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Daniel Nagrin
Daniel Nagrin
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Daniel Nagrin (May 22, 1917 – December 29, 2008) was an American modern dancer, choreographer, teacher, and author. He was born in New York City.[1]

Key Information

Nagrin studied with Martha Graham, Anna Sokolow, Hanya Holm, Bill Matons[2] and Helen Tamiris whom he later married. In addition to working as a modern dancer, Nagrin also performed on Broadway in Plain and Fancy, Up in Central Park, and Annie Get Your Gun, among other musicals. His 1950 dance Dance in the Sun was adapted by filmmaker Shirley Clarke for her 1953 film of the same name.

In June 1954 he formed the Dance-Percussion Trio with David Shapiro and Ronald Gould (who would go on to form the New York Percussion Trio), and the group toured the United States in June and July of that year. Nagrin and his wife formed the Tamiris-Nagrin Company in 1960. When Tamiris died in 1966, Nagrin concentrated on a solo career. In the early 1970s Nagrin formed "The Workgroup", a performance company including dancers such as Sarah Stackhouse and with a focus on improvisation.

Nagrin's better known choreographic works include "The Peloponnesian War" (with music by Eric Salzman), "Strange Hero", "Man of Action", "Spanish Dance", and "Jazz, Three Ways". Additionally, he choreographed for the 1954 film His Majesty O'Keefe.

In 1985, a 15-hour compilation of Nagrin's work, The Nagrin Videotape Library of Dances, was assembled. It is held in the Dance Collection at the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts.

Nagrin, who held a B.S. in Education from City College in New York, taught at C.W. Post College, New York University, the American Dance Festival, and Arizona State University. He was the author of several books, including How to Dance Forever: Surviving Against the Odds (1988) and Choreography and the Specific Image (2001).

Nagrin died on December 29, 2008 in Tempe, Arizona.[1]

Selected choreography

[edit]
  • Private Johnny Jukebox (1942)
  • Spanish Dance (1948)
  • Strange Hero (1948)
  • Man of Action (1948)
  • Dance in the Sun (1950)
  • Faces from Walt Whitman (1950)
  • Man Dancing (1954)
  • Progress (1957)
  • Indeterminate Figure (1957)
  • Three Happy Men (1958)
  • Jazz, Three Ways (1958)
  • For a Young Person (1958)
  • A Dancer Prepares (1958)
  • An American Journey (1960)
  • Two Improvisations (1962)
  • The Man Who Did Not Care (1963)
  • In the Dusk (1965)
  • Not Me, But Him (1965)
  • Path (1965)
  • A Gratitude (1965)
  • Why Not (1965)
  • The Peloponnesian War (1968)
  • The Ritual (1971)
  • Rondo (1971)
  • Rituals of Power (1971)
  • Signs of the Times (1972)
  • Ritual for Two (1972)
  • Ritual for Eight (1972)
  • Wounded Knee (1972)
  • Sea Anemone Suite (1972)
  • Hello-Farewell-Hello (1973)
  • Steps (1973)
  • Jazz Changes (1974)
  • Sweet Woman (1974)
  • Nineteen Upbeats (1975)
  • The Edge is Also a Center (1975)

References

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Bibliography

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Daniel Nagrin (May 22, 1917 – December 29, 2008) was an American modern dancer, choreographer, teacher, and author known for his intensely dramatic solo performances that became classics of the modern dance repertoire. His work emphasized psychological depth and character-driven movement, setting him apart in the post-war American dance scene. Born in New York City, Nagrin began formal dance training during his college years despite an early interest in movement. He graduated from City College of New York in 1940 and soon launched his professional career with engagements including summer resorts, club dates, Broadway musicals, and acting roles. He gained prominence through his collaboration with choreographer Helen Tamiris, his wife, co-founding the Tamiris-Nagrin Dance Company and performing in numerous works together. After Tamiris's death in 1966, Nagrin focused on solo concert work, creating signature pieces that explored themes of heroism, urban life, and human struggle. Nagrin's influence extended beyond performance through his teaching and writing. He served as a professor at Arizona State University later in his career and authored influential books on dance technique and performance, including explorations of acting methods adapted for dancers. His contributions helped bridge modern dance with dramatic expression, leaving a lasting legacy in the field.

