Photographs, personal and professional papers, reviews, press cuttings, oral histories, research notes and audiovisual material of Dr Dorothy Gifford Madden, former Professor Emerita of the University of Maryland, United States of America who was responsible for bringing American modern dance practice to the United Kingdom.
Dorothy Madden Collection
This material is held atTrinity Laban Conservatoire of Music and Dance, Laban Archive
- Reference
- GB 1701 D23
- Dates of Creation
- 1912-2002
- Name of Creator
- Language of Material
- English
- Physical Description
- 18 boxes
Scope and Content
Administrative / Biographical History
Dorothy Gifford Madden was born in New Hampshire in America and educated at Middlebury College, Vermont where she graduated in French and music and became interested in dance under the influence of Mary Lou Storrs who had been trained by the German expressionist Mary Wigman, a pupil of Rudolf Laban.
Madden became a dance instructor in the physical education department at Maryland University and by 1967 had become the Founding Chairman of the Dance Department, a position she retained until 1972. In 1962 she enrolled at New York University to do a doctorate in dance as a creative art. She was the first person to receive a PhD in which the practice of choreography was part of the assessment.
In the 1960s she was invited to the United Kingdom by the Ministry of Education and later by Dartington Hall to introduce modern American dance into British education. During her administrative career she performed in Washington with the Chamber Dance Group, Children's Dance Theatre and the dance companies of Pola Nirenska and Ethel Butler. In 1971 she founded the Maryland Dance Theatre, a touring company that performed contemporary dance until 1988 when it closed.
In 1977 she retired from Maryland as Professor Emerita of Dance and took up a post at Laban (now Trinity Laban Conservatoire of Music and Dance) to write and lead the first MA in Choreography and the first doctoral programme in dance studies. She also mentored choreographers through her mid-80s at dance schools in Paris and Europe.
In 1992 the University of Maryland honoured her by naming part of the new theatre complex after her, and in 2003 began a dance scholarship in her name. Dorothy Madden died in London in 2009.
Arrangement
The Collection has been sorted into the following series:
- D23/A Choreography
- D23/B Research PhD New York University 1962
- D23/C Tours
- D23/D Maryland Dance Theatre
- D23/E Department of Dance, University of Maryland
- D23/F Professional dance career
- D23/G Teaching
- D23/H Research for the book You call me Louis, not Mr Horst
- D23/I National Dance Association
- D23/J Articles
- D23/K Professional career
- D23/L Dorothy Madden Studio Theatre
- D23/M Reviews
- D23/N Advisory work
- D23/O Portraits
- D23/P Oral history
- D23/Q Writings
- D23/R Music
- D23/S Videos
Access Information
Temporarily closed to the public.
Acquisition Information
Dorothy Madden via Valerie Preston-Dunlop.
Other Finding Aids
A pdf document of the Dorothy Madden catalogue can searched on the Laban Archive catalogue.
Archivist's Note
Description compiled by Jane Fowler, Archivist, Laban.
Conditions Governing Use
Photocopies can be made according to copyright law and depending on the condition of the documents. Please consult the Archivist.
Appraisal Information
Duplicate material has been weeded.
Custodial History
Dorothy Madden employed an assistant to catalogue her archive collection which was stored in boxes in her house. The archive was donated to the Laban Archive by Dr Madden before her death.
Accruals
No further accruals are expected.
Bibliography
The research notes for the book Madden, Dorothy (1996). You call me Louis, not Mr Horst Amsterdam: Harwood Academic Publishers, are included in this collection, as well as notes for Madden's PhD thesis Always the Sea. The DVD, Preston-Dunlop, Valerie (2005) The American invasion 1962-72London: Laban, is based on Dorothy Madden's work in bringing American modern dance to the UK.