Marian van Tuyl explained

Marian van Tuyl
Other Names:Marion van Tuyl, Marian van Tuyl Campbell (after marriage)
Birth Name:Marian Elizabeth Tubbs
Birth Date:October 16, 1907
Birth Place:Wacousta, Michigan
Death Date:November 10, 1987
Death Place:San Francisco
Nationality:American
Occupation:Dancer, choreographer, dance educator, writer, filmmaker

Marian van Tuyl (October 16, 1907 – November 10, 1987), born Marian Tubbs, was an American dancer, dance educator, writer, and choreographer.

Early life and education

Marian Elizabeth Tubbs was born in Wacousta, Michigan, the daughter of Charles Samuel Tubbs and Mary Elizabeth McLaughlin Curry Tubbs. Both of her parents attended Oberlin College. Her father, a Congregational minister,[1] died by accidental drowning when she was young.[2] Her mother, who later became a psychology professor at the University of Michigan, remarried in 1914, and Marian Tubbs used her adoptive father Frank Foster van Tuyl's surname thereafter.[3] [4]

Van Tuyl attended the University of Michigan, where she earned a bachelor's degree in education in 1928.[5] While she was an undergraduate at Michigan, she was "chairman of dances" for the Junior Girls' Play Committee, "dancing manager" of the Women's Athletic Association Board, and an active member the Women's Physical Education Club;[6] she was also the model for a mural, "Young American Womanhood", in a women-only lounge area on campus.[7] She studied dance with Martha Graham, Hanya Holm, Doris Humphrey, and Louis Horst.[8] [9]

Career

Van Tuyl taught dance and directed musical productions at the University of Chicago from 1928 to 1938.[10] While in Chicago, she was one of the founders of the Chicago Dance Council.

She taught at Mills College in California from 1938,[11] when previous dance program head Tina Flade left to marry.[12] Under van Tuyl's leadership, the dance program became an independent academic department, instead of being housed in the Physical Education department. "The only thing we share with physical education is the space and the showers, and dancers are too busy to take many showers," she once explained. Like Flade, she often collaborated with composers in the Mills College community, including Darius Milhaud, Henry Cowell,[13] Lou Harrison, and John Cage.[14] From 1935 to 1947, she performed and toured with her group, the Marian van Tuyl Dance Company. She made two "experimentalist dance films", Horror Dream (1947) and Clinic of Stumble (1948); the former involved a score by John Cage.[15]

She was the longtime editor and publisher of Impulse: An Annual of Contemporary Dance, from 1951 to 1970, and from that published An Anthology of Impulse (1969).[16] She also wrote Modern Dance Forms in Relation to the Other Arts, and was an editor of the Dance Research Journal.[17] She served on the California Arts Commission, and was a founding member of the Congress on Research in Dance. She was a fellow of the Bennington Dance Festival.[18]

Personal life

Marian Van Tuyl married Douglas Gordon Campbell, a psychiatrist. They had three children, Bruce, Robert, and Gail. She was widowed in 1983, and she died from cancer in 1987, in San Francisco, aged 80 years.[19] John Cage contributed a composition to her memorial service. Her papers are in the special collections library at Mills College. There is a recorded 1977 oral history interview with her in the Jerome Robbins Dance Division of the New York Public Library.[20]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Congregational Michigan. 1907. 76. en.
  2. Book: Oberlin Alumni Magazine. 1910. Oberlin College for the Alumni Association.. 463. en.
  3. Web site: Van Tuyl, Marian (1907-1987), dance educator. Ross. Janice. American National Biography. 2000. en. 10.1093/anb/9780198606697.article.1801175. 978-0-19-860669-7. 2020-04-11.
  4. Book: Groenendijk, R. L. Van Tuyl and J. N. A.. A Van Tuyl Chronicle: 650 Years in the History of a Dutch-American Family. 1996. Rory Van Tuyl. 616. en.
  5. Web site: Marian van Tuyl Papers. Online Archive of California. 2020-04-11.
  6. Book: Michiganensian. 1927. UM Libraries. 481, 482, 497. en.
  7. Web site: Feminine ideal. Tobin. James. 2017-04-21. Michigan Today. en-US. 2020-04-11.
  8. Book: Legacy in Dance Education. Cambria Press. 978-1-62196-886-3. 80–83; quote on page 81. en.
  9. News: Modern Dance Artists Coming. 1939-01-22. The Spokesman-Review. 2020-04-11. 18. Newspapers.com.
  10. News: Van Tuyl Recital Billed in S. F.. 1939-02-26. Oakland Tribune. 2020-04-11. 19. Newspapers.com.
  11. Jewell. Margaret. May 1939. News from the Dance Section. Journal of Health and Physical Education. 10. 9. 303. 10.1080/23267240.1939.10623692.
  12. Joffe-Block. Jude. Summer 2019. A Free-Spirited Life Launched by Dance. Mills Quarterly. 10–11.
  13. Miller. Leta E.. 2002-03-22. Henry Cowell and modern dance: the Genesis of elastic form. American Music. en. 20. 1. 1–25. 10.2307/3052241. 3052241.
  14. Web site: Cage and Contemporary Choreographers – It's Less Like an Object and More Like the Weather. Northwestern University. 2020-04-11.
  15. Web site: Marian Van Tuyl, A Dancer, Educator And Writer, Is Dead. Dunning. Jennifer. 21 November 1987. The New York Times. 34. en. 2020-04-11.
  16. Book: Van Tuyl, Marian. Anthology of Impulse; annual of contemporary dance, 1951-1966. 1969. Dance Horizons, Inc. 0-87127-017-X. Brooklyn. 15446.
  17. Tuyl. Marian Van. December 1970. Notes From the Editor. Dance Research Journal. en. 2. 2. 3–4. 10.1017/S0588735600050028. 247327247 . 0588-7356.
  18. Book: McPherson, Elizabeth. The Bennington School of the Dance: A History in Writings and Interviews. 2013-06-13. McFarland. 978-1-4766-0295-0. 129. en.
  19. News: Schermerhorn. James. Marian Van Tuyl. 1987-11-13. The San Francisco Examiner. 2020-04-11. 23. Newspapers.com.
  20. Web site: Interview with Marian Van Tuyl. NYPL Digital Collections. en. 2020-04-11.