Award-winning German choreographer Pina Bausch dies at 68

Published Tuesday June 30th, 2009

BERLIN - Pina Bausch, a German choreographer known for her pioneering work, died Tuesday. She was 68.

Click to Enlarge
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS/Frank Augstein, File
In this Oct. 22, 2007 file photo, German dance theatre choreographer Pina Bausch is seen during a news conference in Duesseldorf, western Germany. World famous German choreographer Pina Bausch died Tuesday morning, June 30, 2009, the Wuppertal Dance Theater announced. She was 68.

The Wuppertal Dance Theatre in western Germany, where she had served as director, announced the death. It did not give the cause, but said Bausch's "unexpectedly fast" death came five days after a cancer diagnosis.

"We have lost with Pina Bausch a wonderful artist, a world class dancer and choreographer and last but not least a prominent representative of German culture," German President Horst Koehler said in a statement.

Born on July 27, 1940, in Solingen, Germany, Bausch started her dance studies at the Folkwang School in Essen and trained at the Juilliard School of Music in New York.

She danced at the New American Ballet and the Metropolitan Opera in New York before returning to Germany in 1962.

Back home, Bausch joined the Folkwang Ballet in Essen, where her own choreography became part of the program in 1968. Five years later, she became director and choreographer of the newly founded Wuppertal theatre.

An innovative creator of striking, absurdity scenes, Bausch won Britain's Laurence Olivier Award in 2006 for outstanding achievement in dance. She was honoured for her productions "Carnations" and "Palermo Palermo."

In 2007, she won Japan's Kyoto Prize for arts and philosophy for her pioneering work in developing a new genre of ballet.

The Wuppertal theatre said Bausch and her company last appeared on stage in the German city June 21.

Details of survivors and funeral arrangements were not immediately available.

 

Disabled

Commenting has been disabled for this item. Existing comments appear below but you may not add a new comment at this time.
Advertisement
Advertisement

Search Articles