Joan Benesh

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Joan Benesh
Royal Ballet
Known forBenesh Movement Notation
SpouseRudolf Benesh

Joan Benesh (née Rothwell; 24 March 1920 – 27 September 2014) was a British ballet dancer who, with her husband Rudolf, created the Benesh Movement Notation, which is the leading British system of dance notation.[1]

Early life, education, and marriage

She was born Joan Dorothy Rothwell in the Wavertree district of Liverpool in 1920.[2] She studied dance for three years in Liverpool at the Studio School of Dance and Drama and then studied with Lydia Sokolova.[3] She won the ballet prize of the All England Dance Competition in 1937 and the Parker Trophy for Dance in 1938.[4]

She then worked as a dancer and choreographer in commercial theatre where, in 1947, she met the accountant, artist and musician, Rudolf Benesh, who noticed that she was having trouble: "During a break while I was painting Joan's portrait, I mused at her struggle to get down on paper her choreographic ideas for a ballet".

Sadler's Wells Ballet Company.[2][5]

Benesh Movement Notation

The notation uses a five bar

Royal Ballet, fully published in 1956 and exhibited at Expo 58 in Brussels.[2]

In 1960, the Royal Ballet recruited a notator who had been trained in the Benesh system.

Benesh Institute of Choreology was then created in 1962 with Joan as principal, Rudolf as director and Frederick Ashton as president.[2] The Institute established a library of dance scores in London and a residential training college in Sussex.[7]

Later life

Rudolf died of cancer in 1975 and Joan then retired as principal.[2] She published a history, Reading Dance: The Birth of Choreology, in 1977 and was recognised with the Queen Elizabeth II Coronation Award of the Royal Academy of Dance in 1986.[1] She retired to Wimbledon where her hobbies included gardening, sewing and philosophy.[4] She subsequently moved to Skelmersdale to be near her only son Anthony.[2] She died in a nursing home there of pneumonia in 2014, aged 94.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c "Joan Benesh – obituary", Daily Telegraph, 5 December 2014
  2. ^
  3. ^ Benesh, Rudolf; Benesh, Joan (1977), Reading Dance: the birth of choreology, Souvenir, p. 104
  4. ^ a b World Who's Who of Women 1990/91, Taylor & Francis, 1990, p. 67
  5. ^ Current Biography Yearbook, H. W. Wilson Co., 1958, p. 58
  6. ^
  7. ^ The history of Benesh International (formerly the Benesh Institute) (PDF), Benesh International, 2018

External links