Brown, Beverly, -2002

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Beverly Brown (ca. 1941-2002) was born in Effingham, Ill., reared in Venezuelan oil camps and in Arizona. She graduated from Carlton College in Minnesota and then went to New York to study dance professionally. A longtime resident of Manhattan, she moved to Kansas City two months before her death.

A modern dance choreographer and lead performer with the Erick Hawkins Dance Company, she danced with Hawkins from 1967 to 1974. While performing as a soloist with the Hawkins Dance Company, Brown founded The Greenhouse Dance Ensemble in 1972 with five of her colleagues. Developing a fusion of dance and vocal sound textures, she became the founder and artistic director of the Beverly Brown Dancensemble Theatre for Bodies and Voices in 1976. Brown taught and choreographed for a variety of student groups in professional, educational and community settings. Brown's teacher, mentor, and greatest influence, Erick Hawkins (1909-1994), was known as one of the revolutionary pioneers of radical modern dance through his original choreography and evolution of a new theory and technique of modern dance. One of his most beautiful works was entitled Early Floating. In her writings Brown explored this piece and other Hawkins ballets. His style was a strong and commanding one and he believed that movement could be beautiful and enjoyable for its own sake - movement not bound but free and flowing, creating certain aesthetics only found in the Hawkins Technique. This inspired Brown in her own work as a choreographer where movement was organic and natural, building on Hawkins belief of letting the movement take the body through three dimensional space. Brown taught dance at such institutions as Colorado University at Boulder and the University of California at Santa Cruz. Her interest in the sacred and spiritual roots of dance led to research as well as her master's degree where she explored and wrote extensively about Christian based dance experiences. A long-standing interest in the deserts and cultures of the American Southwest was fostered by her four years of high school at Verde Valley School in Sedona, Arizona and led to the essay From Where I Stand featured in her high school yearbook. Her artistic apprenticeship with Erick Hawkins nurtured her interest in the Southwest because Hawkins' own work had been thematically influenced by his early years in the Southwest. Desert Series was originally inspired by the writings of Barry Lopez's book Desert Notes. Their correspondence is a feature of the collection. Her research for Desert Series included library study, consultation, visits to Native American dance events and collaborative efforts with dancers during her Cross-Cultural Dance Resource Center (CCDR) residency in Arizona, where Brown gave workshops and lecture-demonstrations. Her research into Native American mythology, while there, led her to create a video dance, The Seed Keeper. As a chorographer, dancer and master teacher, Brown presented her work in NYC. Starting in the 1970's Dancensemble toured the eastern United States, Puerto Rico and Canada, participated in the Riverside Dance Festival in New York and the American Dance Festival in New London, Connecticut. Brown taught extensively as a visiting choreographer in colleges and university dance programs around the United States, had works in the repertory of the Concert Dance Company of Boston and Nova Dance Theatre of Halifax, Nova Scotia. She taught and performed at Colorado Mountain College in Breckenridge and during her residency at Fort Lewis College in Durango, Colorado.

From the description of Beverly Brown papers, 1955-2000 (New York Public Library). WorldCat record id: 232114064

Beverly Brown (ca. 1941-2002) was born in Effingham, Ill., reared in Venezuelan oil camps and in Arizona. She graduated from Carlton College in Minnesota and then went to New York to study dance professionally. A longtime resident of Manhattan, she moved to Kansas City two months before her death.

A modern dance choreographer and lead performer with the Erick Hawkins Dance Company, she danced with Hawkins from 1967 to 1974. While performing as a soloist with the Hawkins Dance Company, Brown founded The Greenhouse Dance Ensemble in 1972 with five of her colleagues. Developing a fusion of dance and vocal sound textures, she became the founder and artistic director of the Beverly Brown Dancensemble Theatre for Bodies and Voices in 1976. Brown taught and choreographed for a variety of student groups in professional, educational and community settings.

Brown’s teacher, mentor, and greatest influence, Erick Hawkins (1909-1994), was known as one of the revolutionary pioneers of radical modern dance through his original choreography and evolution of a new theory and technique of modern dance. One of his most beautiful works was entitled Early Floating . In her writings Brown explored this piece and other Hawkins ballets. His style was a strong and commanding one and he believed that movement could be beautiful and enjoyable for its own sake - movement not bound but free and flowing, creating certain aesthetics only found in the Hawkins Technique. This inspired Brown in her own work as a choreographer where movement was organic and natural, building on Hawkins belief of letting the movement take the body through three dimensional space.

