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Crossword clues for choreographer

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
choreographer

1829, from choreography + -er (1). Choreographist (1857) did not thrive. In Greek, a person who trained a chorus was a khorodidaskelikos.

Wiktionary
choreographer

n. A person who choreographs.

WordNet
choreographer

n. someone who creates new dances

Usage examples of "choreographer".

But it's a ballsy fight-scene up there on the stage having been intricately choreographed by an Oriental guy Himself rented from some commercial studio and put up in the HmH, who ate like a bird and smiled very politely all the time and didn't have even a word to say to anybody, it seemed, except Avril, to whom the Oriental choreographer had cottoned right off balletic and full of compelling little cornerings and near-misses and reversals, and the theater's audience is rapt and clearly entertained to the gills, because they keep spontaneously applauding, as much maybe for the film's play's choreography as anything else which would make it more like spontaneously meta-applauding, Hal supposes because the whole fight-scene has to be ingeniously choreographed so that both combatants have their respectively scaly and cream-complected backs155 to the audience, for obvious reasons .

An empty body waiting to be filled by the bid of choreographers and composers?

Nick and I, along with Mark and Marianne," she glanced briefly at two choreographers, "have outlined a tentative program.

The Corojumi were also choreographers, and we know that when the Quaggima was restless, the Corojumi designed dances that soothed her.

I see so many different styles of dance tangled together into one “dance” that I wonder whether the choreographers really know the different genres of dance anymore.

I've heard that it started because the great choreographer George Ballanchine wanted his corps de ballet (all the dancers who aren't the stars) to look alike.