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Ailes Gilmour

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Ailes Gilmour was among the young pioneers of the American Modern Dance movement of the 1930's. Her half-brother is Isamu Noguchi the American sculptor.

Ailes was born in Yokohama, Japan in 1912. Her mother, Leonie Gilmour was an American ex-patriate living in Japan nd working as an English teacher and writer. Ailes older brother is Leonie Isamu Noguchi the American sculptor.

Leonie Gilmour \, Ailes mother had met Yone Noguchi, while Yone he was living in New York. He trying to get his poetry published and at first she worked for him as his editor. Isamu was born after Yone had gone back to Japan but Leonie believed they were married. However, when Leonie got to Tokyo, she discovered that Yone already had children and another family.

Leonie's daughter was born in Japan in 1912. Leonie chose her daughter's name from the poem Beauty's a Flower" by Moira O'Neill. a pseudonym of Agnes Shakespeare Higginson It is a striking coincidence that the words in that poem seemed to predict Ailes destiny as a dancer. Moira wrote, "Ailes was girl that stepped on two bare feet..." Indeed dancing barefoot like Isadora Duncan became important in modern dance.

Ailes' father was not Yone Noguchi. Ailes said in a biographical statement she gave to Marion Horosko for Horosko's book about Martha Graham that her father was a Japanese poet. It seems that neither Ailes nor Isamu knew the identity of Ailes' father.

According to Masayo Duus in her biography of Isamu, , Ailes' son found a page in an old notebook which might have referred to Ailes' father. However, the corner of the paper where a signature would be written had been torn off.

Ailes grew up in a little Japanese style house that Leonie had built in Chigasaki, a seaside town near Yokohama. Isamu as a boy actually worked with the carpenter on its construction. Ailes was remembered by neighbors in Chigasaki as a happy child who liked playing in the garden, chasing butterflies and cicadas.

In 1920 Leonie managed to return to San Francisco with Ailes. Isamu is still in high school in LaPorte, Indiana. He gets accepted into Columbia University's pre-med program in 1922.

Leonie and Ailes also go to live in New York City. Leonie sends Ailes to the Ethical Culture elementary school where she herself had been a student. It was founded in 1876 by Felix Adler, as professor of Philosophy at Columbia University and champion of many educational and social reforms of the Progressive movement. Leonie herself had studied at Bryn Mawr College and the Sorbonne in Paris. For her daughter, Leonie chooses the Cherry Lawn School in Connecticut. It was one of the first progressive, co-educational boarding schools. The director of the school was Dr. Christina Stael von Holstein, a descendant of the famous Madame DeStael of the Napoleonic era. Her husband, Dr. Boris Bogoslovsy had been an official in the Kerensky government and later served an observer at the Nurenberg trials. He taught science at Cherry Lawn.

In 1928, Ailes was the literary editor of The Cherry Pit, the Cherry Lawn's student magazine. She graduates in 1929 and gets a scholarship to the Neighborhood Playhouse to study dance and performing arts. There she met the young Martha Graham and joins her professional dance troupe. Ailes told Marion Horosko that she introduced Martha Graham to her brother, Isamu, in 1929. At the time he was trying to make a living in New York City taking commissions for portrait busts. Martha had a bust made of herself in bronze.


On December 31, 1933 Ailes mother, Leonie Gilmour dies in the charity ward of New York's Bellevue Hospital. The cause of death was listed as pneunomia but years of poverty and hardship must have taken their toll. Isamu made a Japanese style unglazed haniwa statue to guard Leonie's grave. Isamu and Ailes put a small gravestone for their mother in her family burial plot in Cypress Hills cemetery in Brooklyn. Isamu's renown and success as an artist was to come many decades later.

During the Depression Era, artists struggled like Ailes and Isamu struggled to find work. In 1932 Radio City Music Hall opened. Ailes performed for its debut with the Graham company in a piece called Choric Patterns. Its run lasted only one week.


Ailes name appears in dance programs with a dancer-choreographer named Bill Matons . Ailes and Matons performed in a WPA dance recital at the Brooklyn Museum in 1937. They were in Adelante, a WPA sponsored Broadway musical in 1939. Matons was the director of the "Experimental Unit" of the New Dance League. This organization evolved from the Workers Dance League between 1931 and 1935, Among the group's members were male dance-choreographers like Jose Limon and Charles Weidman. Matons is credited with arranging the choreography for the Lenin Peace pageant at Madison Square Garden.

Ailes was married to Herbert J. Spinden. Ailes son is Jody Spinden.

Additional Reading

Duus, Masayo. The Life of Isamu Noguchi: Journey without Borders. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2004.

Horosko, Marian. Martha Grahm: The Evolution of Her Dance Theory and Training. University Press of Florida, 2002.

Noguchi, Isamu. A Scupltor's World. New York: Harper and Row, 1968.

  1. Horosko, Marian. Martha Graham: The Evolution of Her Dance Theory and Training. University Press of Florida, 2002
  2. Duus, Masayo. The Life of Isamu Noguchi: A Journey without Borders. Princeton University Press, 2004
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