Access
Biography/History
Formats
Arrangement
Conditions Governing Use note
Preferred Citation
Acquisition
Title: Saida Gerrard Collection
Collection number: 0341
Date (inclusive): 1930-1980
Contributing Institution:
USC Libraries Special Collections
Doheny Memorial Library 206
3550 Trousdale Parkway
Los Angeles, California, 90089-0189
213-740-5900
specol@usc.edu
Language of Material:
English
Physical Description:
12.0 Linear feet
Location: East Library Building 239
creator:
Gerrard, Saida
creator:
Carousel Dance Theatre for Children.
creator:
Weidman, Charles
creator:
University of Southern California .
creator:
Idyllwild Arts Foundation.
creator:
University of California, Los Angeles .
creator:
Zemach, Benjamin
creator:
Heritage Dance Company.
creator:
Tzerko, Aube
creator:
Helfman, Max
creator:
University of Judaism.
Access
COLLECTION STORED OFF-SITE: Advance notice required for access.
Biography/History
Saida Gerrard: b. April 9, 1923, Toronto, Canada. d. May 4, 2005, Los Angeles, California.
Saida Gerrard was a performer, choreographer, student and teacher of modern dance. She grew up in Toronto, Canada in a family
of Russian Jewish immigrants. Her parents were amateur musicians who exposed her to music and dance at an early age. As
a child, she studied music and dance at the Hambourg Conservatory of Music in Toronto and at the Toronto Conservatory of Music,
including Dalcroze Eurythmics with Madeleine Boss Lasserre. She would go on to study dance and perform with some of the greatest
individuals in modern dance, including Vilzak-Scholler, Margaret Craske, Hanya Holm, Louis Horst, Doris Humphrey, Charles
Weidman, Martha Graham, Fe Alf, Amy Sternberg, and Benjamin Zemach.
In the late 1930s Gerrard moved to New York where she studied on scholarship with Hanya Holm at the Mary Wigman School. From
1943-1948, she studied modern dance techniques with Martha Graham. In 1945, she joined the Charles Weidman Company. During
this time she studied composition with Weidman, Louis Horst and Doris Humphrey. She was a principal dancer with the Charles
Weidman Company on three national and five East Coast tours. Gerrard performed with Hanya Holm and Weidman for a festival
at the New York City Center. She was also a principal dancer and soloist at festivals in Vermont, Massachusetts and New York.
In addition to her dance performances she served as the Assistant Choreographer and soloist with the New York City Opera in
performances of
Aida,
Traviata, and
Love of Three Oranges. From 1945-1953, she frequently returned to Canada to serve as a guest artist with the Toronto Symphony Orchestra. Gerrard
taught the Graham Technique in New York from 1945 until 1950. From 1950-1953, she taught at the Humphrey-Weidman School.
In 1953, Gerrard moved to Los Angeles with her American pianist husband Aube Tzerko. While in Los Angeles, Gerrard taught
masters classes and gave lectures, demonstrations, and workshops at USC, UCLA, the Idyllwild Arts Festival, Los Angeles City
College, the University of Judaism, Pasadena City College, as well as, a variety of other colleges and high schools throughout
Southern California. She also gave performances and lectures on Hebraic dance and modern dance with Jewish themes at many
of the Los Angeles area Jewish temples. From 1953-1960, Gerrard performed with the Saida Gerrard Theater Dance Company for
the Long Beach Symphony, the Idyllwild Arts Festival, Bovard Auditorium at USC Schoenberg Hall at UCLA and at the University
of Judaism in Los Angeles. She choreographed and performed the operas
The Consul at USC,
Secret of Suzanne at the University of Judaism, and
Hansel and Gretel for three consecutive years at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles, CA.
In 1960, Gerrard began teaching at the University of Judaism in Los Angeles. She was the Director of the Saida Gerrard School
of Contemporary Dance, where she taught technique and choreography for adults, children, actors, and singers, from 1957-1970.
