Lawrence Adams | |
---|---|
Born | St. Boniface, Manitoba, Canada | 2 November 1936
Died | 26 February 2003 66) Toronto, Ontario, Canada | (aged
Occupation(s) | dancer, archivist, dance presenter, publisher |
Known for | Co-founder of Dance Collection Danse |
Lawrence Vaughan Adams was a Canadian dancer, archivist and publisher. He was a member of the National Ballet of Canada from 1955 to 1960, [1] and also performed with Les Grands Ballets Canadiens and New York's Joffrey Ballet. In 1963, he rejoined the National Ballet of Canada as a soloist and then, principal dancer, leaving the company in 1969. [2] [3]
Adams was the co-founder, with wife and collaborator Miriam Adams, of the experimental Toronto performance space 15 Dance Lab, and the dance reconstruction project Encore! Encore!; and with John Faichney he co-founded The Arts Television Centre. In 1983, the Adams pair established Dance Collection Danse, a publishing company and archives dedicated to preserving Canadian dance history. [4]
Adams was born in the English-speaking neighbourhood of Norwood in St. Boniface, Manitoba on November 2, 1936. He had three siblings, including David Adams, who became a prominent ballet dancer. When the family moved to Vancouver, Adams studied ballet with Mara McBirney. [5] When he was 15, Adams joined his brother David and sister-in-law, ballerina Lois Smith, in Toronto. A 1957 Maclean's magazine article describes their home as a makeshift studio-workshop where Lawrence and his brother did carpentry, experimented with film and video equipment and discussed the beginnings of a Canadian dance archive. [6] While living in Toronto, Adams studied with local teacher Boris Volkoff. At 16, he made his professional debut with the Toronto Theatre Ballet in a performance in Midland, Ontario. [5] Adams danced the role of Rothbart in excerpts of Swan Lake.
Adams joined the National Ballet of Canada as a member of the corps de ballet in 1955. He left the National in 1960, but returned in 1963 as a Principal dancer. Notable roles included Gurn in La Sylphide (Erik Bruhn after A. Bournonville), Mercutio in Romeo and Juliet (John Cranko), The Prince in The Nutcracker (Celia Franca after Marius Petipa), The Rake in The Rake’s Progress (Ninette de Valois), The Prince in Swan Lake (Celia Franca after M. Petipa and L. Ivanov), Solor in La Bayadère (Marius Petipa produced by E. Valukin), and Hilarion in Giselle (Celia Franca after J. Coralli). His television appearances with the National Ballet of Canada included Offenbach in the Underworld, Swan Lake (Erik Bruhn), Cinderella, Romeo and Juliet, Pineapple Poll, Winter Night (Antony Tudor), and Giselle. Adams left the National for good in 1969, turning his attention to writing, teaching, publishing and presenting contemporary dance. [7]
Adams joined Les Grands Ballet Canadiens in 1961. He stayed there for a year, performing a main role in Labyrinth by choreographer Eric Hyrst. For the rest of the company's repertoire, he danced in the corps de ballet.
In 1963 Adams joined the Robert Joffrey Theatre Ballet (now Joffrey Ballet), then based in New York City. He went on an extended tour with them to Lisbon, Amman, Jordan, Ramallah and East Jerusalem, Damascus, Beirut, Kabul and Teheran, followed by an 8-week tour of India. [8]
At around the same time Adams returned to the National Ballet of Canada in 1963, he opened an antique shop in Toronto's Mirvish Village with fellow dancer Yves Cousineau. They called it Adams and Yves. The store sold pieces of Adams’ refurbished furniture, which he worked on in a carpentry workshop at St. Lawrence Hall. In time, they opened up a gallery, print and framing shop across the street from the antique shop. [5]
By the time Adams left his second stint at the National Ballet of Canada in 1969, he had met and married fellow dancer Miriam Weinstein, his life-long partner in many creative projects. Together they kept the Adams and Yves gallery going while also teaching class at the newly opened Lois Smith School of Dance. The gallery space connected the Adamses to Toronto's nascent visual arts scene, and that networking impacted their next major projects together: 15 Dancers and 15 Dance Lab.
