Roger Pryor Dodge

Roger Pryor Dodge
Born(1898-01-21)January 21, 1898
DiedJune 2, 1974(1974-06-02) (aged 76)
NationalityAmerican
Occupation(s)dancer, choreographer, writer
Known forjazz criticism, Nijinsky photographic collection
Spouses
Anne Bacon
(m. 1927; div. 1941)
Joze Duval
(m. 1944; ann. 1945)
Lyena Barjansky
(m. 1945)
ChildrenPryor

Roger Pryor Dodge (21 January 1898 — 2 June 1974) was an American ballet, vaudeville, and jazz dancer, as well as a choreographer and pioneering jazz critic. He formed the first extensive collection of photographic portraits of Vaslav Nijinsky.

Self-taught, his original thinking contributed to the understanding of the relationship of jazz to classical music and to dance. He endeavored to break down barriers between jazz and other 'serious' art forms and build the respect it deserved.[1]

Dodge’s taste in jazz was formed in 1924, initially from listening to recordings of Fletcher Henderson and others, then refined when Miguel Covarrubias, newly arrived from Mexico and already ensconced in the Harlem Renaissance, introduced Dodge to recordings of Bessie Smith.[2]

Jazz inspired Dodge to crystalize a unique style of white American dance, whereupon he choreographed dances to Duke Ellington's recordings with James "Bubber" Miley among others. For years, he performed these pieces in multiple locations in New York, brought a dance trio to perform in Paris, and filmed several of these numbers years later, c1937. His performance career ended in 1942 due to a back injury.

James "Bubber" Miley and Roger Pryor Dodge, c1930
"The Man in the White Costume," c1934
  1. ^ Bacon, Anne. The Jazz Writings of Roger Pryor Dodge. 1974 (original typescript, Roger Pryor Dodge Archive)
  2. ^ Dodge, Roger Pryor. "Jazz in the Twenties." JAZZ (July 1942)