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Home/People/Agnes de Mille
Agnes de Mille profile photo
Born
Sep 18, 1905Died: Oct 7, 1993
Lived 88 years
Place of Birth
New York City, New York, USA
Known For
Acting
Gender
Not specified

Career Highlights

8
Movies
3
TV Shows
IMDb Profile

Agnes de Mille

Acting

Biography
From Wikipedia Agnes George de Mille (September 18, 1905 – October 7, 1993) was an American dancer and choreographer. De Mille began her association with the fledgling American Ballet Theatre (then called the Ballet Theatre) in 1939, but her first significant work, Rodeo (1942) with the score by Aaron Copland, was staged for the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo. Although de Mille continued to choreograph nearly up to the time of her death—her final ballet, The Other, was completed in 1992—most of her later works have dropped out of the ballet repertoire. Besides Rodeo, two other de Mille ballets are performed on a regular basis, Three Virgins and a Devil (1934) adapted from a tale by Giovanni Boccaccio, and Fall River Legend (1948) based on the life of Lizzie Borden. On the strength of Rodeo, de Mille was hired to choreograph the musical show Oklahoma! (1943). The dream ballet, in which dancers Marc Platt, Katherine Sergava, and George Church doubled for the leading actors, successfully integrated dance into the musical's plot. Instead of functioning as an interlude or divertissement, the ballet provided key insights into the heroine's emotional troubles. De Mille went on to choreograph over a dozen other musicals, most notably Bloomer Girl (1944), Carousel (1945), Brigadoon (1947), Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (1949), Paint Your Wagon (1951), The Girl in Pink Tights (1954), Goldilocks (1957), and 110 in the Shade (1963). De Mille's success on Broadway did not translate into success in Hollywood. Her only significant film credit is Oklahoma! (1955). She was not invited to recreate her choreography for either Brigadoon or Carousel. Nevertheless, her two specials for the TV series Omnibus, "The Art of Ballet" and "The Art of Choreography" (both televised in 1956), were immediately recognized as landmark attempts to bring serious dance to the attention of a broad public. Her love for acting played a very important role in her choreography. De Mille revolutionized musical theatre by creating choreography which not only conveyed the emotional dimensions of the characters but enhanced the plot. Her choreography, as a reflection of her awareness of acting, reflected the angst and turmoil of the characters instead of simply focusing on a dancer's physical technique. De Mille married Walter Prude on June 14, 1943. They had one child, Jonathan, born in 1946. Her hobbies included collecting fine porcelain and research on the history of clothes, something at which she was an expert. She suffered a stroke on stage in 1975, but recovered. She died in 1993 of a second stroke in her Greenwich Village apartment.
The Lost City of Cecil B. DeMille poster

The Lost City of Cecil B. DeMille

as Self
2016
Ballet poster

Ballet

Cast
1995
The First 100 Years: A Celebration of American Movies poster

The First 100 Years: A Celebration of American Movies

as Self
1995
Martha Graham: The Dancer Revealed poster

Martha Graham: The Dancer Revealed

as Self - Biographer
1994
Agnes: the Indomitable De Mille poster

Agnes: the Indomitable De Mille

as Herself/Narrator
1987
Musical Comedy Tonight poster

Musical Comedy Tonight

Cast
1979
World's Young Ballet poster

World's Young Ballet

Cast
1969
The Ragamuffin poster

The Ragamuffin

as Jenny, as a Child
1916