Deborah Jowitt
Deborah Jowitt is an American dance critic, author, and choreographer. Her career in dance began as a performer and choreographer. Jowitt has received several awards for her work, including a Bessie for her work in dance criticism.
Early life
Jowitt was born in 1934, hailing from California.Career
Beginning in 1967, she wrote a weekly dance column for The Village Voice, providing frequent reviews of dance performances in New York City. From some time in the 1970s until 1994, the Voice had a page and a half for dance coverage: Jowitt contributed 1600 words or a full page of this, week after week, plus occasional features. Collections of her reviews from the Voice and numerous other publications have appeared as books – Dance Beat: Selected Views and Reviews, 1967–1976 and The Dance in Mind: Profiles and Reviews 1976–1983.In 2007, Jowitt's column in the Village Voice was increased in length to 3/4 page, having been earlier reduced to a half-page; in 2008, her position as dance critic was converted from full-time to freelance. However, Jowitt continued to write 3/4 page reviews for the Voice until 2011. She was a faculty member at the New [York University Tisch School of the Arts].
Her biography of the dancer Martha Graham, Errand into the Maze, was published in 2024. Jowitt took the title from Graham's 1947 ballet of the same name.
Awards
- 1985, a special citation from the Society of [Dance History Scholars|SDHS] for The Dance in Mind
- 1988, the de la Torre Bueno Prize for the best book in the field of dance studies for Time and the Dancing Image
- 2001, the "Outstanding Contribution to Dance Research" award from Congress on Research in Dance
- 2005, a special citation from the Society of Dance History Scholars for her 2004 book, Jerome Robbins: His Life, His Theater, His Dance
- 2025, Reginald Martin Award for Excellence in Criticism from PEN Oakland for ''Errand Into the Maze: The Life and Works of Martha Graham''