In January 1963 Kinch and her dance company performed at the
Newport, Rhode Island Civic Music Association. Her dance repertoire was composed of
satire and spoofs. She lampooned diverse subjects like
bullfighting, a weary circus dancer, a family of acrobats, and stereotypes of classic ballet. Kinch performed through the 1960s. She regularly toured with dancer Ralph McWilliams and composer-pianist Manuel Galea. Galea became her husband. Kinch was praised as one of
the brightest and most imaginative of American dancers. Critics admired her
ultramodern and daring routines. Among her popular parodies were
Tomb For Two,
Bolero For A Bad Bull,
A Waltz Is A Waltz Is A Waltz, and ''Giselle's Revenge''. The latter was a well researched rendition of the excesses of
Giselle, the
Romanticism period ballet. Among the more candid works she choreographed were two popular dances for
Ted Shawn, modern dance innovator and founder of Jacob's Pillow. In
The Bajour Shawn played a gypsy king. He also had the lead in her
Sundered Majesty, which was based on
King Lear. ==Death==