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General
Background:
International Encyclopedia of Dance: A project
of Dance Perspectives Foundation, 1998. (purchase,
but it's incredibly expensive, so check your library
first)
Excellent
general resource if you can find it. Recommended
books and articles for further study follow each
entry which are on every dance subject imaginable
and written by the experts in every field.
Online
Resources
There
is a wealth of information available online. Sites
change addresses frequently, but several Relevant
Links are listed elsewhere on this site. A search
of "Renaissance," "Dance," and/or "Shakespeare" will
uncover many primary and secondary resources including
all the works of Shakespeare and most of the original,
dance manual texts. The Society for Creative Anachronism
(SCA), Renaissance faires, and early music organizations
often have links to useful sites. The main caveat
is to be wary of misleading or incorrect information
as there is no guarantee of authenticity or validity
for information found on a website.
Dance
manuals and relevant conduct manuals:
Arbeau,
Thoinot. Orchesography. Langres, 1589.
Translated by Mary Stewart Evans; Introduction and
Notes by Julia Sutton. New York: Dover Publications,
Inc., 1967. (purchase)
The essential text for any beginning Renaissance
dance reconstructor. The dances--mostly branles and
galliard combinations--are simple and straightforward
as are their explanations although the step names
are left in their original French. There are some
original illustrations of the steps as well as Labanotation,
and Julia Sutton’s editiorial comments though detailed,
are easily understood. Arbeau gives the melody line
for all the dances although arrangements from other
sources are recommended for performance. Arbeau’s
highly amusing but still relevant defense of dancing
makes great reading, and there is also a lengthy
section on dance and marching drumbeats.
Caroso,
Fabritio. Courtly Dance of the Renaissance:
A New Translation and Edition of the "Nobilità di
dame" (1600). Translated and edited by Julia
Sutton. New York: Dover Publications, Inc., 1995.
(purchase)
Contains
fairly elaborate and elegant dances with modern transcriptions
of the lute tabulatures. (In other words, the music
can be played on the piano right out of the book.)
The dances, however, can be difficult to reconstruct
from the book--despite Sutton’s extensive commentary
and the Labanotation--if one does not already know
the basic steps, and even then, it often unclear
what steps occur on what counts of the music. However,
the "Notes on Conduct," offering useful and entertaining
advice for actors and dancers on how to sit, bow,
and otherwise behave at balls and other social gatherings,
requires no prior knowledge.
Castiglione.
The Courtier.
Elyot
The Boke of the Governour
Cunningham
& Wilson. Inns of Court.
Ready-made
dances & Recordings:
DHDS
publications - which I don't like as much, but
that's just me.
Songs
& Dances from Shakespeare. The Broadside
Band. Director Jeremy Barlow. Wotton-Under-Edge,
England: Saydisc Records, 1995. (purchase)
This
compact disc features songs and dances referred to
or most likely used in the original productions and
dances of the period as well as songs from early
revivals of the plays. Lyrics for all songs are included
as well as suggestions for which music should be
used in which plays and helpful background material.
In addition, Jeremy Barlow was the accompanist (or
rather, harpsichordist) at the Dolmetsch Historical
Dance Society Summer School I attended in England
in August of 1998 and personally recommended music
and instruments for my production, The
Bard’s Galliard... or how to party like an Elizabethan.
The Broadside Band also has recordings of Renaissance
court dance music. (Shakespeare's
Musick (Songs & Dances...)
Wortelboer,
Dorothée. Celeste Giglio: Flowers of 16th
Century Dance. Amsterdam: Tactus Music, 1996.
(purchase)
This
is a secondary source, a modern dance manual with
a detailed glossary of steps, sheet music arranged
for three or four part ensembles, and an accompanying
compact disc. The dances are primarily complicated
Italian choreographies from Fabritio Caroso and Cesare
Negri’s dance manuals with a few additions from Thoinot
Arbeau and other dance masters. While one should
always consult the original text, this manual offers
workable interpretations of ambiguous passages and
clearly specifies what steps should be done during
what bar of music. Some adjustments may be necessary
in performance on the stage, however, as most of
the dances are long, physically arduous, and frequently
have a dancer’s back to the audience.
Dance’s
function in the plays:
Brissenden,
Alan. Shakespeare and the Dance. London:
The MacMillan Press, 1981. (out of print, check
Shakespeare section of library)
Essential
text for studying dance references in the plays.
Extensive analysis both of how dance functions as
a plot device and how Shakespeare uses dance references
within the text. While Brissenden gives no choreographies
-- just the names of suggested dances for fifteen
of the plays, he does provide a concise history of
Renaissance court dance and explains how dance was
viewed by the Elizabethans. Consult this text for
specific dance references and for general themes
in the different genres of tragedy, comedy, etc.
Brissenden also includes a short, but well-chosen
glossary of common dance terms and a substantial
bibliography.
Music
scores and commentary:
The
Fitzwilliam Virginal Book. London, 1899.
Edited by J. A. Fuller Mailand and W. Barclay Squire.
New York: Dover Publications, 1963. (purchase)
Two
volumes, also known as Queen Elizabeth’s Virginal
Book. Contains instrumental music contemporary
with Shakespeare including William Byrd’s "O Mistris
myne" sung in Twelfth Night. Unfortunately,
there are few notes on the pieces, and half of them
are in German. (Electronic
excerpts).
Four
Hundred Songs & Dances From the Stuart Masque.
Ed. Andrew Sabol. Hanover and London: Brown
University Press, 1982. (out of print, check amongst
scores in a music library)
The
arrangements in the chapter "Dances for the Measures
and Revels" are excellent for dances and processions
in Shakespeare plays, just avoid those with too late
a date. Several of the notes on the pieces refer
to dancing, and Appendix C is John Ramsay’s "Practise
for Danucinge," a description of 24 English dances
from the Inns of Court.
Naylor,
Edward W. Shakespeare and Music. London:
J.M. Dent & Co., 1896. (out of print, check Shakespeare
section of library)
Whole
chapter on dancing founded on Arbeau’s Orchesography
and references to dancing by Thomas Morley and other
Shakespeare contemporaries. Detailed explanation
of dance and music vocabulary in the plays and more
hints at choreography than Brissenden’s analysis.
While one of two of Naylor’s acknowledged suppositions
are no longer believed true, this is still an extremely
useful text. Naylor offers unusually clear explanations
of rhythm as well as information regarding processions
and entrances and exits not found in other texts.
** Special Collections **
There are several wonderful videos, tapes, and
documents in the New
York Public Library for the Performing Arts’s
Dance Collection at Lincoln
Center. Access to the collection is restricted
by geography and videos can only be seen by appointment,
But if you can arrange it, however, every effort
should be made to visit the
Dance Collection as it probably has the best
public (or somewhat public) collection of Renaissance
dance videos available anywhere.
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