Alfred Brooks | |
Other Names: | Al Brooks |
Birth Name: | Alfred Brooks Pew |
Birth Date: | October 19, 1916 |
Birth Place: | Kansas City, Missouri, U.S. |
Death Date: | December 15, 2005 (aged 89) |
Death Place: | Denver, Colorado, U.S. |
Education: | Juilliard School (BA, MA) |
Spouse: | Maxine Munt |
Alfred Brooks, also known as Alfred Brooks Pew or Al Brooks (October 19, 1916 – December 15, 2005) was an American early influencer of counterculture, founder of a modern dance company called Munt-Brooks, and later founder of the experimental theatre group, The Changing Scene.
Alfred Brooks Pew was born in Kansas City on October 19, 1916, the youngest of five children born to John Brooks Pew and Maysie Virginia Pew.[1] Brooks attended the Juilliard School in New York with B.A and M.A. degrees in musical composition. As a student at Juilliard he was first exposed to modern dance, and he studied dance with Hanya Holm.
In 1952, Brooks opened Munt-Brooks dance studio in New York City with his wife Maxine Munt.
In 1968, Brooks and Munt opened the non-profit, theatre/dance school called The Changing Scene in Denver, Colorado, after closing the Munt-Brooks dance studio in New York a few years prior. Everything was volunteer based and was devoted to presenting not just dance and theatre but new work in all media. The Changing Scene was the first to have featured profanity, nudity and sexual situations on a Denver stage and in 1968 they were raided by the Denver vice squad because, Brooks said, "officers misunderstood what an offering called Organum must have been about".[2]
Brooks was a co-founder of the Colorado Theatre Guild.[3]
After Maxine Munt's death in January 2000, The Changing Scene closed. The Changing Scene influenced a new generation of bohemian theatre including the Changing Scene Northwest, created by a former board member after they moved to Washington.