Renate Schottelius

Renate Schottelius (8 December 1921 – 27 September 1998) was a German dancer and choreographer known for her work in Argentina and the USA.

Renate Schottelius
Renate Schottelius
Born8 December 1921
Died27 September 1998 (1998-09-28) (aged 76)
OccupationDancer and choreographer

Life

Schottelius was born in Flensburg. Her parents moved so that she could be trained in ballet at the Berlin Opera.[1] and at the Mary Wigman School where she worked under Alice Uhlen and Ruth Abramovitz. She had to leave in 1936 because of Nazism. Her father, Professor Justus W. Schottelius, and mother chose to move to Columbia but Schottelius chose Argentina where her uncle lived. She was just 14 when she arrived and she had to take work so that she could continue to study at the National Ballet School in Buenos Aires.[2]

She perfected with Miriam Winslow dancing between 1942-47. Winslow was an important colleague. Together they toured Argentina with 18 dancers, two pianists and a drummer.[2]

In 1953 she traveled to the United States where she studied with Martha Graham, José Limón, Hanya Holm,[2] Agnes De Mille and other choreographers. She taught at the Boston Conservatory in the early 1970’s.

Schottelius' choreographies were presented at the Teatro Presidente Alvear, Teatro San Martín, Teatro Blanca Podestá and the Teatro Astral.

She returned to Germany to visit in 1958 and lectured in Boston.

Among her most outstanding disciples, the Argentine choreographer Oscar Aráiz and Ana María Stekelman.[3]

In 1989 she received the Konex Award - Merit Diploma as one of the best choreographers in Argentine history.

Schottelius died in 1998 in Buenos Aires.[2]

References

  1. Sharon E. Friedler; Susan B. Glazer (8 April 2014). Dancing Female. Routledge. pp. 44–48. ISBN 978-1-134-39790-7.
  2. Renate Leaves Home, ballett international&/ tanz aktuell, March1998, Retrieved 26 May 2017
  3. Fortuna, Victoria. "Schottelius, Renate (1921 – 1998)". routledge.com. Retrieved 27 May 2017.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.