Hazel Chung
Status: --unk--
Specialty: Indonesian
Range: Indonesian, African
Hazel Chung
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Hazel Chung was a teacher Indonesian and African dances. One of the venues she taught was the Santa Barbara Folk Dance Conference.

Hazel was married to Mantle Hood, who established the Institute of Ethnomusicology at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) in the early 1960s. Hood had visited West Africa on two occasions and, on each visit, had taken Ghanaian drumming lessons and had taught Indonesian gamelan music. Hazel learned some of the Ghanaian dances and taught courses on Southeast Asian dance. On his last visit, Hood, with Chung, shot footage in Ghana and Nigeria for his classic film, Atumpan: The Talking Drums of Ghana (released in 1964).

Among Hazel's publications is:

  • Dances of the Three-Thousand-League Land, by Alan C. Heyman, rev. by Hazel Chung Hood.

Dances Ms. Chung taught include Badju Kurung, Sampang Dua-Belas, and Tari Ptring.


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