Early life and training

Birth and family background

Daniel Nagrin was born on May 22, 1917, in New York City. He was the son of Russian Jewish parents who fled the pogroms in Russia. Nagrin grew up in New York City as part of a family shaped by Eastern European Jewish immigrant experiences common among many in the early twentieth-century modern dance world. From childhood, he displayed an interest in movement. This early inclination emerged within his New York environment before any formal studies began.

Dance studies and influences

Daniel Nagrin pursued his dance training in New York City during the 1930s and 1940s, studying modern dance with several leading figures of the era who shaped his distinctive approach. He took his first formal classes at the New Dance Group and at Martha Graham’s studio, marking the beginning of his immersion in modern techniques. His teachers included Martha Graham, Hanya Holm, Anna Sokolow, Bill Matons, and Helen Tamiris, each contributing to his technical foundation and artistic perspective. His early training occurred in the Experimental Dance Unit under Bill Matons, where he gained basic dance experience alongside classes taught by Charles Weidman and participation in the Dance Unit directed by Anna Sokolow. He further studied with Martha Graham, Hanya Holm, and Helen Tamiris—whom he later married—as well as Elizabeth Anderson-Ivantzova for ballet fundamentals. These studies exposed him to diverse modern dance methodologies during a formative period when the field was expanding in New York. This training fostered Nagrin's dramatic, gestural style, which prioritized character portrayal and social commentary over abstract formalism. Influenced by his teachers' emphasis on expressive movement and human themes, he developed a focus on psychologically complex roles, often exploring outsiders and conflicted figures through clear gesture and rhythmic vitality drawn from modern and jazz sources. His approach reflected a commitment to movement as metaphor for real human experiences and concerns.

Early career

Broadway and commercial dance

Daniel Nagrin began his professional dance career in 1940, performing in Broadway revues and commercial venues in New York. His Broadway debut came that year with the revue Tis of Thee. In 1942, he appeared at the Rainbow Room nightclub as well as in the revue Of "V" We Sing. These early engagements established him in both theatrical and commercial dance circuits during the early 1940s. Throughout the mid-1940s, Nagrin continued to build his reputation as a dancer in Broadway productions and related work. In 1944, he performed in the musicals Marianne, Stove Pipe Hat, and Up in Central Park. He then served as a featured dancer in the long-running musical Annie Get Your Gun from 1946 to 1947. By 1949, he was appearing in Lend an Ear and Touch and Go, where he took on varied dance roles including "American Primitive" Dancer, The Man, and others in the latter revue. From 1940 onward, Nagrin spent fifteen years as a prominent dance soloist in Broadway musical comedies, during which he was voted Best Male Dancer. His commercial work also encompassed nightclub performances, contributing to his versatility in the competitive New York dance scene of the era.

Initial choreography and performances

Nagrin began choreographing in the late 1940s, transitioning from his work as a performer in Broadway musicals to creating his own solo material. In 1948, he presented his first solo concert at the Kaufmann Concert Hall of the 92nd Street YM-YWHA in New York City, marking his debut as an independent choreographer. The program included his first major choreographed work, "Strange Hero," a solo portraying a small-time gangster with dramatic intensity and jazz-inflected movement, set to a piano transcription of Stan Kenton's "Monotony." This piece quickly became recognized for its character study and helped establish Nagrin's distinctive approach to blending modern dance with theatrical expression. In the years immediately following, Nagrin continued to build his solo repertoire through additional concerts and performances, focusing on concise, expressive works that drew from contemporary American life. His early choreography emphasized individual storytelling and physical directness, setting the foundation for his later development as a solo artist. These initial efforts remained independent of major collaborative partnerships and highlighted his emerging voice in modern dance.

