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Eleanor
Frampton
Dance
Teacher and Advocate
1896–1973
In the 1930s, Eleanor Frampton was regarded as Cleveland's
leading authority on modern dance. By the time she died in 1973,
she had become a local institution fondly known as Frampie.
Born
in Lincoln, Nebraska, in 1896, Frampton came to town in 1931 to
start a dance program at the Cleveland Institute of Music (CIM).
She was recommended to the Institute by modern dance masters Doris
Humphrey and Charles Weidman with the proviso that she polish her
technique through intensive summer training. Frampton and Weidman
had been acquainted since 1920 when both traveled from Lincoln to
Los Angeles to study at Denishawn, the school founded by modern
dance pioneers Ruth St. Denis and Ted Shawn.
| Frampton
had attended Wellesley College, earned a B.A. in physical education
from the University of Nebraska in 1918, taken summer courses
at the Perry Mansfield Dance Camp in Steamboat Springs, Colorado,
and opened a dance school in her home town. In California, she
and her lifelong friend Helen Hewitt formed a sister duo and
went into vaudeville along with fellow Denishawn dancer Martha
Graham. The sisters made their debut on November
22, 1920, and then signed a contract to tour to Australia, where
the vaudeville show folded and the two were left stranded. Working
their way home, they stopped in Honolulu and taught dance for
a year before earning enough money to return to the mainland.
Frampton opened a dance school in Oakland, California, in 1922.
For the next nine years, she continued to tour in vaudeville
and take courses in New York with disciples of German modern
dance pioneers Mary Wigman and Rudolf van Laban. |

Eleanor
Frampton, June 1939; above, in 1936 |
At
the Cleveland Institute of Music, Frampton trained a group of girls
for two years before presenting her first concert at the Drury Theatre
of the Cleveland Play House. The program featured dances choreographed
by Humphrey, Weidman, and Frampton to piano music by Debussy, Prokofiev,
and Louis Horst. Local critics praised the dancer-choreographer
for her lightness, charm, and incisive gestures. For the next few
years the student-faculty concert became an annual event.
Besides
teaching, choreographing, and performing, Frampton ran girls' basketball
and baseball teams for the Cleveland Recreation Department and gave
lectures introducing the community to new trends in modern dance.
In 1942 she resigned from CIM and took a job representing a Chicago
beauty supply house. The following year she was named director of
the Karamu Concert Dancers, an energetic ensemble that was nicknamed
Frampie's Chicks. For ten summers, she took the Karamu
dancers to the American Dance Festival at Connecticut College for
advanced training.
In
the 1950s, Frampton served as publicist for the Cleveland Institute
of Music and began a new career as a freelance dance critic for
the Plain Dealer. She also helped bring major artists to
town to teach and perform under the auspices of the Cleveland Modern
Dance Association. For more than a decade, she choreographed the
annual Anvil Revue for the Cleveland City Club. At age
63 she developed an exercise program for older women.
Frampton
won headlines not only for her work in dance, however, but also
for her battle with Mayor Karl Ertle of Cleveland Heights in 1956.
He objected to the contemporary look of the modest home that was
designed for her by noted Cleveland architect (and Arts Prize winner)
Robert A. Little. She sued the mayor and built the house.
A
trailblazer who laid the foundations for the development of modern
dance in Cleveland, Eleanor Frampton received the Cleveland Arts
Prize in 1964, the first time it was awarded in the field of dance.
text by
Wilma Salisbury
Fall 2002
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