In 1972, Lawrence and Miriam Adams created the 15 Dancers project, working with students from the Lois Smith School of Dance. Experimenting with the possibilities of contemporary ballet choreography, the group innovated with text, improvisation, and humour, among other things. Their shows at Toronto's Poor Alex Theatre, and on tour to the National Arts Centre in Ottawa, pushed the boundaries of contemporary dance in Canada. At home in Toronto, they built a tiny black box performance venue in a disused factory space. As 15 Dancers disbanded in 1974, their space on Britain Street became known as 15 Dance Laboratorium (or, 15 Dance Lab). It would prove to be a vital hub for independent dance artists, presenting original performance art, environmental dance, site-specific work and experimental video for six years, closing in 1980.
The artists who created and performed works at 15 Dance Lab make for a distinguished dance history roster. Among them were David Earle, Jean-Pierre Perreault, Jennifer Mascall, Marie Chouinard, Anna Blewchamp, Christopher House, Judith Marcuse, Margie Gillis, Peggy Baker, Peter Boneham and Judy Jarvis. [5]
Adams was enthusiastic about video production and media when those forms were in their infancy as vehicles for artistic expression. He, Miriam and video artist Terry McGlade established The Visus Foundation in 1974 as a dance-focused video production organisation. The foundation recorded dance videos and presented a weekly cable TV arts broadcast. In 1981, the Adamses submitted a proposal to license a Toronto arts and culture channel for pay TV. Though not successful in acquiring a licence, The Arts Television Centre (ATC) operated from 1984 to 1990. With performer, television producer and software analyst John Faichney as manager, the Centre sought to familiarise artists with television production, while also serving as a rental facility for corporate video. Adams' early interest in computer technology and digital publishing would push his work in dance performance and video into new realms as innovative ideas about archiving, digital and print media began to circulate.
As an early adopter of computer technology, Adams developed software and learned to scan photographs and historical artifacts from dance history. In the late 80s, he published dance articles online using a dial-up computer-to-computer BBS (Bulletin Board System) called The Arts Network. Lawrence and Miriam also took over a University of Waterloo project, The Dictionary of Theatre Dance in Canada, and published it first as a floppy disk and then in print as an encyclopaedia. Even earlier, the Adamses had established regular print contributions with the dance and performance magazines Spill (1976-1978) and Canadian Dance News (1980-1983). [9] Concurrently, they offered a typesetting and layout service called LAMA Labs to the Toronto cultural community (1977-1980). These endeavours reinforced the Adamses' commitment to preserving Canadian dance history through a variety of means, work that is ongoing to this day.
In 1983, the Adamses began researching Canada's early dance history, and the artists who pre-dated the founding of institutions such as the National Ballet of Canada (1951) and the Canada Council for the Arts (1957). Choreographic works from pioneers such as Gweneth Lloyd (co-founder of the Royal Winnipeg Ballet) and Françoise Sullivan were in danger of being forgotten completely, they believed. Using cross-Canada field research and interviews collected by Saskatchewan dance teacher Sonja Barton, and funding from the Laidlaw Foundation, the Adamses embarked on a large-scale dance reconstruction project they called Encore!Encore! Over a six-week period in 1986, a handful of early dance works, including Shadow on the Prairie by Gweneth Lloyd, Red Ear of Corn by Boris Volkoff, Maria Chapdelaine by Nesta Toumine and Déformité, Moi je suis... by Françoise Sullivan and Jeanne Renaud, were reconstructed, videotaped and notated by a team that included many of the original choreographers and performers.
