2 3 Throwback Thursday and Gail Grant | Ballet Webb

Thursday, June 23, 2016

Throwback Thursday and Gail Grant



Throwback Thursday and Gail Grant

One of the best known books about classical ballet is the small (less than 150 pages), but popular Technical Manual and Dictionary of Classical Ballet. Originally published in 1950, it has been revised and reissued many times since then. Organized in dictionary format, it provides definitions and descriptions of ballet terms, and it includes illustrations – also by author Gail Grant. I began to wonder about who she is (or was) and was surprised to find that there was little personal information about her on the internet, and her book doesn’t contain the typical “Biography of the Author” section.

(Edith) Gail Grant made her debut in 1916, when she was six years old in “Queen Sceptre: A Musical Fairy Pantomime”. In 1923 she took a correspondence course in dance technique from Chicago and opened her first dance studio - in an attic. She included a library of dance books.

In 1927 Gail’s family moved to Winnipeg and here she began her first formal ballet training with Geraldine Foley. She trained intensely for two years before returning to Regina to re-open her studio.

In 1932 she joined the new Radio City Music Hall Ballet where she worked for the next eight years. During this period she began to write, and in 1950 her most famous work was published. Many other works followed.

In 1991, Gail Grant was in her eighties and living in Florida.

From the Big Blue Book of Ballet Secrets:

Dance History Factoid #116:
Gail Grant is the author and illustrator of the famous book Technical Manual and Dictionary of Classical Ballet.”

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