Tag Archive | "ballet"

Why Do I Have to Take Ballet?


By Laura Di Orio.

Becoming a professional dancer is like building a house from the ground up. You can’t start by adding the roof and interior decorations; rather, you must start by creating a solid foundation to support the structure and make it last. Similarly, a dancer must establish that foundation in technique before adding all the “tricks” and performance quality. And that foundation, according to many dance teachers and professionals in the field, is ballet.

“Because ballet has been constantly evolving for over 400 years, it has arrived at a very solid method of developing human movement potential for the stage,” says Stephen Pier, director of the Dance Division at The Hartt School of the University of Hartford, located in Connecticut.

“It’s still the most relevant technical training all around and can serve as a very effective way of organizing and developing the facility of the dancer. Most other techniques or styles have not been around that long. They are too limited to be the sole basis of training, and they haven’t worked out the science and art of dancing to the depth that ballet has.”

All of Pier’s students are required to take daily ballet class during their four years at Hartt. Ballet has proven to inform their dancing, and students have gone on to work in a vast range of professional companies – from Paul Taylor and Joffrey Ballet, to downtown contemporary and Las Vegas.

Like Pier, Dawn Hillen, master ballet teacher who currently teaches in NYC at Steps on Broadway, Broadway Dance Center and Ballet Arts, stresses the importance of ballet as a foundation of training. She says even her non-ballet-focused students have benefited. Some of her students who first started in hip-hop and found ballet later, for instance, said they felt definite improvement in their ability to change weight quickly, hit clean lines faster, focus and stay in the moment, and they became physically and mentally stronger.

Dawn Hillen leads a ballet class at Broadway Dance Center

Dawn Hillen leads a ballet class at Broadway Dance Center. Photo by Fiamma Piacentini Huff.

“You can use ballet to refine yourself,” Hillen says. “It creates a dancer or performer who is centered, balanced, lengthened and physically graceful. Just standing up is an art form, and it is a big part of your first impression. There have been a number of pre-professionals who were not getting work, and once they added ballet training to their daily or weekly routines, they began getting callbacks and jobs.”

Ballet contributes more to a dancer than just refined technique, too. Pier says ballet also imparts skills like “attention to detail, mastery, form, harmony, precision, discipline, social grace and awareness of the group – all skills that help young people succeed in the adult world.”

In addition, Yuka Kawazu, who has been teaching ballet in NYC for 15 years at various studios, including Ballet Arts and Broadway Dance Center, says, “We learn so many things, like patience, discipline, a different language, how to breathe, and we share joyful moments with other dancers.”

For these reasons, it is probably best to introduce ballet early on in a dancer’s training, to establish these skills in his/her dance and life. “If you really have the dancer’s best interest at heart, you must offer a proper ‘diet’ of training, and ballet is a big part of that good ‘diet,’” says Pier. “Not everyone is going to like broccoli if they’re used to eating candy all the time, but you might find some great recipes for serving it more tastefully.”

Still, some students may complain that ballet is “boring” or that learning the basics of technique is “slow.” In actuality, however, ballet is rigorous and demanding and a practice that requires great physical and mental control. To change a dancer’s approach from ballet as “boring” to ballet as “interesting” or “enjoyable,” Pier suggests taking a look at that dancer’s passion. Perhaps he/she is more focused on jazz. Then how can ballet support that passion, and what does ballet have in common with that passion?

Yuka Kawazu corrects a young dancer in her ballet class

Yuka Kawazu corrects a young dancer in her ballet class. Photo courtesy of Yuka Kawazu.

“Sometimes it’s good to show them how many successful artists in that field have studied ballet,” Pier says. “I like to point out in ballet class how different steps or phrases or movements relate to other dance techniques that I know a student is really turned on by.”

Similarly, as a teacher, Hillen says that when students come to her with the “ballet is boring” attitude, she tries to discover what they want, what they value and what drives them, and then she connects ballet to that. 

“The dancer can use this same approach on themselves to link up what they love with what they may need to do that, at first, seems ‘boring’,” Hillen adds. “Ask yourself what you want and what you like and how ballet is actually a means to creating those things.”

Many of Kawazu’s students are young Broadway professionals, and she says they have all come to realize the importance of ballet training to their career. Her teenage students have performed on Broadway in Finian’s Rainbow, Mary Poppins, Billy Elliot, Beauty and the Beast, Evita, Once, The Little Mermaid and more. 

