Vaslav Nijinsky, a dance prodigy and the star of Serge Diaghilev’s company Ballets Russes, shocked Europe when his groundbreaking work Le Sacre du Printemps ("The Rite of Spring") premiered in 1913. Choreographed to Igor Stravinsky's musical composition of the same name, Sacre caused a near-riot at its premiere in Paris at the Théâtre des Champs-Élysées and received only six performances. Sacre is an iconic work with enduring legacy even today. Stravinsky's music appears in pop culture phenomena like Disney's Fantasia, and prominent figures in the dance world continue to restage their own versions of Le Sacre to audiences worldwide, but Nijinsky's original steps have not survived. Nobody knows exactly what the original dance looked like. So why do choreographers keep constructing their own versions of Sacre? To answer this question, I researched four different modern versions of the dance: the Joffrey Ballet and Millicent Hodson's 1987 reconstruction of Nijinsky’s original choreography, Pina Bausch's Rite of Spring, Molissa Fenley's State of Darkness, and Jürg Koch's Rite of Spring, which premiered at the University of Washington last winter. I analyzed the sweeping themes apparent in each dance, regardless of the varied choreography, and compared them with what remains of Nijinsky's original ballet and artistic vision. Through interviews, historical archival research, and my own physical embodiment of aspects of each dance, I am making an effort to piece together Sacre's impact and continued allure, positing the history of Le Sacre as anything but a straight line.