Alastair macaulay biography of abraham lincoln

          Critic and historian of performing arts.

        1. Critic and historian of performing arts.
        2. Alastair Macaulay was the chief dance critic of The New York Times from until He was previously the chief theater critic of The Financial Times.
        3. She had been teaching throughout her Cunningham years, - dance, drama, and literature at the New Lincoln School - but now, after having given.
        4. Ashton in semi-retirement was a recurrent figure in the artistic lives of both Royal Ballet companies right up to his death in ; de Valois's involvement.
        5. The cultural enterprises of George Balanchine and Lincoln Kirstein have just lost one of their most devoted, intelligent, and generous patrons: Nancy Lassalle.
        6. She had been teaching throughout her Cunningham years, - dance, drama, and literature at the New Lincoln School - but now, after having given..

          Alastair Macaulay

          American writer and dance critic

          Alastair Macaulay is an English writer and dance critic.

          He was the chief dance critic for The New York Times from 2007 until he retired in 2018.[1][2] He was previously chief dance critic at The Times and Literary Supplement and chief theater critic of the Financial Times, both of London.

          He founded the British quarterly Dance Theater Journal in 1983. He writes that his first morning in New York City was before September 1981.[3] In addition to his roles as critic, Macaulay has written for The New Yorker[4] and also published a biography on Margot Fonteyn.[5] In 2000, he wrote Matthew Bourne and His Adventures in Dance: Conversations with Alastair Macaulay with Matthew Bourne.[6] Macaulay was named one of the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts' Jerome Robbins Dance Division Fellows in 2017.[7] As of 2019, Macaulay was an instructor