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Facsimile ![]() Fancy Free ![]() Interplay ![]() N. Y. Export. Op. Jazz ![]() Les Noces ![]() Other Dances ![]() Summer Day ![]() |
His career as a gifted ballet dancer developed with Ballet Theatre
where he danced with special distinction the role of Petrouchka,
and character roles in the works of Fokine, Tudor, Massine, Lichine
and de Mille, and, of course, his first choreographic sensation Fancy
Free (1944). This ballet, followed by Interplay (1945)
and Facsimile (1946), was performed by Ballet Theatre, after
which he embarked on an enormously successful career as a choreographer
and later as a director of Broadway musicals and plays. His first musical,
On the Town (1945), was followed by Billion Dollar Baby
(1946), High Button Shoes (1947), Look Ma, I’m Dancing
(which he co-directed with George Abbott in 1948), Miss Liberty
(1949), Call Me Madame (1950) and the ballet The Small
House of Uncle Thomas in The King and I (1951). His work
continued with Two’s Company (1952), Pajama Game
(again co-directed with Abbott in 1954) and Peter Pan (1954),
which he directed and choreographed. In the same year, he also directed
the opera The Tender Land by Aaron Copland. Two years after
that he directed and choreographed Bells Are Ringing (1956),
followed by the historic West Side Story (1957), Gypsy
(1959) and Fiddler on the Roof (1964). In 1949, he joined New
York City Ballet as Associate Artistic Director with George Balanchine.
Among his outstanding works were The Guests (1949), Age
of Anxiety (1951), The Cage (1951), The Pied Piper
(1951), Afternoon of a Faun (1953), Fanfare (1953)
and The Concert (1956). For his own company, Ballets U.S.A.
(1958-1962), he created After the triumph of Fiddler on the Roof, Robbins dedicated
his energies to creating ballets for New York City Ballet. In 1988 he
took a leave of absence to stage Jerome Robbins’ Broadway.
In 1990 During this extraordinary career, Robbins served on the National Council
on the Arts from 1974 to 1980, and the New York State Council on the
Arts/Dance Panel from 1973 to 1988. He established and partially endowed
the Jerome Robbins Film Archive the Dance Collection of the New York
Public Library at Lincoln Center. His numerous awards and academic honors
included the Handel Medallion of the City of New York (1976), the Kennedy
Center Honors (1981), three Honorary Doctorates, an honorary membership
in the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters (1985) and
in 1988 he was awarded the National Medal of the Arts. |