Fine Arts
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She was a ballerina with the Kirov before defecting to the West | Natalia Makarova
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She was a muse for George Balanchine as Dulcinea in Don Quixote | Suzanne Farrell
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This Danish born dancer is the head of the New York City Ballet | Peter Martins
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She is the British born ballerina who used to partner with Nureyev and became a dame | Margot Fonteyn
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This Osage dancer was born in Oklahoma was also once married to George Balanchine | Maria Tallchief
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She joined the Paris Opera Ballet and then helped her sister Maria start the Chicago City Ballet | Marjorie Tallchief
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Robert Joffrey founded his own troupe in this city | Chicago
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Maya Plisetskaya was the prima ballerina for this company after Galina Ulanova | Bolshoi
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French choreographer who created The Dying Swan for Anna Pavlova | Michel Fokine
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This ballet company was founded in 1948 by George Balanchine | New York City Ballet
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This dancer lost her two children in an auto accident before dying by accidental scarf strangulation in 1927 | Isadora Duncan
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This impresario founder of the Ballet Russes in 1909 worked with Nijinsky and Balanchine | Sergei Diaghilev
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The Dying Swan was created for this Russian ballerina who also had swans at her home in London | Anna Pavlova
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She choreographed unusual works such as Deuce Coupe | Twyla Tharp
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This Tatar was with the Kirov until 1961 when he defected and partnered with Fonteyn and was director of the Paris Opera Ballet | Rudolf Nureyev
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The Marlinsky Theater in St Petersburg hosts this ballet company | Kirov
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At Teatralnaya Square in Moscow you can see this company which takes its name from Russian for "big" | Bolshoi
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One of these, from the French for “throw”, can be a “grand” or “petit” leap from one foot to the other | jete
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Literally French for "beating", this movement of the leg may be grand, petit or frappe | battement
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Ballet pose named after a peninsula | Arabesque
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French term for a spin, it's a full complete turn of the body on one foot | Pirouette
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A dance for two | Pas de deux
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Bending of the knee, from the French | Plie
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Russian-born American choreographer who was related to Balanchivadze composer family and who worked with Stravinsky and Diaghilev | George Balanchine
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He choreographed the "Slaughter on Tenth Avenue" sequence for the Rodgers & Hart musical "On Your Toes" | George Balanchine
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He was born in Kiev in 1890, went insane in 1919, and died in London in 1950. | Vaslav Nijinsky
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He performed from 1909-1913 with Ballets Russes in The Afternoon of a Faun and the Rite of Spring | Vaslav Nijinsky
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This Centralia, WA born choreographer produced avant garde works, usually with John Cage | Merce Cunningham
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This African American choreographer created Revelations and other jazz influenced works at his American Dance Theater | Alvin Ailey
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He created ballets on American life such as West Side Story and Fancy Free and has worked with NYC ballet | Jerome Robbins
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Nicknamed Misha, he defected in Toronto in 1974 and starred in the movie the Turning Point and in Sex and the City | Mikhail Baryshnikov
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He founded the White Oak Dance Project and is a former director of American Ballet Theater and Kirov dancer | Mikhail Baryshnikov
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The "Contraction & Release" method was associated with this female doyenne choreographer of Appalachian Spring | Martha Graham
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This female choreographer worked for a century and was a descendant of Miles Standish | Martha Graham
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Characters in this 1942 ballet include the head wrangler & the champion roper and a cowgirl was created by Agnes de Mille | Rodeo
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She choreographed 3 virgins and a devil, the informer, brigadoon, oklahoma, and fall river legend | Agnes de Mille
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Vernon & Irene Castle popularized the "hesitation" style of this ballroom dance | waltz
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Famous tap dancer who danced with Shirley Temple and had the nickname Bojangles | Bill Robinson
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Tamara Karsavina was the 1st to dance the role of this Stravinsky bird, in 1910 | The Firebird
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1948 ballet choreographed by Frederick Ashton | Cinderella
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/// | royal ballet
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This dance was brought by the gypsies to Andalusia in Spain; castanets were not traditionally used in the dance | Flamenco
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The fastest dancer in this style is Solero De Jerez, who attained 16 heel taps per second in 1967 | Flamenco
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Poland's national anthem is in the style of this dance, named for a region of eastern Poland. Chopin wrote some | Mazurka
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This Irish star isn't just the "Lord of the Dance, he's got "Feet of Flames | Michael Flatley
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This Seattle, WA founder of an American ballet troupe who was born Abdullah Jaffa Bey Khan created the 1st psychadelic ballet Astarte in the 60s | Robert Joffrey
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"Dancing on My Grave" & "The Shape of Love" are autobiographical works by this New York City ballet dancer | Gelsey Kirkland
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Choreographer Rudolf von Laban developed a widely used system of this so you know when to do a fouette | Dance notation
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This ballerina wrote a biography of George Balanchine after taking off her "red shoes | Moira Shearer
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Famous 19th century ballerina created the title role in "Giselle" in 1841 | Carlotta Grisi
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This 18th century ballerina is remembered for shortening her skirt to calf length | Marie Camargo
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It's the "little" French surname of choreographer Roland of the Ballets de Paris | Roland Petit
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In 1801, Tsar Paul I brought this Swedish man who introduced flesh-colored tights, to St Petersburg as Ballet Master | Charles Didelot
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French for on the toes | sur les pointes
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This Brazilian music style & dance of the 1960s combined samba & cool jazz | bossa nova
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This dance originated in Cuba as a variation of the mambo | cha-cha
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Cuba is where you can find the Kings of this | mambo
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Xavier Cugat was the king of this Cuban dance with subtle hip movements | rumba
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Popular in the 1940's, the name of this Brazilian dance style means "to rub navels together" and spun off Carioca | samba
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Arthur Mitchell co-founded this theater in 1968 in response to the death of Martin Luther King Jr | Dance theater of Harlem
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In a 1935 ballet based on this mythical person, a dancer leaps toward the sun, then crashes to the stage | Icarus
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