Robin Howard (born May 17, 1924, London, Eng.—died June 12, 1989, London) was a British ballet enthusiast and dance company founder who promoted modern dance in England.
Howard, grandson of Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin and the eldest child of Sir Arthur and Lady Lorna Howard, studied at Eton College and served in World War II as a lieutenant in the Scots Guard (1942–45), until he sustained injuries that resulted in the loss of both his legs. In 1945 he resumed his education at Trinity College, Cambridge, and passed the bar examination to become a lawyer, but he never practiced; instead he entered the hotel and restaurant business. In 1956 he formed the Hungarian Department of the United Nations Association in England to assist refugees, and he served as its director of international service (1956–63).
Howard became a full-time patron of modern dance in 1963, beginning with his sponsorship of performances by the Martha Graham Dance Company, a troupe that he first encountered in 1954. He persuaded Graham to return to Britain to appear at the 1963 Edinburgh Festival and in a London engagement. Following the company’s successful tour, he established Graham-inspired classes, and by 1967 he had founded the London Contemporary Dance Group (afterward renamed the London Contemporary Dance Theatre) and the Contemporary Dance Trust, of which he was director general (1966–88) and life president (1988–89). In 1969 Howard founded a London dance school complex known as The Place.