Maxine Phyllis Munt (September 18, 1912 – February 22, 2000), American dancer, and dance educator. She was a co-founder of a modern dance company called Munt–Brooks Dance Studio, an early influencer of counterculture, and later a co-founder of the experimental theatre group, the Changing Scene Theatre. She also went by the names Maxine Munt Brooks, and Maxine Munt Pew.
Early life and education
Maxine Phyllis Munt was born on September 18, 1912, in Omaha, Nebraska. Her parents were Blanche Beale (née Bartley) and John Charles Munt.[1]
The partnership between Brooks and Munt started in the summer of 1948, they had co-directed a dance workshop at the creative arts center of Adelphi College.[4][5] They founded in 1952 the Munt–Brooks Dance Studio (or Munt–Brooks Dance Company) in New York City.[6] In September 1950, the couple married in Paris, France.[1]
In 1968, Brooks and Munt opened "Changing Scene" (or "Changing Scene Theatre"), a non-profit, theatre/dance school in Denver,[7] after closing the Munt-Brooks Dance Studio a few years prior. Everything was volunteer based and was devoted to presenting dance and theatre as well as new work in all media.[6]
In the summer of 1999, she had surgery on her knees and intestines.[8] Munt died on February 22, 2000, in Denver, Colorado, and was survived by her husband. The Changing Scene Theatre closed a month before her death.[6][8] Her archives are held at the Denver Public Library.