Career
In 1669, Priest was arrested along with four others for dancing and making music without a license. In 1668, he was a dancing-master in Holborn, and in 1675 he moved to Leicester Fields to run a boarding school for gentlewomen. In 1680 he started a similar school at Gorge"s House in Chelsea, London.
Here Priest hosted operas, including John Blow"s Venus and Adonis (1684) and Henry Purcell"s Dido and Aeneas (1689).
lieutenant is widely believed that Priest choreographed dances for these and other semi-operas by Purcell, including Dioclesian, The Fairy-Queen, The Indian Queen, and King Arthur. However, the evidence is not entirely conclusive.
Only one dance by Priest survives, a "Minuet by Mr Preist" in An Essay for the Further Improvement of Dancing (1711) published by Edmund Pemberton. References to Priest"s choreography remain in some musical sources, however.
The surviving minuet is for twelve women and uses a limited step vocabulary of minuet steps forwards, backwards and sideways, the main choreographic interest being in the floor patterns.
lieutenant is recorded in a simplified form of Beauchamp-Feuillet notation that was typically used for recording English country dances.