Accident (1989)

This week we look back at Peggy’s mentorship and work with American dancer and choreographer, Annabelle Gamson.

“More than any other artist in the mid-1970s, Annabelle Gamson initiated unprecedented attention to the history of American modern dance. Her musically inspired, passionate performances of dances, choreographed by Isadora Duncan and others in the early twentieth century, brought about a resurgence of interest in Duncan’s work and her legacy, modern dance. Although Gamson was in her forties when she began performing Duncan’s dances, the dynamic strength and maturity of her physical presence, crowned by a mane of long white hair, distinguished her as singularly original.” The Encyclopaedia of Jewish Women

Peggy writes: “In my late thirties, eager to learn more about solo dancing, I sought out Annabelle as a mentor. She allowed me to take her classes alongside the extraordinary women in her group (including Roxane D’Orleans-Juste, Risa Steinberg and Nina Watt – all soloists with the Limon Company), and to understudy the historic works she was currently staging as well as the new group work she was creating. As a culmination of our work together, Annabelle choreographed two solos for me, Accident (1989) and Sand (1990).

Though she was working with her group mainly at the 92nd St Y in New York City, Annabelle was living outside the city, in Rye Brook, and all of our rehearsals took place in her home studio – an expansive space with a beautiful hardwood floor and wide windows, furnished only with a grand piano. For the weeks that we worked together I took morning class in the city, caught a train at Grand Central, was picked up at the station by Annabelle, and then rehearsed with her for 2 or 3 hours. Annabelle always insisted on giving me dinner before I left, and conversations over those meals were the occasion for stories about her childhood dance lessons, about Agnes de Mille and Anna Sokolow, about dancing on Broadway and with American Ballet Theatre, and about the interior world of the Isadora’s dances.

Accident was made in the wake of the death of a young woman – the child of one of Annabelle’s friends – in a car crash. It was a tragic dance, with sequences of jarringly brutal action, the body a distorted tangle. One day in rehearsal the images at play brought me to tears. Annabelle was shocked. “What ‘s wrong with you?” she demanded, “This isn’t happening to you, you’re telling the story.” Without that blunt intervention, some of the dances that lay ahead for me over the next decades could never have been navigated safely.” - PB

“Ms. Baker is a performer with a shining, expressive innocence and a body that is an astonishing collection of big bones and lithe muscles. Annabelle Gamson made inspired use of all that in ''Accident,'' set to a dark score by Francis Poulenc, in which a life seems to be relived in the moments right after an accident.” Jennifer Dunning, The New York Times

Read more about Annabelle Gamson’s Isadora Duncan reconstruction project here on The New York Times.

Listen to dance legends discuss the home created for modern dance by the 92nd Street Y here.

Welcome to the Creation Catalogue Blog!

We’re currently building a brand new website that Peggy has titled The Creation Catalogue. It will be an online searchable archive that documents more than 30 years of creation, production, touring and professional development undertaken by Peggy Baker Dance Projects.

The Creation Catalogue Blog will post features on the company’s history from Peggy and guest contributors. Our inaugural post is of course from the company’s founding artistic director, principal dancer until 2010, and now choreographer and choreographic director, Peggy Baker:

The photograph we’re using for the banner of The Creation Catalogue was taken by Josef Astor in New York City in 1992. Lise Friedman – a former Cunningham dancer who was then the editor of the award-winning quarterly, Dance Ink – arranged a shoot with Josef for a photo feature in the publication. I was instructed to arrive at a side door of Carnegie Hall, take the elevator to the sixth floor, then find a back staircase and climb a few steps to arrive on the eighth floor. (How does that work?) The apartments and studios of Carnegie Hall were famous for the artists living and working there and, (feeling like I really had no business being there), I hesitantly roamed the maze of corridors until I found Josef’s door. I knocked at a tempo approximating my nervous heartbeat. A tall and exceedingly handsome man with a glowing smile threw open his door to me. Light streamed through a huge slanting skylight onto the studio floor and a seamless paper backdrop. Josef took movement portraits of me in costume for my dance Sanctum, Mark Morris’s Beautiful Day, and Accident by Annabelle Gamson. I had also brought a long, deep purple stretch velour dress that I had found in a sale bin at Vivienne Westwood’s Soho shop a couple of days earlier and I put in on to improvise for the camera. The moment that Josef caught in this photo inspired the second of four dances in Her Heart, choreographed the next year. - PB

For more reading on Josef Astor and his Carnegie Hall studio, visit improvised life here.

Photos below of Peggy Baker by Josef Astor, appeared in Dance Ink Fall 1992 issue Vol 3 No. 3.