Cesare Negri

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Cesare Negri (c. 1535- c.1605) Italian dancer and choreographer. He was nicknamed il Trombone, a perjorative or jocular name for someone "who likes to blow his own horn." Born in Milan, he founded a dance academy there in 1554. He was an active court choreography for the nobility in Milan. He wrote Le Grazie d'Amore, the first text on ballet theory to expound the principle of the "five basic positions". It was republished in 1604 as Nuove lnventioni di Balli (New Inventions of the Dance).


This article about someone associated with the art of dance is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.
In other languages