Hawkins intensely believed in the beauty and power of live music in the theater. His company always performed to live music usually composed and performed by his wife, Lucia Dlugoszewski. The natural sounds that accompanied much of Brown’s choreography and writings stem directly from these influences. Hawkins notable quote “Dance is the most beautiful metaphor of existence in the world” served as a personal metaphor for Brown and references to it can be found in her journals.

Brown taught dance at such institutions as Colorado University at Boulder and the University of California at Santa Cruz. Her interest in the sacred and spiritual roots of dance led to research as well as her master’s degree where she explored and wrote extensively about Christian based dance experiences. A long-standing interest in the deserts and cultures of the American Southwest was fostered by her four years of high school at Verde Valley School in Sedona, Arizona and led to the essay From Where I Stand featured in her high school yearbook.

Beverly Brown explored the Hawkins philosophy as it related to instruction and learning, developing an awareness of the psychological and emotional aspects of teaching and learning dance. She stood out as a dancer for her blend of serenity, simplicity and quietly gutsy energy, a mix that made her an ideal interpreter of Hawkins's works which permeated her own choreography. Though her dance is recognizably derived from the Hawkins school, Brown developed an unmistakable voice as a choreographer; achieving a blend in which movement and sound are mutually enhancing. In Balada, a dance to electronic music, syllables are chanted in unison and help to establish the intimacy of dance partners through duets, in three sections where physical relatedness is explored. Life in a Drop of Pond Water places bodies in odd processionals with unexpected lifts and quirky variations to re-create the apparently aimless purposefulness of organic matter stared at from above. Cloudspeed dates from 1971, before Brown began to incorporate voice into her works. It is a stark duet and used an abstract wooden set form. Voices of the Becalmed carried dancers through a storm that hurtled their bodies across the stage onto a shore. Her journals/notebook entries discuss the inspiration for this dance which came in part from her learning that the expression “in the doldrums” referred to a place in the mid-Atlantic equatorial belt of quick weather changes, or calms and squalls. This image became a metaphor for her own emotional life experiences, where she found that a storm is not always a bad thing, for the calm follows.

Her artistic apprenticeship with Erick Hawkins nurtured her interest in the Southwest because Hawkins’ own work had been thematically influenced by his early years in the Southwest. Desert Series was originally inspired by the writings of Barry Lopez’s book Desert Notes . Their correspondence is a feature of the collection. Her research for Desert Series included library study, consultation, visits to Native American dance events and collaborative efforts with dancers during her Cross-Cultural Dance Resource Center (CCDR) residency in Arizona, where Brown gave workshops and lecture-demonstrations. Her research into Native American mythology, while there, led her to create a video dance, The Seed Keeper .

As a chorographer, dancer and master teacher, Brown presented her work in NYC. Starting in the 1970’s Dancensemble toured the eastern United States, Puerto Rico and Canada, participated in the Riverside Dance Festival in New York and the American Dance Festival in New London, Connecticut. Brown taught extensively as a visiting choreographer in colleges and university dance programs around the United States, had works in the repertory of the Concert Dance Company of Boston and Nova Dance Theatre of Halifax, Nova Scotia. She taught and performed at Colorado Mountain College in Breckenridge and during her residency at Fort Lewis College in Durango, Colorado.

From the guide to the Beverly Brown papers, 1955-2000, (The New York Public Library. Jerome Robbins Dance Division.)

Archival Resources
Role Title Holding Repository
creatorOf Beverly Brown papers, 1955-2000 The New York Public Library. Jerome Robbins Dance Division.
creatorOf Brown, Beverly, d. 2002. Beverly Brown papers, 1955-2000 New York Public Library System, NYPL
Role Title Holding Repository
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associatedWith Cross-Cultural Dance Resources. corporateBody
associatedWith Hawkins, Erick. person
Place Name Admin Code Country
United States
Subject
Dance
Dance
Modern dance
Modern dance
Occupation
Choreographer
Activity

Person

Death 2002-05-17

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