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Finding Aid for Mary Wigman letters to Margaret Erlanger, 1932-1969.

Guide to the Wigman, Mary, 1886-Letters, 1932-69.

(S) *MGZMC-Res 13
Jerome Robbins Dance Division. New York Public Library.
40 Lincoln Center Plaza
New York, NY 10023-7498
(212) 870-1657
dance@nypl.org
http://nypl.org/research/lpa/dan/dan.html
Processed by:
A.M. Wentink
Date Completed:
February 3, 1973
Encoded by:
Apex Data Services; revised by Dan Santamaria
Date Completed:
September 27, 2003; revised 2004
Encoding funded by the generous support of the Gladys Krieble Delmas Foundation.

© 2004 The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts. Astor, Lenox and Tilden Foundations. All rights reserved.

Table of Contents

Descriptive Summary Table of Contents

Title
Wigman, Mary, 1886-Letters, 1932-69.
Collection ID
(S) *MGZMC-Res 13
Creator
Wigman, Mary
Size
91 (12 folders) items
Repository
The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts
Jerome Robbins Dance DivisionNew York, New York

Administrative Information Table of Contents

Source

Gift. Gift of Margaret Erlanger. Material received on: 9/68-1/69.

Access

The collection is open to research.

Restrictions on Use

For permission to publish, contact the Curator, Jerome Robbins Dance Division, The New York Library for the Performing Arts.

Preferred Citation

Wigman, Mary, 1886-Letters, (S) *MGZMC-Res 13, Jerome Robbins Dance Division, The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts.

Biographical History Table of Contents

Mary Wigman, German modern dancer and choreographer, was born Mary Wiegmann, November 13, 1886 in Hanover. She trained first with Emile Jaques-Dalcroze in Hellerau and Dresden and later with Rudolf von Laban in Anscona, Switzerland and in Munich. Her debut as a concert dancer and choreographer occurred in 1919. Successful performances encouraged her to open her own school in Dresden, where among her first students were Yvonne Georgi, Gert Palucca, and Harald Kreutzberg. By 1925, her students included Ruth Abrahamowitsch, Hanya Holm, and Tilly Losch. Her students performed as a company, touring Western Europe throughout the 1930's. Wigman performed at the Berlin Olympics of 1936, but the National Socialists closed her school, and she became a teacher at the Leipzig Music Academy. After World War II, she returned to Berlin, re-opening her school in 1948, which became the center for the German modern dance movement. She choreographed over one hundred dances for herself and her dancers but also worked in various German opera houses, staging productions of Gluck in Leipzig and Mannheim and a famous joint performance of Carl Orff's Carmina Burana and Catulli Carmina in 1955. She died in Berlin September 18, 1973.

Scope and Content Note Table of Contents

A collection of letters written by [UNK] Wigman to Margaret Erlanger, Supervisor of the Dance Division at the University of Illinois. Also included are two letters to a Mr. Potter in 1932 and a number of letters to Margaret Erlanger from other correspondents concerning events honoring Mary Wigman, ca. 1956-66.

Language: In English.

Container List Table of Contents

f. 1     
Mary Wigman to Mr. Potter 1932
f. 2     
Mary Wigman to Margaret Erlanger 1950-55
f. 3(2A)     
Mary Wigman to Margaret Erlanger 1956
f. 4(3)     
Mary Wigman to Margaret Erlanger 1957
f. 5(4)     
Mary Wigman to Margaret Erlanger 1958
f. 6(4A)     
Mary Wigman to Margaret Erlanger 1959
f. 7(5)     
Mary Wigman to Margaret Erlanger 1960-63
f. 8(5A)     
Mary Wigman to Margaret Erlanger 1964-65
f. 9(6)     
Mary Wigman to Margaret Erlanger 1966
f. 10(7)     
Mary Wigman to Margaret Erlanger 1967
f. 11(8)     
Mary Wigman to Margaret Erlanger 1968-69 & n.d.
f. 12(9)     
Correspondence to Margaret Erlanger and miscellaneous 1956-66

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