Byline: MICHAEL ECK Staff writer
Woody Guthrie met Marjorie Greenblatt Mazia in New York City in 1942. He was a fireplug folksinger recently blown in from the West, and she was a Martha Graham dancer.
Mazia was already working with choreographer Sophie Maslow on a new piece called ``Folksay,'' which aimed to set American folk tunes to modern dance. Some of the songs were culled from Guthrie's album ``Dust Bowl Ballads,'' and the young dancer was sent with a friend to his apartment to ask if he would perform live as part of the show.
``Ah, the love story starts,'' says Nora Guthrie, the couple's youngest daughter, with a chuckle.
``I think …
