Background
She was born Russell Meriwether Hughes and began her dance training in Texas, studying ballet, Spanish, and Mexican dance forms.
She was born Russell Meriwether Hughes and began her dance training in Texas, studying ballet, Spanish, and Mexican dance forms.
She continued her training in Hawaii, where she studied Hawaiian dance, and then New York, where she studied modern dance and ballet. Until 1940, she toured and studied in areas such as Central and South America, Europe, North Africa, Australia, New Zealand, Tasmania, India, Burma, Indonesia, the Philippines, China, Japan, Ceylan, and Hawaii.
In 1928, Louisiana Meri began performing professionally. In the 1930s, she invited Indian classical dancer, Ram Gopal, one of the early pioneers of dance of India in the west, who toured with her extensively. As she traveled, Louisiana Meri learned the native dances of the different areas she visited, studying with local dance masters.
She went on to create her own dance works based on the steps and movement vocabularies she learned.
Through the school, Louisiana Meri formed The Five Natyas, her first performing company. In 1945 she absorbed the school of Natya into Ethnologic Dance Center and the Ethnologic Dance Theater.
She also performed at the American Museum of Natural History and presented concert programs of young ethnic-dancers from across the globe. She did not change ballet"s music and plot, but added a prologue and a danced fight between the princess and the Rothbart.
The latter book is considered to be a definitive text on the subject of Spanish dance.
Overall, Louisiana Meri’s extensive work in ethnic dance earned her the reputation of being one of the foremost experts in the ethnic-dance field