Partnership with Helen Tamiris

Marriage and professional collaboration

Daniel Nagrin married the pioneering modern dancer and choreographer Helen Tamiris on September 3, 1946. Their personal and artistic partnership had roots in earlier professional interactions, as Nagrin first worked under Tamiris's choreography in a revue shortly after his college graduation in 1940, and later joined her in Broadway musicals and concert performances following his military service in World War II. Following their marriage, Nagrin served as Tamiris's assistant on numerous Broadway productions that she choreographed during the 1940s and 1950s, while also performing as a lead dancer in her works and collaborating on the creation of musical theater material. Their joint efforts encompassed over a dozen major Broadway shows, with Nagrin contributing to staging, performance, and artistic development under Tamiris's direction, blending modern dance techniques with theatrical expression. This close collaboration, marked by mutual influence in choreography and performance style, continued through the early 1960s. Their professional synergy endured until their separation around 1964, after which they no longer collaborated. Tamiris died from cancer on August 4, 1966, following which Nagrin pursued independent work.

Tamiris-Nagrin Dance Company

The Tamiris-Nagrin Dance Company was formed in 1960 by Helen Tamiris and Daniel Nagrin, who co-directed the troupe following years of collaboration on Broadway musicals. Tamiris, having retired from performing in the 1940s, focused on choreography, while Nagrin served as the company's primary dancer and also contributed choreography. The company operated with modest success over approximately five to six years, emphasizing modern dance works that drew on their shared artistic vision, until disbanding around 1965 following their separation. The repertoire included group pieces choreographed by Tamiris, such as Rituals and Versus, alongside Nagrin's solo Indeterminate Figure. In January 1964, the company presented a program of four works at Kaufmann Hall in New York, featuring these pieces among others; the performance highlighted familiar repertory items and new creations, reflecting their joint creative efforts. Additional works associated with Tamiris during this era include Memoir (1959) and Women’s Song (1960), which explored personal and social themes. The company's activities centered primarily on New York performances, showcasing a blend of established and original choreography by both founders.

Solo career and independent choreography

Transition to solo work

Following the death of Helen Tamiris in 1966, Daniel Nagrin shifted his professional focus to independent solo performances, marking a decisive transition from collaborative company endeavors to individual concert work. This change allowed him to concentrate on self-choreographed solo programs, which he toured extensively across university circuits and other venues in the ensuing decades. Dance Magazine characterized this phase of his career by dubbing him "the great loner of American dance," a moniker that underscored his preference for solitary artistic expression and his status as an independent figure in modern dance. The epithet, reproduced in a 1997 profile, highlighted how Nagrin's post-1966 trajectory emphasized personal vision over ensemble collaboration. This pivot enabled Nagrin to sustain a prolific output of solo choreography while continuing to perform into his later years, cementing his reputation as a dedicated exponent of solo dance artistry.

Signature solo dances

Daniel Nagrin's signature solo dances stand out for their vivid dramatic portraits, exaggerated gestures, and use of movement to convey social consciousness, satire, and character revelation through gestural metaphors. Several key works from the late 1940s established his reputation as a master of solo form, while a major later piece extended his approach to explicit political commentary. Created in 1948, Strange Hero is set to music by Stan Kenton and Pete Rugolo and depicts a suave yet menacing street thug whose sharp, stylized movements and exaggerated gestures satirically reveal the character's violent coolness and inner menace. Similarly from 1948, Man of Action portrays the frantic stresses, strains, and hurried pace of an urban executive's life through gestural metaphors that highlight the pressures of modern existence. Also from 1948, Spanish Dance offers an impression of flamenco, driven by intense Spanish-flavored music composed by Genevieve Pitot, with movements that evoke passionate and rhythmic character exploration. In 1968, amid the Vietnam War, Nagrin premiered The Peloponnesian War, a solo dance-theater collage that addressed the perpetuity of war and societal desensitization to violence by juxtaposing narration from Thucydides' historical text (performed by Frank Langella) with a soundtrack by Eric Salzman that began with a deliberately distorted Star Spangled Banner collage in multiple keys to undermine patriotic complacency. The work incorporated stark visual elements, including Nagrin's interaction with a realistic severed arm prop—examining it, shaking its hand, arm-wrestling it, and kicking it away—to symbolize war's carnage and passive public indifference, culminating in a blank gunshot fired toward the audience to provoke awakening and social consciousness. These pieces collectively illustrate Nagrin's distinctive approach to solo choreography as a vehicle for incisive character study and pointed commentary on human and societal conditions.

