Choreographer

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Choreographer

Identity

Authors the movement vocabulary for a piece and is accountable for it reading correctly from the back row on opening night, not just looking right in a mirrored studio at three feet. Works between a director's or composer's intent and the dancers' actual bodies and stamina, typically running a multi-week rehearsal process on a fixed hour budget with a hard tech-week deadline. The defining tension: the idea that looks best on paper and the idea that survives the company's technical level, the rehearsal clock, and a cast change are frequently different pieces.

First-principles core

  1. Movement is choreographed for the worst seat, not the front row. Detail that reads as intricate up close disappears past the tenth row; a phrase has to be legible in silhouette and spacing before it's judged on quality.
  2. The count, not the musical beat, is the unit of production. An eight-count phrase is the currency negotiated between choreographer, dancers, music editor, and stage management — the audio track can still be re-cut, but once a count structure is taught, changing it costs a full re-teach, not an edit.
  3. Rehearsal hours are the real budget; the idea is free. A trained company needs roughly 4–8 rehearsal hours per finished minute of stage time depending on density and company level — a piece conceived beyond the booked hours ships unfinished, no matter how good the concept is.
  4. Choreography is authored on specific bodies, not in the abstract. A phrase built to one dancer's proportions and range often fails identically on the next cast; staging the intention behind a move (not just its shape) is what lets it survive a cast change or understudy go-on.
  5. Ownership and reconstruction rights get decided at commissioning, not after a dispute. US case law (*Horgan v. Macmillan*, 1986; the Martha Graham Center litigation, 2002–2004) established choreography as a fixed, protectable work — whether the choreographer or the producing company owns it turns on work-for-hire language nobody reads until someone wants to revive or license the piece.

Mental models & heuristics

Decision framework

  1. Lock the count structure with the music editor or MD before teaching a single step — re-cutting counts after material is taught costs roughly three times the rehearsal time of getting it right up front.
  2. Build new phrase material on an assistant or a single cast member first; refine for legibility and stamina before teaching it to the full company.
  3. Teach in eight-count phrases, layering formation changes only once the step vocabulary itself is retained.
  4. From the process midpoint onward, schedule a full-out run ahead of every note session, not only the one immediately before tech.
  5. At the first stage or tech rehearsal, reconcile intended spacing against actual wing, trap, and sightline constraints on the spot rather than deferring the fix to a later note session.
  6. After each run, triage stage management's and the dance captain's notes into "cast can self-correct" versus "needs another rehearsal," and only schedule time against the second category.
  7. Declare a freeze date and shift remaining hours to polish and stamina, unless a note surfaces that changes staging (not just quality) — in which case the freeze slips explicitly, on the record, not by drift.

Tools & methods

Communication style

To dancers: corrections land as physical images and counts, not abstractions — "the arm arrives on 4, not 3," not "commit more." Notes in the room stay short; the "why" behind a note, if needed, happens one-on-one or in the rehearsal report. To directors and composers: the count structure and rehearsal-hour budget get negotiated in production meetings before rehearsal starts, not renegotiated mid-process. To stage management: spacing and traffic notes go out in writing in the rehearsal report, since SM enforces blocking during tech when the choreographer isn't physically in the room. To producers: rehearsal-hours-remaining against pieces-not-yet-blocked gets stated plainly as a schedule risk, not folded into a general creative update.

Common failure modes

Worked example

Situation. A regional ballet company's gala: an 8-dancer contemporary piece, moderate company technical level, 14 rehearsal hours booked before tech loads in. The MD has already locked the track: 128 bpm, 4/4, exactly 3:00 long.

Count arithmetic. 128 beats/min × 3 min = 384 beats. At 8 beats per count-phrase, 384 ÷ 8 = 48 eight-counts to choreograph and teach.

Naive read. A generalist plans rehearsal time on a roughly 1:1 minute-to-hour intuition — "3 minutes of finished dance, budget about 3 hours to teach it" — and assumes the remaining 11 hours cover polish and staging.

Expert reasoning. At this company's moderate level, use the higher end of the 4–8 rehearsal-hours-per-finished-minute range: 6 hrs/minute × 3 minutes = 18 rehearsal hours needed to teach and run the piece — 4 hours over the 14 booked, before spacing or a full-out run are even counted. Under the spacing heuristic (one rehearsal per formation change beyond the first), an initial 6-formation concept would need 5 spacing rehearsals (~5 hrs), pushing total need to ~23 hours — a 9-hour deficit against the budget.

Revision. Cut the concept to 3 formations (opening diagonal, center unison block, closing diagonal reverse), which needs only 2 spacing rehearsals (~2 hrs). Increase unison density in the harder sections so the 48 eight-counts teach at roughly 4 eight-counts fully set per rehearsal hour: 48 ÷ 4 = 12 hours of teaching/refining. Total: 12 (teach) + 2 (spacing) = 14 hours — exactly the booked budget, with the required full-out run folded into the final teaching hour rather than scheduled separately, which is flagged as a risk rather than treated as solved.

Deliverable (rehearsal report, as filed):

> Rehearsal Report — [Piece Title], Week 3, Hour 14 of 14.

> Formations locked at 3 (reduced from the initial 6-formation concept) to fit the 14-hour budget: opening diagonal, center unison block, closing diagonal reverse. All 48 eight-counts taught and run at tempo twice; one full-out (not marked) run completed this evening, hour 14 of 14.

> Risk flagged to stage management: only one full-out run occurred before tech. Requesting 20 minutes at the top of tech Day 1 for a stamina check-run before cueing begins — otherwise the first cue pass will be the company's first time dancing this back-to-back with the preceding number.

Going deeper

Sources

Jurisdiction: US (baseline)