Pytt Geddes

Pytt Geddes (born Gerda Meyer Bruun; 17 July 1917 4 March 2006) was responsible for bringing t'ai chi to the UK.[1] She taught classes at The Place in London, UK.

She was born in Bergen, Norway the daughter of a successful businessman and politician who served in the Norwegian government as Minister of Trade. During the Second World War, she joined the Norwegian Resistance.

After she and David Geddes married in 1948, they moved to Shanghai, where she discovered t'ai chi. Soon after, the People's Liberation Army took power there. Around 1951, they were able to move to Hong Kong, where she studied t'ai chi with Choy Hawk Pang, and then with his son Choy Kam Man.

She became a friend of Benjamin Britten and Peter Pears.

She studied psychology in the USA and underwent Reichian analysis in Oslo.

Publications

  • Looking for the Golden Needle: An Allegorical Journey (Paperback) by Gerda Geddes
    • Paperback, 124 pages, MannaMedia (1991) ISBN 1-872606-01-6
    • Paperback, 116 pages, Paul H Crompton Ltd (1995) ISBN 0-9525104-0-5

References

  1. Frank Woods. "Title", Gerda 'Pytt' Geddes, Dancer in the Light, Retrieved on 2008-08-18.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.