Kawazu says she has had students who didn’t want to take ballet but should of in order to better their performing career. “I tell them that it’s okay to make a lot of mistakes and then they’ll learn,” she continues. “I mix between trying to make ballet fun and teaching more seriously. I would like them to feel that they can get better when they repeat the same exercises a few times. And when they hold their balance or can do the step, I see their face glow. I love that moment!”

In today’s dance world, where dancers are expected to be versatile, it probably doesn’t hurt every dancer, regardless of his/her concentration, to explore other dance forms. But it is the old tradition of ballet that seems to make the difference between dancer and professional. 

“Ballet is the ‘grandmother’ of them all in the Western world,” Pier says. “This system has evolved over centuries and has survived and absorbed every fad imaginable. It has great wisdom and logic imbedded in it, which every dancer should learn about. It’s not important whether or not you think you will become a ballet dancer. It is very important, however, that you become educated about your art and respect all of its various practices and practitioners.”

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Dance Quiz – Ballet Terminology


Test your ballet terminology.

By Rain Francis.

1.   What does piqué mean?

a)     To pick
b)     To prick
c)     To stick
d)     To click

2.     If you were doing a fondu, how many legs would you be standing on?

a)     One
b)     Two
c)     None

3.     Who was the ‘royale’ (or changement battu) allegedly named for?

a)     Nijinksy
b)     Nijinksa
c)     Pavlova
d)     Louis XIV

4.     Which of the following means ‘to fall’?

a)     Tombé
b)     Chassé
c)     Jeté
d)     Pas de bourrée

5.     Which of the following is commonly considered a step to be performed by a male dancer?

a)     Fouetté en tourant
b)     Tour en l’air
c)     Glissade
d)     Grand battements

6.     If you were travelling de côté, in which direction would you be going?

a)     Forwards
b)     Backwards
c)     Sideways
d)     Diagonally

7.     Where would you find your jambes?

a)     At the end of your arms
b)     Attached to your hips
c)     On your shoulders
d)     In your ballet shoes

8.     Which body parts are primarily involved in épaulement?

a)     Head, neck, shoulders
b)     Waist, hips, hands
c)     Feet and legs
d)     Arms and legs

9.     Which of the following is not named for an animal?

a)     Pas de chat
b)     Pas de cheval
c)     Pas de bourrée

10.  True or false?

Frappé means ‘to whip’.

Answers:

1 – b; 2 – a; 3 – d; 4 – a; 5 –b; 6 – c; 7 – b; 8 – a; 9 – c; 10 – false.

Photo © Dmitri Mihhailov | Dreamstime.com 

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The Miami HEAT courts The Miami City Ballet


By Chelsea Thomas.

Professional basketball players and prima ballerinas might have a lot of differences – height, build, training and skills being some – but they also have a lot of similarities, including acute grace and finesse, utmost strength and physical prowess, as well as drive and passion.

These parallels between basketball players and ballerinas have recently been the inspiration for a photo campaign between the Miami City Ballet and Miami HEAT.

Celebrating 25 years of mutual athleticism, the organizations came together for a series of studio-based photographs featuring MCB principal dancers Jeanette and Patricia Delgado with Miami Heat stars LeBron James and Dwayne Wade.

LeBron James and Jeanette Delgado

Jeanette Delgado of Miami City Ballet with LeBron James of Miami Heat. Photo by David Alvarez

MCB Artistic Director Lourdes Lopez said the campaign was an “incredibly important” way to recognize these neighboring organizations and to applaud the athletes that generate them. She also drew parallels between basketball and ballet.

“Ballet and basketball are both about grace under pressure and the pursuit of perfection,” Lopez explained. ”No Miami City Ballet dancer stands alone just as HEAT players can’t win alone. It requires teamwork—and that’s Miami!”

During the photo-shoot, Jeanette Delgado was paired with LeBron James while her sister Patricia Delgado was paired with Dwyane Wade. Jeanette, who was once heralded by The New York Times as “one of the world’s most marvelous ballerinas,” is pictured holding the basketball while James towers behind her. Likewise, Patricia, who The New York Times said “can catch the audience’s heart from her first entry and hold it,” expresses a playful nature with Wade – him standing with his arms crossed while she strikes a pose in the foreground.

While the final photos are basic, simple images lacking any complexity, they will now serve as an important centerpiece for a local and national campaign to promote the arts scene on Miami’s Biscayne Boulevard.

