Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 July 2014
1. An honorary Board of Trustees— Conseild'Administration—also includes Erick Aschengreen (Denmark), Ivor Guest and Madeleine Inglehearn (Great Britain), Marie-Françoise Christout (France), Bengt Häger (Sweden), as well as representatives from Belgium, Holland, Spain, Portugal and France. Membership in the Association is 250FF, which is high in comparison with other European and American associations.
2. PatriziaVeroli told me that when her abstract was accepted for the Conference, she was informed that French and English (and not Italian!) were the official languages, and that there would not be any translations.
3. In Stockholm, Erik Näslund had insisted that English—only—be the Conference language in order to insure a good Scandinavian attendance. The Barcelona Conference promises to have simultaneous translation from and into Spanish, Catalan and English.
4. The proceedings of the Turin Conference are in the process of being published and will make up the next issue of La Danza Italiana. While this will undoubtedly be a more attractive solution than the usual camera-ready copy, I personally prefer having the papers available for purchase at the beginning of the Conference, as was the case in Stockholm.
5. Pontremoli, Alessandro and La Rocca, Patrizia, Il ballare lombardo (Milan: Vita e Pensiero, 1987)Google Scholar.
6. Published in Paris by the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique; re-edition, 1978.
7. Published in Turin by the Istituto Bancario San Paolo di Torino.
8. I wish to thank Concetta Lo Iacono for clarifying certain aspects of Elizabeth Souritz's presentation, as well as generously providing me with other information—from Russian sources—on Adelina Giuri's life.
9. Enzo Cosimi, Lucia Latour, Virgilio Sieni, Fabrizio Monteverde, and the “Sosta Palmizi” group.
10. Quoted, with permission of the author, from her letter to me dated Oxford, 31 October 1993.