has gloss | (noun) someone who creates new dances choreographer |
lexicalization | eng: choreographer |
subclass of | (noun) a person who grows or makes or invents things creator |
has subclass | e/Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo choreographers |
has subclass | c/Australian choreographers |
has subclass | c/Ballets Russes choreographers |
has subclass | c/British choreographers |
has subclass | c/Choreographers by nationality |
has subclass | c/Choreographers from Melbourne |
has subclass | c/Choreographers of The Royal Ballet |
has subclass | c/Contemporary dance choreographers |
has subclass | c/Estonian choreographers |
has subclass | c/Filipino choreographers |
has subclass | c/Greek Choreographers |
has subclass | c/Indian film choreographers |
has subclass | c/Italian choreographers |
has subclass | c/Lebanese choreographers |
has subclass | c/New Zealand choreographers |
has subclass | c/Romanian choreographers |
has subclass | c/Scottish choreographers |
has subclass | c/So You Think You Can Dance choreographers |
has subclass | c/Taiwanese choreographers |
has subclass | e/Diamond Project |
has instance | (noun) United States choreographer noted for his use of African elements (born in 1931) Alvin Ailey, Ailey |
has instance | (noun) Cuban dancer and choreographer (born in 1921) Alicia Alonso, Alonso |
has instance | (noun) British choreographer (1906-1988) Sir Frederick Ashton, Ashton |
has instance | (noun) United States dancer and cinema actor noted for his original and graceful tap dancing (1899-1987) Fred Astaire, Astaire |
has instance | (noun) United States dancer and choreographer (born in Russia) noted for his abstract and formal works (1904-1983) George Balanchine, Balanchine |
has instance | (noun) Russian dancer and choreographer who migrated to the United States (born in 1948) Baryshnikov, Mikhail Baryshnikov |
has instance | (noun) United States dancer and choreographer (born in 1922) Merce Cunningham, Cunningham |
has instance | (noun) United States dancer and choreographer who introduced formal dance to a wide audience (1905-1993) Agnes de Mille, Agnes George de Mille, de Mille |
has instance | (noun) United States dancer and choreographer whose work was noted for its austerity and technical rigor (1893-1991) Graham, Martha Graham |
has instance | (noun) Russian choreographer (1834-1905) Ivanov, Lev Ivanov |
has instance | (noun) United States dancer and choreographer (born in 1944) Judith Jamison, Jamison |
has instance | (noun) United States choreographer (1930-1988) Robert Joffrey, Joffrey |
has instance | (noun) United States dancer who performed in many musical films (1912-1996) Kelly, Eugene Curran Kelly, Gene Kelly |
has instance | (noun) Hungarian choreographer who developed Labanotation (1879-1958) Rudolph Laban, Laban |
has instance | (noun) French choreographer and ballet dancer (born in Russia) (1895-1979) Leonide Fedorovitch Massine, Massine, Leonid Fyodorovich Myasin |
has instance | (noun) United States choreographer who brought human emotion to classical ballet and spirited reality to Broadway musicals (1918-1998) Jerome Robbins, Robbins |
has instance | (noun) United States dancer and choreographer who collaborated with Ruth Saint Denis (1891-1972) Shawn, Ted Shawn |
has instance | (noun) United States dancer and choreographer who collaborated with Ted Shawn (1877-1968) Ruth Saint Denis, St. Denis, Saint Denis, Ruth St. Denis |
has instance | (noun) innovative United States dancer and choreographer (born in 1941) Twyla Tharp, Tharp |
has instance | (noun) United States dancer and choreographer (born in England) (1909-1987) Tudor, Antony Tudor |