Basketball star Dwyane Wade of Miami Heat with ballerina Patricia Delgado of Miami City Ballet

Patricia Delgado of Miami City Ballet with Dwyane Wade of Miami Heat. Photo by David Alvarez

MCB’s Public Relations Manager Roberto Santiago said the partnership between the company and the HEAT first took form last year. “Essentially, it is the city’s best sports team and the city’s best performing arts company joining together to celebrate the best that each has to offer in the city that made it possible,” he surmised.

Michael McCullough, HEAT Executive Vice President and Chief Marketing Officer, also pointed out that the campaign is a reflection of a past collaboration between the organizations. About 25 years ago, an image of HEAT basketball player Billy Thompson posed with a MCB ballerina was made into a poster. “We had the idea to replicate that,” McCullough said in a television news interview.

Miami HEAT superstars Dwayne Wade and LeBron James thought the idea was neat.

“What these ladies do, as far as being ballerinas, is unique,” James said. “It’s great to have a couple of pictures with them in their poses—poses I’d never be able to get into!”

Wade added, “It’s always good for our fans to see something different out of us; to see us interact in a different way. We feel at times we’re like graceful dancers in the air so it’s good to put the two worlds together.”

On Sunday, February 10, the HEAT welcomed Jeanette and Patricia to their game against the Los Angeles Lakers. There they participated in various activities.

Lopez believes this exposure is important for the company, and all dance companies, because many people dissociate dancers from being athletes. This tends to create a great divide between the physical worlds of sports and dance, and ballet in particular.

“I think it is incredibly important because for the most part people don’t think of dancers as athletes. Now you have these athletes which are graceful and these dancers that are athletic,” Lopez said.

For more information on the campaign, visit www.MiamiBalletandBasketball.com.

Photo (top): Patricia Delgado of Miami City Ballet with Dwyane Wade of Miami Heat. Photos by David Alvarez, courtesy of Miami City Ballet and Miami Heat.

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Flashdance Bound for Broadway


The Fox Theatre, Atlanta
February 5, 2013

By Deborah Searle.

After a not so successful season in London in 2010, Flashdance the musical has been reworked and now has a second chance to wow audiences in a US tour before hitting Broadway later in the year.

A stage version of the 80s cult classic movie, Flashdance tells the story of “Alex”, a steel worker by day and club dancer by night who dreams of being a trained, professional dancer. With a story all about dance, it’s no wonder there are many dance scenes, which was great for this dance lover.

The slogan for the musical is “One girl, one dream, one chance”, but the musical is really about a group of characters and their dreams and aspirations, and it took a huge team to create and successfully get this musical back to the stage. A colorful 80s explosion, Flashdance effectively took us back to the era of leg warmers, MTV music videos, and musical hits like “Maniac” with fitting choreography, sets and costumes.

With everything from ballet, jazz and hip-hop, to even break dance and pole, Flashdance features a wonderfully talented ensemble of versatile dancers.  The strength of the dance component was the large ensemble numbers where the dancers were all very neat and committed to every step, oozing 80s pizazz. Sometimes the 80s feel seemed a little forced, but the dancers gave a lot of energy and life to the steps. Many of the dancers probably don’t even remember the 80s! The ballet scenes were also a strong point of the production.

Flashdance The Musical. Photo by Kyle Froman

Emily Padgett as ‘Alex’ with the dancers of ‘Flashdance The Musical’. Photo by Kyle Froman

Some of the solo jazz dance numbers by the lead cast left me a little disappointed, however, with bent legs in an aerial cartwheel, a lack of turnout and extension when needed, and hops in pirouette.  That said, the lead performers, led by Emily Padgett as ‘Alex’, were all very talented actors and singers. Emily Padgett has a stunning voice and was a joy to listen to. She was very believable as the young, sassy ‘Alex’.

A few scenes were dissatisfying. The iconic, sexy scene where Alex sits on a chair and pulls a chain to shower herself with water, felt rushed and like it was just squashed into the program right before intermission. I was disappointed that this very memorable scene didn’t have more build up or resonance. Sadly, the pivotal final audition scene where Alex dances a jazz number for a panel of judges was poorly staged. The judges were on the side of the stage and Alex danced facing them, instead of facing us in the audience. This made it harder for us to feel engaged by her performance and left the dance number feeling a little flat.

The music is infectious and a feast of 80s classics like “Maniac”, “Manhunt”, “I Like Rock and Roll” and the movie title song “Flashdance- What a Feeling”, and the show is really quite fun and entertaining. Unfortunately though, I wasn’t blown away. I heard mixed reviews from the audience, but I was happy to hear people saying “I want to go dancing now”, as they left the theater. If Flashdance can inspire people to dance, then it’s definitely achieved something that we dancers can’t complain about.

