[
UK
/kˈɔːɹɪˌɒɡɹæf/
]
[ US /ˈkɔɹiəˌɡɹæf/ ]
[ US /ˈkɔɹiəˌɡɹæf/ ]
VERB
-
plan and oversee the development and details of
The meeting between the two Presidents had been carefully choreographed -
compose a sequence of dance steps, often to music
Balanchine choreographed many pieces to Stravinsky's music
How To Use choreograph In A Sentence
- Dysfunctional families seem to be occupying the minds of Scotland's visiting choreographers.
- Its choreography is dense with invention, its dancers project a fine fierce physicality and an alert, emotional presence. Stephen Petronio Company – review
- It is a delicate task to choreograph the proceedings in such a way as to sidestep them.
- It's a magical scene, impossible to choreograph, and yet Mr. Gardner captures such instances again and again. Rocking and Rolling in the Wild, Wild East
- I do my share of driving and I had no idea all that cutting people off and speeding and changing lanes without signaling and blowing through stop signs was "choreographed"--no wonder I find driving to say nothing of cycling in New York City so irritating. People Are People: Dealing With It
- Different combinations of music, choreography, design and lighting are determined by the roll of a dice.
- Traditional dances - kozachok, hopak, metelytsia, kolomyika, hutsulka, and arkan - differ by rhythmic figures, choreography, region, and sometimes by gender, but share a duple meter.
- Kathryn led her own contemporary dance company for eighteen years and now choreographs for ballet companies nationally and internationally.
- Since choreographing Underland in Sydney, Stephen has been undertaking commissions in Sweden, Denmark, France and England through to 2005.
- The "hearts" and "love" that dot his texts and titles have a generic Valentine-card feel to them, but the passions and pulsations that animate his choreography ring with power and expressivity. Earthly Figures in the Clouds