762 THE SURVIVAL OF CLASSICAL MYTHOLOGY
Ferry, N.Y.: Morgan & Morgan, 1980), p. 160. Another work, danced by three males,
Bas Relief (1926, music by Cyril Scott), is also influenced by the ancient world.
- Don McDonagh, Martha Graham (New York: Praeger Publishers, 1975 [1973]), pp.
80-81 and 85. - George Beiswanger, quoted in ibid., p. 146.
- The following three Martha Graham works are easily found on video: Night Journey;
Errand into the Maze; and Cave of the Heart. The video Martha Graham, an American
Original in Performance, includes both A Night Journey and A Dancer's World, in which
she talks about her philosophy as she prepares for her role as Jocasta in a rehearsal
of Night Journey. Also Martha Graham, the Dancer Revealed presents interviews of ma-
jor figures in the world of dance and excerpts from her works. A special issue of
Dance Magazine (July 1991), devoted to Graham is particularly helpful: an article by
Virginia Brooks (pp. 62-63) discusses Graham's films and where to find them. For
these and other videos and films see Spain, Dance on Camera. - Graham, Blood Memory, pp. 212-217.
- Richard Buckle, George Balanchine, Ballet Master (New York: Random House, 1988),
p. 45. - An excerpt from Apollo is found on video: The Balanchine Library, The Balanchine Cel-
ebration, Part 1; and Ballet with Edward Villella, New York City Ballet (Coronet); also
an excerpt from Agon: Peter Martins: A Dancer. The video Stravinsky gives some em-
phasis to the collaboration between the composer and the choreographer. For these
and other videos and films see Spain, Dance on Camera. - Stephen Rebello and Jane Healey, The Art of Hercules: The Chaos of Creation (New York:
Hyperion, 1987). - The New York Greek Drama Company also offers Songs of Sappho, a re-creation in
ancient Greek of excerpts. - For an intelligent assessment see Peter W. Rose, "Teaching Greek Myth and Con-
fronting Contemporary Myths," in Martin M. Winkler, éd., Classics and Cinema (Lewis-
burg: Bucknell University Press, 1991 [Bucknell Review 35, 1]), pp. 17-39. - Erling B. Holtsmark, Tarzan and Tradition: Classical Myth in Popular Literature (West-
port, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1981).