Photo: Emily Padgett as Alex in Flashdance The Musical. Photo by Kyle Froman.

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Ballet: Method to Method


By Laura Di Orio.

Ballet has been around since the Italian Renaissance courts of the 15th century. It has shifted and molded according to history and the different cultures and people who have embraced the art form, and its traditions continue to be taught and learned all over the world. Over the centuries of ballet’s worldwide travels, several different schools, or methods, have been established, each one with its own notable characteristics and stylistic differences. Here, Dance Informa looks at several of those schools of ballet and what sets each apart.

The French School

From Italy, ballet spread to the French courts during the time of Louis XIV, in the 17th century. Seeing as the majority of the ballet vocabulary is in French, this shows that this time in history was very important in the development of the art form. The French School of ballet training stresses cleanness, fluidity and elegance. As the focus of this technique is on great speed and quantity of steps, the music is played more slowly.

Famed dancer Rudolf Nureyev, who also directed the Paris Opera Ballet, played a major role in defining and leading the French School of ballet. During the time of his leadership at Paris Opera Ballet, Nureyev also choreographed alternate versions of such classic ballets as La Bayadère, Swan Lake, Romeo and Juliet, Raymonda, Cinderella and Sleeping Beauty.

Bournonville Method

The Bournonville ballet technique was devised by Dane August Bournonville, who trained with his father, Antoine, and other French ballet masters. He was strongly influenced by the French School of ballet. Some characteristics of the Bournonville method include: a graceful épaulement, with the upper body often twisting toward the working leg; a lowered eye-line to exude kindness; extreme attention to the placement of the arms (often in a preparatory fifth position); quick footwork; a contrast between the speed of the legs and the grace of the upper body; pirouettes in a low leg position; and little visible effort.

Dancers such as Erik Bruhn, Nikolaj Hübbe and Johan Kobborg were trained in the Bournonville method, and the Royal Danish Ballet, which originated in 1748 and was once directed by Bournonville, still contains many Bournonville ballets in its current repertoire.

Vaganova Method

Agrippian Vaganova, a Russian ballet dancer born in 1879, devised her own method of teaching ballet, now known as Vaganova technique. A dancer with the Marinsky Ballet, Vaganova retired early in her career, in 1916, to focus on her teaching. Qualities in the Vaganova method include expressiveness of port de bras, where all parts of the arm (from hand to elbow to shoulder) are important; extreme flexibility, but in an artful way; and a mobile lower back. Dancers trained in this technique are taught to be strong and clean, without stiffness.

Some of the greatest dancers, including Anna Pavlova, Natalia Makarova, Nureyev and Mikhail Baryshnikov, were trained through Vaganova’s pedagogy. Vaganova believed in precision within the teacher’s instruction, and the Vaganova Ballet Academy continues to have high demands for its students.

Cecchetti Method

The Cecchetti method of ballet technique was formed by Enrico Cecchetti, an Italian ballet master. Its focus lies mainly in anatomy, and the hope for those studying the method is that they learn to dance by internalizing rather than just imitating. Qualities of the Cecchetti method include: balance, poise, line, strength, elevation, elasticity, musicality, artistry, clarity and purity.

The Cecchetti training system has levels from beginner to professional, and during this progression new movements are only added once other movements have been mastered and refined. The hope within this training system is that dancers become well-rounded and versatile.

Royal Academy of Dance

The Royal Academy of Dance (RAD), an international dance examination board, was established in London, England, in 1920. Its method of ballet is known as the English style and is a merging of Italian, French, Danish and Russian methods. RAD’s focus is on attention to detail when learning ballet’s basic technique. As a result, progression from level to level in this method is slow, as difficult steps are only taught once a maximum level of technique is achieved.

The RAD offers two training programs for students: the Graded Examination Syllabus, which consists of 10 levels and incorporates classical ballet, free movement and character dance; and the Vocational Graded Syllabus, a more demanding, ballet-focused path designed for older children and young adults who desire a career in professional dance.

Balanchine Method

A more recent ballet style in the history of ballet is the Balanchine method, a style invented by choreographer George Balanchine and one most widely used in the United States. Dancers trained in the Balanchine method are taught to utilize more space in less time, which results in increased speed, height and length. Characteristics of this style include: extreme speed, a deep plié, an emphasis on line, en dehors pirouettes taken from a lunge in fourth position with a straight back leg and an athletic dance quality.