Teaching career

Academic positions and workshops

Nagrin joined the faculty of Arizona State University in 1970 as a professor in the Department of Dance, where he taught modern dance and choreography until his retirement in 1982. This twelve-year tenure marked his primary academic position, during which he was instrumental in shaping the university's dance curriculum and mentoring students in performance and composition. Beyond his long-term role at Arizona State University, Nagrin frequently led workshops and master classes at other institutions and festivals, including summer sessions at the American Dance Festival and Jacob's Pillow, as well as guest teaching engagements at universities across the United States and abroad. These workshops provided intensive training in his approach to improvisation and solo performance, extending his pedagogical reach far beyond formal academic appointments. His teaching engagements often focused on professional development for dancers and choreographers, with many workshops held in conjunction with dance conferences and conservatory programs throughout the 1970s and 1980s.

Pedagogical contributions

Nagrin's pedagogical contributions centered on his innovative method of using the specific image to stimulate improvisation and creative movement, encouraging dancers to draw from concrete, personal, and detailed imagery to generate authentic expression rather than relying on abstract or generalized prompts. This approach aimed to foster individual creativity and truth-seeking in dance, allowing performers to connect deeply with their inner experiences and produce movement that is simple, eloquent, and powerful. While working with his company, the Workgroup, Nagrin developed over one hundred improvisational structures that he taught in workshops, providing dancers and students with practical tools to explore and expand their creative range. His mentorship emphasized personal integrity and the discovery of unique artistic voices, influencing generations of dancers through direct instruction and the dissemination of his techniques in educational contexts. Nagrin's legacy in dance pedagogy endures in the continued use of his image-based methods to cultivate thoughtful, individualized performance practices.

Literary works

Books on dance technique and improvisation

Daniel Nagrin authored several influential books that explore dance technique, improvisation, choreography, and performance longevity, drawing from his extensive experience as a performer, choreographer, and teacher. His 1988 book How to Dance Forever: Surviving Against the Odds, published by William Morrow, challenges the common assumption that dancers must retire from professional performing in their early forties. Nagrin, who began his solo career at age forty in 1957, combines personal philosophy, practical advice on nutrition, health treatments, and training adaptations, and reflections on mentors and technique to argue that dancers can sustain high-level performance far longer than convention suggests. In Dance and the Specific Image: Improvisation (University of Pittsburgh Press, 1994), Nagrin articulates his aesthetic philosophy of movement as metaphor rather than abstraction, emphasizing that dance should communicate human experience through concrete, emotionally resonant images. Influenced by Stanislavski, Helen Tamiris, and Joseph Chaikin, the book details over one hundred structured improvisational exercises developed with his Workgroup company in the 1970s, offering practical tools for dancers, actors, and musicians to generate meaningful movement from specific imagery. Nagrin extended these ideas to performance preparation in The Six Questions: Acting Technique for Dance Performance (University of Pittsburgh Press, 1997), adapting Stanislavskian principles exclusively through movement rather than spoken scenes. The method centers on six guiding questions—who is doing what, to whom, where and when, why, and against what obstacle—to help dancers uncover inner intentions, overcome pitfalls like vanity or self-doubt, and achieve performances of emotional honesty and authority. Finally, Choreography and the Specific Image: Nineteen Essays and a Workbook (University of Pittsburgh Press, 2001) examines the creative process of making dances, presenting essays on artistic decision-making alongside practical workbook exercises that reinforce the role of specific imagery in generating authentic choreography. These works collectively reflect Nagrin's pedagogical emphasis on integrating technical skill with imaginative depth and emotional truth in dance practice.

