choreographer - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From choreograph + -er.
choreographer (plural choreographers)
- A person who choreographs.
1969 July 13, Lawrence M. Bensky, “Susan Sontag, Indignant, Stoical, Complex, Useful -- and Moral”, in The New York Times[1]:
"More and more, the shrewdest thinkers and artists are precocious archeologists of ... ruins-in-the-making, indignant or stoical diagnosticians of defeat, enigmatic choreographers of the complex spiritual movements useful for individual survival in an era or permanent apocalypse."
1994 September 12, Jennifer Dunning, “DANCE REVIEW; Merging Body and Spirit To Produce a Single Essence”, in The New York Times[2]:
Chandralekha, a choreographer from Madras, India, has been described as a counterculturalist who draws on elements of classical Indian dance like Bharata Natyam and on Western modern dance.
person who choreographs
- Catalan: coreògraf m
- Chinese:
- Czech: choreograf m
- Finnish: koreografi (fi)
- French: chorégraphe (fr)
- Galician: coreógrafo (gl) m
- German: Choreograph (de) m, Choreograf (de) m, Ballettmeister m, Choreographin f, Choreografin (de) f
- Greek: χορογράφος (el) m or f (chorográfos)
- Indonesian: koreograf (id), koreografer (id)
- Italian: coreografo (it) m, coreografa f
- Japanese: 振付師 (ふりつけし, furitsukeshi)
- Malay: koreografer
- Polish: choreograf (pl) m, choreografka (pl) f
- Portuguese: coreógrafo (pt)
- Romanian: coregraf (ro) m, coregrafă (ro) f
- Russian: хорео́граф (ru) m (xoreógraf), балетме́йстер (ru) m (baletméjster)
- Spanish: coreógrafo (es) m
- Swedish: koreograf (sv) c
- Turkish: koreograf (tr)