2nd Year - Gillian Lynne
Dame Gillian Lynne
1926-2018
Gillian Lynne was born on February 20, 1926 in Bromley, Kent, England as
Gillian Barbara Pyrke. She is known for her work on The Phantom of the
Opera (2004), National Lampoon's European Vacation (1985)
and BBC Sunday-Night Theatre (1950). She was married to Peter Land and Patrick Back. She died on July 1, 2018 in
Marylebone, London, England.
The
Independent Column when she passed away
Dame Gillian Lynne, who has died at the age of 92,
quite simply changed the way we think of dance.
Her
husband, actor Peter Land, announced on Twitter the death of his “darling
Gillie”, sharing that she was adored by many and had left “a huge
legacy”.
The
opening of Andrew Lloyd Webber’s musical Cats, which premiered in
1981 in London, became the focal point of that legacy and the moment
we were captivated by a new, frenetic and fantastical choreography.
The show
introduced Lynne’s work to a new audience, gaining attention from countries all
over the world for many years. Fittingly, Webber renamed the New London
Theatre, which he owns and was home to Cats, to the Gillian Lynne theatre,
making it the only West End venue playhouse to be named after a
choreographer – or indeed a non-royal woman.
In a
ceremony to mark the event, Lynne was carried to the stage on a golden throne,
surrounded by dancers from Cats.
Lynne’s
entry to dance came in a most unusual way, and was courtesy (it seems) of
a most unusual doctor. When she was a child, her mother took her to the doctor
because she fidgeted and could not concentrate at school. The doctor turned the
radio on, asked the mother to observe her daughter, and left the room.
Gillian’s mum watched her daughter involuntarily dancing to the music from the
radio. Her mother soon died in a car crash, when Gillian was only 13.
During
the Second World War, she was spotted by Dame Ninette de Valois, founder of
Sadler’s Wells Ballet (later The Royal Ballet) and danced her first major solo
as the Lilac Fairy in The Sleeping Beauty on her 20th birthday. Later,
roles were to be specifically created for her by Royal Ballet choreographers
Frederick Ashton and Robert Helpmann.
As she
moved from dance to choreography and direction, she choreographed for the Royal
Shakespeare Company, Royal Opera House and English National Opera, numerous
west end shows such as Chitty Chitty Bang Bang and three Lloyd Webber
musicals, Cats, The Phantom of the
Opera and Aspects
of Love. In an
astonishingly long and diverse career (she described herself on Twitter as “a
working nonagenarian”), she even directed The
Muppets on
TV and starred on screen opposite Errol Flynn (“I had a fling with Errol,” she
once recalled, “but so did everyone.”)
And yet
none of that classical training, nor the stage and screen stardom, signalled
what will surely be her lasting legacy – the transformation of the art form
from a classically-based genre to a high-energy modern dance, which would
inspire huge numbers of the young and not so young to embrace dance, both as
spectators and practitioners.
There
were signs of it in a number of pre-Cats’ productions. I recall vividly
Trevor Nunn’s RSC production of a rumbustious musical version of The
Comedy of Errors in
1976, in which Lynne’s dazzlingly energetic and often humorous choreography was
performed by Judi Dench, among others.
But it
was Cats that was to mark the transformation of musical
theatre. Long a champion of jazz dance, Lynne’s mogs, slinky and sensuous,
daring and dastardly, danced to a high-energy fusion of ballet, jazz and
old-fashioned showbiz, always underlined by her trademark athleticism. Cast
members recall that she did not choreograph from the stalls but always joined
and led the company on stage in rehearsals.
As lights
in the West End were dimmed Monday night in her honour, Sir Cameron Mackintosh,
producer of Cats and Phantom described her as “a unique light”
in musical theatre.
“Inspirational
and indefatigable, wickedly funny and fabulously sexy, Gillie’s brilliantly
inventive talents over the decades have illuminated the lives of all those who
have had the luck to work with her as well as the audiences who have witnessed
her magic,” he said.
He added:
“She always signed her notes to me ‘Taut and Tight’ – it perfectly summed
up both her timeless elegance and her extraordinary work ethic. We will all
miss her beyond words, but I have no doubt she already has the angels
rehearsing the Jellicle Ball… God bless her. She is truly unforgettable.”
Andrew
Lloyd Webber tweeted “Three generations of the British musical owe so much to
you.”
Yes, she
changed forever the craft of the British musical, but her legacy goes beyond
that, and stretches just as importantly beyond theatre to ordinary people,
inspired by her work and passion to try and to love the transformative nature
of dance.
Quick Key
Facts
1.
She choreographed the original stage productions of Andrew Lloyd
Webber's "Cats" and "The Phantom of the Opera".
2.
She choreographed the original London stage
production of "The Roar of the Greasepaint-The Smell of the Crowd",
as well as the Broadway production.
3.
She has choreographed several operas for the Royal
Opera House, Covent Garden, including "Les Troyens".
4.
She was one of the fairies in the Royal Ballet's
1946 stage production of Pyotr Ilyich
Tchaikovsky's "The Sleeping Beauty", starring Margot Fonteyn.
5.
(April 2005) : Choreography and musical staging for
"Chitty Chitty Bang Bang", a musical by Richard M. Sherman and Robert
B. Sherman, adapted for the stage by Jeremy Sams, based on the
MGM/United Artists film (Hilton Theatre, New York City, New York, USA).
Sources:
·
IMDb.
(2020). Gillian Lynne -
IMDb. [online] Available
at: https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0528852/ [Accessed 23 Feb. 2020].
·
Lister,
D. (2018). Dame Gillian Lynne: the choreographer who transformed musical
theatre. The Independent. [online] Available at:
https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/theatre-dance/features/gillian-lynne-dead-cats-phantom-of-the-opera-choreography-musical-theatre-a8427266.html
[Accessed 23 Feb. 2020].
Answer
the below 2 Questions in 400 words:
1.
What are three qualities that make Gillian Lynne choreography unique?
2.
How do you think these qualities are reflected in your
Cats Routine?
The blog of 400 words to answer the two questions mentioned earlier is due by Friday 6th March at 8.30am.
Please send your
published blog link to the email address here.
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