A multi-media performance based on the Adamses' Encore Encore! research was presented at Expo '86 in Vancouver. There's Always Been Dance introduced Canadian Pavilion visitors to the country's vibrant theatrical dance history using live performance, film, video and photographs. The complex production toured several cities in Western Canada at the end of its Expo run.
An organic extension of Miriam and Lawrence Adams’ work in Canadian dance history, Dance Collection Danse (DCD) began official operations in 1986. An ever-expanding archive of photographs, costumes, scrapbooks, souvenir programs, letters, poster and company records, DCD is also Canada's only dedicated publisher focused on dance.
Housed in Miriam and Lawrence Adams’ own home until 2013, DCD commissioned, edited and published both print and electronic newsletters and books, including the Dictionary of Dance: Words, Terms and Phrases (edited by Susan Macpherson 1996), the Dictionary of Classical Ballet Terms - Cecchetti (Rhonda Ryman 1998) and Theatrical Dance in Vancouver, 1880s - 1920s (Kaija Pepper 2000). Several early editions were published on the short-lived 5 1⁄4-inch floppy disk format, an indication of Lawrence's ongoing love affair with technology of all kinds. By contrast, Lawrence also bound several books by hand for limited editions that include early copies of Maud Allan and Her Art by Felix Cherniavsky.
Since Lawrence's death in 2003, DCD has continued to grow. Along with Miriam, his mentee Amy Bowring took over some of his tasks, including the design and printing of several new books. Instrumental in opening DCD's new research centre and exhibition space in 2013 to showcase highlights from a growing collection, Bowring now continues as Executive and Curatorial Director.
Karen Alexandria Kain is a Canadian former ballet dancer and was the Artistic Director of the National Ballet of Canada from 2005 to 2021.
The National Ballet of Canada is a Canadian ballet company that was founded in 1951 in Toronto, Ontario, with Celia Franca, the first artistic director. A company of 70 dancers with its own orchestra, the National Ballet has been led since 2022 by artistic director Hope Muir. Renowned for its diverse repertoire, the company performs traditional full-length classics, embraces contemporary work and encourages the creation of new ballets, as well as the development of Canadian dancers and choreographers.
Veronica Tennant, is a Canadian producer, director, and filmmaker and a former principal dancer of the National Ballet of Canada. She was born in London, England and moved to Canada with her parents and sister in 1955. Dancing from the age of four, by the age of 18, she became the youngest person ever to enter the National Ballet of Canada.
Classical ballet is any of the traditional, formal styles of ballet that exclusively employ classical ballet technique. It is known for its aesthetics and rigorous technique, its flowing, precise movements, and its ethereal qualities.
David Adams, was a Canadian ballet dancer and a founding member of the National Ballet of Canada.
The Sleeping Beauty is a ballet in a prologue and three acts to music by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky, his Opus 66, completed in 1889. It is the second of his three ballets and, at 160 minutes, his second-longest work in any genre. The original scenario was by Ivan Vsevolozhsky after Perrault's La belle au bois dormant, or The Beauty Sleeping in the Forest; the first choreographer was Marius Petipa. The premiere took place at the Mariinsky Theatre in St. Petersburg on January 15, 1890, and from that year forward The Sleeping Beauty has remained one of the most famous ballets of all time.
Greta Hodgkinson O.Ont is an American-Canadian ballet dancer. She was a Principal dancer with the National Ballet of Canada until she stepped down in 2020. She continues to perform freelance and is Artist-in-Residence of the National Ballet.
La Bayadère is an 1877 ballet, originally staged in four acts and seven tableaux by the French choreographer Marius Petipa to music by Ludwig Minkus and libretto by Sergei Khudekov. The ballet was staged for the benefit performance of the Russian Prima ballerina Ekaterina Vazem, who created the principal role of Nikiya. La Bayadère was first presented by the Imperial Ballet at the Imperial Bolshoi Kamenny Theatre in St. Petersburg, Russia, on 4 February [O.S. 23 January] 1877. From the first performance the ballet was hailed by contemporary critics and audiences as one of the choreographer Petipa's masterpieces, particularly the scene of act II The Kingdom of the Shades, which is one of the most celebrated pieces in all of classical ballet.
