Tudor: Antony

: He used classical ballet to explore adult themes like social repression, heartbreak, and private longing.

: He spent over 20 years on the faculty of The Juilliard School , where he was arguably the most influential dance teacher in the school's history. Signature Choreographic Works Theme / Significance Jardin aux Lilas (Lilac Garden)

A later, more abstract work that showed his style could extend beyond pure psychology into lyrical simplicity. antony tudor

: Known as a "prickly" and demanding perfectionist, he often tormented his dancers to find the exact "quality" of a movement rather than just technical perfection.

: Born in London, he began his career with Marie Rambert's Ballet Club before moving to the US in 1939 to join the American Ballet Theatre (ABT). : He used classical ballet to explore adult

A dark, Freudian study of a sex murderer, featuring characters like "drunks on a London street".

Antony Tudor (1908–1987) was a transformative figure in 20th-century ballet, widely credited with creating the "psychological ballet". Unlike the grand, fairytale spectacles of the classical era, Tudor’s works focused on the internal emotional lives and repressed desires of "real people". : Known as a "prickly" and demanding perfectionist,

Often cited as the first "psychological ballet," depicting an illicit affair and social repression.