Become a Member
Life

Celebrating the work of pioneering ‘powerhouse’ choreographer Bella Lewitzky

A sometimes overlooked icon of dance, the Jewish Californian is being recognised at the Royal Opera House

March 21, 2024 11:12
dancers Luke Ahmet, Jenny Hayes, Pierre Tappon, photo Jimmy Parratt, 1
Strength in depth: dancers perform in California Connections: Three Pioneering Women (Photo: Jimmy Parratt)

By

Joy Sable,

Joy Sable

3 min read

When the Yorke Dance Project was created in the late 1990s, a work by Bella Lewitzky was included in its first programme. Twenty-five years on, the company is marking its anniversary with a celebration at the Royal Opera House of Lewitzky’s work, alongside two other pioneering women choreographers: Isadora Duncan and Martha Graham, called California Connections: Three Pioneering Women.

“It is nice to bookend these 25 years with a work of Bella’s,” says the event’s artistic director Yolande Yorke-Edgell, who credits Lewitzky, who died in 2004, as being a major influence on her own work as a dancer, choreographer and teacher.

If Lewitzky’s name is not particularly familiar to dance fans on this side of the Atlantic, Yorke-Edgell says it is because she chose to be based in California and not make the journey, like many other choreographers, to New York. “She stayed on the West Coast and had a harder time of being more visible because, especially in Los Angeles, the film business is the dominant art form there. But she stuck it out, she wanted to stay.”

Yorke-Edgell describes Lewitzky, Duncan and Graham as “powerhouses. I think they had a common thread in that they were survivors, they were resilient. Each of them knew where they wanted to go and what they wanted to do, no matter what was put in their way.”

Topics:

Dance

More from Life

More from Life