a deep impression on artists and intellectuals, one must look at the state
of dance during the last twenty years of the nineteenth century—which roughly
coincided with the first twenty of Isadora’s life.