- Ted Sannella
Ted Sannella (
August 14 ,1928 –November 18 ,1995 ) was a professionalsquare dance ,contra dance andinternational folk dance caller and choreographer who was active in the region surroundingBoston, Massachusetts ,USA .Early life and career
Ted Sannella was born in
Revere, Massachusetts . He graduated from Revere High School in 1945, and in 1949 graduated from Tufts College in Medford, Mass., receiving degrees inbiology andchemistry . He worked as pharmacist at Richardson Drug in Concord, Mass., for many years. He retired after 35 years as a pharmacist and moved to Wiscasset, Maine, in 1989. He diedNovember 18 ,1995 , at the age of 67.Dance career
Sannella devoted much of his adult life to traditional
New England dance as a caller,choreographer ,dancer , and leader. He began calling professionally in 1946 and organized dance series in Cambridge, Westport, andConcord, Massachusetts , and in his final years, North Whitefield, Maine. He was influential as a revered and well-liked caller, as a choreographer through his social dance compositions and books, and via his cheerful attention to teaching about the pleasures of joy and style in social dance. His vigor, energy and perspective influenced many callers and dancers, and his dance compositions are regularly seen today at contra dances, 20 and 30 years after their original composition.Sannella was long involved with the New England Folk Festival Association (NEFFA) as a leader and board member. He served as president of NEFFA and the
North of Boston Callers Association and was also on the board of the nationally-orientedCountry Dance and Song Society . His contributions to social dance were recognized via honorary or life memberships in theFolk Arts Center of New England and theCountry Dance Society , Boston Centre. [ [http://www.neffa.org/sannella.html Obituary] ] His multi-faceted and generous involvement with dance and dance leadership, experience and longevity, earned him the moniker "The Dean of New England Callers."One of Sannella's memorable choreographic innovations, inspired by the three-couple
English country dance triplets, was to compose triplets suitable to contra dance tempo reels and jigs. His 41 published triplets were commonly known as "Ted's Triplets." Triplets are still sometimes composed and are seen on the dance floor.Sannella was very interested in the history of dance, and he possessed an extensive collection of 500-plus dance books and more than 3,000 recordings. He was a careful note-taker, and his dance cards indicate his opinion of the best tunes to go with each dance. His archive consisting of published materials, 50 boxes of personal papers and his dance cards, invaluable to any American folk-dance researcher or present-day caller, is now in the possession of the
University of New Hampshire special collection entitled the "New Hampshire Library of Traditional Music & Dance." [ [http://www.izaak.unh.edu/nhltmd/sannella.htm UNH New Hampshire Library of Traditional Music and Dance] ]Publications
*
*cite book | last = Sannella | first = Ted | authorlink = Ted Sannella | coauthors = | title = Swing the Next: A second collection of squares, contras, triplets and circles in the New England tradition, with music for each dance. | publisher = Country Dance and Song Society | date = 1996 | location = Northampton, Massachusetts | pages = | url = | doi = | id = | isbn = 0-917024-05-2
*cite book | last = Sannella | first = Ted | authorlink = Ted Sannella | coauthors = | title = Calling Traditional New England Squares | publisher = Country Dance and Song Society | date = 2005 | location = Northampton, Massachusetts | pages = | url = | doi = | id = | isbn = 0-917024-16-8
*cite book | last = Jennings | first = Larry | authorlink = | coauthors = Dan Pearl and
Ted Sannella | title = The Contra Connection & Basically for Callers: Reprints from the Country Dance and Song Society NEWS (2nd Edition) | publisher = Country Dance and Song Society | date = 2004 | location = Northampton, Massachusetts | pages = | url = | doi = | id = | isbn = 0-917024-14-1References
External links
* University of New Hampshire, New Hampshire Library of Traditional Music & Dance: [http://www.izaak.unh.edu/nhltmd/sannella.htm Ted Sannella]
* David Smukler's [http://www.davidsmukler.syracusecountrydancers.org/ Index of Ted Sannella's published dances]
* The annotated bibliography for [http://www.cdss.org/sales/annot_biblio.html Ted Sannella's "Swing the Next"]
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