The Canadian Ballet Festival was an annual event staged in Canada from 1948 to 1954 that brought together various Canadian dance companies to generate public interest in classical dance. Prior to the festivals, it was difficult for professional Canadian dancers to earn a living by practising their art in their own country. When the festivals ended in 1954 after six years, Canadian dancers were able to find paid work in Canadian television practising their art.
Margaret Dragu is a Canadian dancer, writer, performance artist and feminist.
Norbert Vesak, one of Canada's leading choreographers in the 1970s, was a ballet dancer, choreographer, theatrical director, master teacher, dance columnist, lecturer, and opera ballet director, known for his unique, flamboyant style and his multimedia approach to classical and contemporary choreography. He is credited with helping to bring modern dance to Western Canada.
Vincent de Paul Warren, was a Canadian dancer, teacher, dance historian and lecturer. After a distinguished career as a ballet dancer and teacher, he became widely known and respected as a historian and archivist. He is celebrated as a leading figure in the dance world of Canada.
Gweneth Lloyd, OC was a co-founder of the Royal Winnipeg Ballet, a ballet teacher and choreographer.
Stephen Jefferies is a retired ballet dancer, artistic director and choreographer. He was a senior principal dancer for The Royal Ballet and The National Ballet of Canada.
David Earle is a Canadian choreographer, dancer and artistic director. In 1968 Earle was co-founder and co-artistic director of Toronto Dance Theatre alongside Patricia Beatty and Peter Randazzo, where Earle choreographed new modern dance pieces. In 1996 Earle started his own company called Dancetheatre David Earle where he continues to choreograph new works, to teach, and to create with the next generation of modern dancers. David Earle has received many accolades; a member of the Order of Canada, a recipient of the Jean A. Chalmers Award for Distinction in Choreography, also an honorary doctorate degree from Queen’s University in Kingston, Ontario.
Boris Vladimirovich Volkoff, was a Canadian-Russian ballet dancer, director, choreographer and ballet master. After studying dance in Warsaw and Moscow he defected from Russia and eventually settled in Toronto. He created the Boris Volkoff School of Dance which trained ballet dancers, and the Boris Volkoff Ballet Company which is arguably considered the first ballet company in Canada. He gave his dancers and studio to the National Ballet of Canada to raise the profile of Canadian ballet. He regretted this decision and attempted to revive his company which ended in failure. He was appointed as a Member of the Order of Canada in 1973, one year before his death.
Cyril Atanassoff is a French dancer of Bulgarian descent.
Miriam Elaine Adams is a dancer, choreographer, and dance archivist from Toronto. After performing with the National Ballet of Canada, she co-founded 15 Dance Laboratorium with her husband Lawrence Adams. It was the first theatre to present experimental dance in Toronto. In 1983, Miriam and Lawrence launched Encore! Encore! to document the works of six Canadian choreographers from the 1940s and 1950s, and in 1986 they launched a centre for archiving dance and publishing books called Arts Inter-Media Canada/Dance Collection Danse (DCD).
Based in Toronto, Dance Collection Danse (DCD) is an archives, publisher and research centre dedicated to Canadian dance history. It was founded in 1983 by former National Ballet of Canada dancers Lawrence Adams and Miriam Adams. Long time DCD director of collections and research and writer Amy Bowring was appointed Executive and Curatorial Director in 2019.
Guillaume Côté is a Canadian ballet dancer, choreographer, composer and artistic director. He is a principal dancer and a Choreographic Associate at the National Ballet of Canada. In February 2024, he announced that the 2024/2025 season will be his last season before retirement. He has been the Artistic Director of the Festival des Arts de Saint-Sauveur since 2014 and is the Artistic Director of Côté Danse.