Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-8ctnn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-26T08:22:39.734Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Preferred Pas de Menuet

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 July 2014

Extract

The recurrence of an uncomplicated step pattern made it possible for 18th-century ladies and gentlemen of varying abilities to perform the Minuet. In 1762, Giovanni-Andrea Gallini, director of dances at the Royal Theatre in the Haymarket, London, said that the success of the Minuet stemmed in part from “the possibility of dancing it to so many different airs, though the steps are invariable.” Thirty-seven years earlier the dancing master Pierre Rameau describes the emergence of a simplified version of the pas de Menuet that replaced a more demanding step. Eighteen-century European dancing masters, such as Charles Pauli, repeatedly describe the Minuet step as natural, plain and unaffected—a step that is “perfect” for performance. Because the Minuet steps were successful and widely performed, dancing masters taught its established steps, not steps based on their own whims or creations. An analysis of a wide range of 18th-century manuals reveals that a preferred version of the Minuet step emerged in the literature and remained relatively unchanged to near the end of the century.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Congress on Research in Dance 1984

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

OTHER SOURCES CITED

Behr, Samuel Rudolph. L'Art de Bien Danser. 1713; facsimile rpt. Munchen: Heimeran Verlag, 1977.Google Scholar
Bonin, Louis. Die Neueste Art zur Galanten und Theatralischen Tanz-Kunst. Frankfurt: J. C. Lochner, 1711.Google Scholar
Essex, John. The Dancing Master. London: J. Brotherton, 1728.Google Scholar
Feldtenstein, C. J. Von. Die Kunst nach der Choregraphie zu Tanzen und Tänze zu Schreiben, nebst einer Abhandlung über die äusserliche wohlanständigkeit im Tänzen. Braunschweig: 1767.Google Scholar
Feldtenstein, C. J. Von. Erweiterung der kunst nach der Chorographie zu tanzen, Tanze zu erfinden, und aufzusetzen; wie auch Anweisung zu verschiedenen National-Tänzen… Braunschweig: 1772.Google Scholar
Leggette, Susan W. “A Russian Dancing Master: The Minuet and Courtiy Dance in Eighteenth Century Russia.” MA thesis, The Ohio State University, 1979.Google Scholar
Magny, M.Principes de Choregraphie. Paris: 1765.Google Scholar
Malpied, . Traité sur l'Art de la Danse. 1780 (?); facsimile rpt. England: Gregg International Publishers, Ltd., 1972.Google Scholar
Rameau, Pierre. Abbrégé de la Nouvelle Methode Dans l'Art d'Ecrire ou de Tracer Toutes Sortes de Danses de Ville. 1725; facsimile rpt. England: Gregg International Publishers, Ltd., 1972.Google Scholar
Sol, C.Méthode tres Facile et Fort Necessaire Pour Montrer à la Jeunesse de l'un & l'autre Sexe la Maniere de Bien Danser. Haye, 1725.Google Scholar
Weaver, John, Orchesography, or, The Art of Dancing by Characters and Demonstrative Figures. 1706; facsimile rpt. England: Gregg International Publishers Ltd., 1971.Google Scholar