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Dance
In Memoriam: Sophie Maslow (1911-2006)
by Deborah Jowitt
July 4th, 2006 12:00 AM
Sophie Maslow, who died last month at 95, opened my eyes to a number of important things when I was a young dancer, coming from a cloistered company to take classes at the New Dance Group. I knew almost nothing about her. She'd finished her 12 years with Martha Graham's company long before then, and the Dudley-Maslow-Bales trio she'd formed in the 1940s with Jane Dudley and William Bales was defunct.

I didn't know it was okay for modern dancers to be glamorous; Sophie taught wearing a fringed red jersey bolero over her black leotard and red lipstick to match. I didn't know rabbis ever danced, or that a piece of choreography could create a vision of community as tender as her The Village I Knew. I didn't recognize the taped voice singing at our rehearsals for a revival of her 1942 Folksay, but I immediately went out and bought a 10-inch LP of Pete Seeger.

Nor did I understand much about the craft of choreography until I danced in one of the suites she often composed for the annual Hanukkah Festivals at Madison Square Garden (among other things, we built a pipeline out of bamboo hoops while dancing). I also stood in for Sophie while she was making Anniversary for a BAM concert. She didn't come to the studio with everything planned; often, we sat around while she wrung the choreography out of herself. But I remember running home and describing to my roommates how amazingly, how powerfully she had turned the fact of dancers simply bouncing in a lunge, without traveling an inch, into the exodus of Jews from the Warszaw ghetto.

Born before World War I in New York to Russian-Jewish parents, coming of age during the Depression, Maslow grew up with a social conscience and a respect for the workers of the world. She translated that into dances that expressed both the gritty and the idealistic aspects of the human condition.

More by Deborah Jowitt
Rain Early, Skies Clear
A choreographer revisits her career with little help from her friends

The H. Purcell Show: King Arthur
'What danger from a naked foe?' Ask Mark Morris.

Paul Taylor Dance Company: The Dream Catcher
A great choreographer roams south of the border

Keely Garfield: Hiding in Plain Sight
Relationships viewed through a cracked glass

LeeSaar/The Company: Turf Wars
Sometimes she Tarzan, he Jane


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