Film and television contributions

Choreography and acting credits

Daniel Nagrin's forays into film were occasional and primarily tied to his expertise as a dancer and choreographer, resulting in a modest but distinctive set of credits across several decades. He appeared as an uncredited specialty dancer in the 1952 musical Just for You, starring Bing Crosby and Jane Wyman. In 1953, Nagrin both performed as the lead dancer and provided choreography for the experimental short film Dance in the Sun, directed by Shirley Clarke, which juxtaposes studio-based movement with the same choreography executed outdoors on a beach and in dunes. The following year, he traveled to Fiji and served as choreographer for the adventure feature His Majesty O'Keefe (1954), starring Burt Lancaster. His final known screen credit came in 1967, when he acted in the film All Woman in the role credited as "Him." No verified television appearances or additional choreography credits in screen media are documented.

Later years and legacy

Personal life and final years

Daniel Nagrin's first marriage was to the choreographer Helen Tamiris, with whom he shared a long personal and professional partnership until her death in 1966. He later married Phyllis Steele Nagrin, who survived him and confirmed his death. In his final years, Nagrin resided in Tempe, Arizona. He died on December 29, 2008, at Friendship Village, a retirement community in Tempe, Arizona, at the age of 91.

Recognition and influence

Daniel Nagrin has been characterized as "the great loner of American dance" by Dance Magazine, a description that underscores his career as an independent solo performer and choreographer who resisted alignment with established schools or institutional structures in modern dance. This independence is reflected in his emphasis on content over form, as he incorporated powerful gestural solos, jazz influences, character-driven narratives, and early mixed-media elements at a time when abstraction and formalism dominated much of the field amid Cold War-era pressures. New York Times critic Anna Kisselgoff observed that "no specific technique springs to mind, no school or tradition provides a ready context" for viewing his work, highlighting its distinctive position outside conventional modern dance frameworks. Scholars have noted that Nagrin's marginalization stemmed from complex factors, including his Jewish background, engagement with popular cultural themes and jazz, and extensive Broadway choreography, which led critics to deem such work less "pure" than that of white formalist modern dancers. Despite this, he received notable recognition during his lifetime, including the 1955 Donaldson Award (a precursor to the Tony) for his performance in the Broadway musical Plain and Fancy, the National Endowment for the Arts Master Teacher/Mentor Award in 1993, and honorary doctorates from SUNY Brockport in 1991 and the California Institute of the Arts in 2004. Nagrin's lasting influence on dramatic solo dance and improvisation endures through his pedagogical innovations, his formation of the improvisational Workgroup ensemble in 1970, and his four influential books that codified approaches to performance technique and longevity in dance. His legacy is preserved in major archival collections, including the Daniel Nagrin papers at the New York Public Library's Jerome Robbins Dance Division, which document his choreographic notes, teaching materials, and career records from 1920 to 1996, and the extensive Daniel Nagrin Collection at the Library of Congress Music Division, spanning circa 1920 to 2006 with materials on his solos, collaborations, and writings. Posthumously, following his death on December 29, 2008, the Daniel Nagrin Theatre, Film & Dance Foundation has sustained recognition of his contributions through legacy interviews, preservation of his costume collection at Arizona State University, and tributes such as performances and celebrations of works including Strange Hero and Man of Action. While his impact remains evident in repertory stagings and scholarship on character-driven solo forms, Nagrin's recognition has been relatively limited in broader mainstream dance histories compared to figures associated with major techniques or institutions.

References

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