From 1960-1964, Gerrard toured the West Coast with her Saida Gerrard Theatre Dance Company and performed twenty-seven concerts
under the management of Columbia Artists. She choreographed and performed with a group of thirty dancers. Her company performed
New Exodus with symphony and choir at the Santa Monica Civic Auditorium in Santa Monica, and at the Shrine Auditorium and Wilshire-Ebell
Theater in Los Angeles. She choreographed
Don Giovanni in 1964, for the first season of the Los Angeles Opera, which was then called the Los Angeles Civic Grand Opera, at the new
Dorothy Chandler Pavilion. From 1965-1969, Gerrard continued to perform and choreograph her works such as
Marais and Miranda at the Morgan Theater in Santa Monica;
Pimpinone at Royce Hall, UCLA; and
The Bartered Bride at the Shrine Auditorium, Los Angeles. In 1973, she staged two Los Angeles performances,
The Measure Taken by Bertolt Brecht at the Mark Taper Forum and
The Golem at the Gindi Auditorium. The following year she staged sixteen performances as the Director of Dance for Theater Arts Program
of Los Angeles. In 1975, Gerrard received a grant from the California Arts Commission, which she used to stage a performance
of
Ancestral Memories, music by Aaron Copland, with the Theater Dance Company at the Gindi Auditorium in Los Angeles.
Gerrard began working in Aspen, Colorado in 1971. She taught, studied, danced, and staged performances there until 1977.
She choreographed contemporary opera and works by Mozart, Stravinsky, and resident composers; attended seminars at the Institute
for the Humanities; and conducted summer workshops for Colorado Mountain College. In 1971, Gerrard became the Director and
teacher of dance and choreography for the Aspen Music School and Opera. She would continue in this position until 1977.
In 1977, Gerrard again focused her work in the Los Angeles area. She taught dance and choreography at the University of Judaism,
where she also served as the Chairwoman of the Modern Dance Department, and at the Immaculate Heart College in Los Angeles
from 1977-1980. In 1980, she began teaching dance and choreography at Loyola Marymount University, Los Angeles. She was
also the Founder, Director and Choreographer for the Saida Gerrard Heritage Dance Company, which performed at the Immaculate
Heart College, Temple Judea, University Synagogue, Temple Emmanuel, Stephen Wise Temple, and the Leo Baeck Temple, all of
which are located in Los Angeles. The Heritage Dance Company focused on works related to her Jewish heritage.
Saida Gerrard's commissions included choreographed oratorios for the New York Philharmonic Chorus and the Toronto Peoples
Chorus;
Song of Miriam for the Detroit Folk Choir;
New Exodus (Di Naye Hagode) for the Chicago Philharmonic Chorus and the Los Angeles Philharmonic Choir; and a grant from the California
Arts Commission to choreograph
Ancestral Memories. She performed as a soloist and principal dancer with the Toronto City Orchestra; Chicago Chamber Orchestra; Detroit Little
Symphony Orchestra; Detroit Folk Choirs; Carnegie Hall and Town Hall Concerts, New York; and the Charles Weidman Theatre Dance
Company. Gerrard served as the Director for the Carousel Dance Theatre for Children and the Mrs. John D. Rockefeller, III,
Dance School; the Saida Gerrard Heritage Dance Company; the Aspen Music School and Opera; and the Modern Dance Department
at the University of Judaism. She was the founder of the Sutro-Syler Dance Studio; the Carousel Theater; and the Heritage
Dance Company. Her performances included
Death and Transfiguration(1935);
Dance Suite-Songs of Unrest (1935);
Sea Shanties (1937), set to music composed by her husband, Aube Tzerko; and
Die Naye Hagodah (1949), choreographed to Max Helfman's choral tone poem.
Saida Gerrard retired from dancing in 1989. Her husband Aube Tzerko passed away in September 1995. While in retirement Gerrard
continued to promote dance and the arts in education. She remained in Los Angeles until her death in 2005. She is survived
by her niece, Lisa Gerrard, who donated her aunt's papers to USC.
Formats
Advertisements
Audiotapes
Clippings
Correspondence
Costumes
Dance Cards
Dance Notation
DVD-Video discs
Ephemera
Letters (Correspondence)
Music--Scores
Notebooks
Performance Contracts
Photographs
Programs
Publications
Video Tapes
Arrangement
Arranged by series: I-XXIX are arranged alphabetically by dance title; XXX-XXXVIII are arranged by format and contain materials
associated with more than one dance or those not identified with a specific dance. Subseries are arranged into fourteen categories.
Conditions Governing Use note
Researchers must follow copyright restrictions when using materials in the archives as part of their own research and publication.
Preferred Citation
[Identification of item], Saida Gerrard Collection, Special Collections, USC Libraries, University of Southern California
Acquisition
Donated by Lisa Gerrard, Saida Gerrard's niece, September 4, 2007.
Subjects and Indexing Terms
Weidman, Charles
Gerrard, Saida
Wigman, Mary, 1886-1973
Gerrard, Saida
Hanya, Holm, 1893-1992
Dancers
Choreography
Choreographers
Modern dance
Dance