Balanchine leaned toward a more neoclassical style, with a focus more on the dance and less on a plot. Today, the Balanchine method is taught at the School of American Ballet, the official school of New York City Ballet, as well as at the schools of Miami City Ballet and Pennsylvania Ballet, among others.

Top photo: © Andrew Ross | Dreamstime.com

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The 30th Anniversary of NYC Landmark Peridance Capezio Center


By Leigh Schanfein.

He knew that this was what he wanted to do. Not for a few years, not until the money ran out or until he’d made a name for himself, but indefinitely. He knew. And now, 30 years later, Igal Perry and the flourishing community of Peridance Capezio Center celebrate a milestone as one of the largest open dance studios in the U.S.

Dance students, teachers, and choreographers come from all over the U.S. and internationally to train, share, and perform at Peridance, with more than 700 individuals walking through the doors each day, choosing from a myriad of diverse dance styles, from ballet to tap to hip-hop and everything in between. It wasn’t an easy road to take; building a dance studio from the ground up requires a vision, dedication, support, and an excellent faculty.

“He took something from nothing…he’s a visionary,” shares Graciela Kozak, one of Peridance’s beloved instructors who has been teaching on the ballet faculty for 28 years. Graciela and Igal have known each other for about 40 years, a lifetime of dancing and working together. In fact, she danced in the first piece he ever choreographed at Bat-Dor Dance Company in Israel, and performed as part of the original Peridance Contemporary Dance Company (then the Peridance Ensemble) founded by Igal in 1984. She began teaching at Peridance the next year and has since found it to be a second home to her.

Igal Perry Peridance Capezio Center New York

Igal Perry with a student from the School at Peridance. Photo by Jaqlin Medlock

“You feel like you’re part of a family. So many people have come through the doors here and come together. It’s the way that the place is run… it’s the open door policy. We have focus. It’s a place where people come to be a dancer.  There is consistency, stability. It’s like a generation who have been coming, and it’s kind of amazing.”

Igal Perry came to the U.S. from Israel in the 1970s when he worked as a dancer, ballet master, choreographer, artistic director, and repetiteur. And while founding a dance studio was not his first endeavor in the U.S., it had been on his mind.

“When I came here, there were not actually any big schools with open classes. There were some but on a small scale, and most of them were not for different styles; they had a concentration, for example mostly ballet. There was a need, and when I had the opportunity I jumped on it.”

He then went around to various studios in NYC to recruit the best teachers he could get, who brought with them their excellent reputations and student base. Of course, Igal taught as well. “My first class, the first day Peridance opened, I had two students! They knew me from having taught at another studio before. I think my next class had four, so that’s pretty good growth!”

The first ten years found the Center operating in the red, and Igal turned to his parents for support, some financial but mostly encouragement and advice. Leaving it’s first high-rent location and moving into a new building on 13th Street just south of Union Square in NYC’s East Village helped turn Peridance’s financial situation around. Eventually, in 2010, Peridance moved into its third and expectedly permanent home, a historic landmark building also on 13th Street just east of its previous dwelling and still in the vicinity of Union Square. Throughout its 30 years, Peridance never left the neighborhood, and this helped make the area a destination for dance.

ballet class New York, Peridance Capezio Center

A dance class at Peridance Capezio Center New York. Photo by Anna Sednova.

“We always struggled with getting the students to come down here. We sort of fell between the cracks…but we kept going forward with quality. Once we moved to [our current location] we did become a focal point, not just in this area but in the whole of New York and nationally. Now people don’t consider it out of the main stream.”

It may be Peridance’s local, national, and international blend that makes it so unique and contributes greatly to its longevity.  Students literally come from all over the world to take open classes and workshops at Peridance, and students enrolled in it’s various international professional training programs hail from more than 30 countries. Igal himself comes from Israel and is based in NYC, and keeping his home at Peridance allows him the opportunity to choreograph and teach around the world, and to then bring the world back to Peridance. He takes what he sees, hears, and feels in other places and gives it back to his students. Igal’s perspective is that art is not something local, it is global.

“Peridance brings in artists from all over the world. We are a hub of international art and are not just aware but a part of what is happening in the world.  Peridance was the first school that had formal classes in hip-hop. Same thing with workshops with international choreographers and master teachers. We started that trend. Now everyone does it, and we do it better! We don’t look to imitate others. We look for originality and ask, what is it that is needed now?”

Another artist who has benefitted greatly from Igal’s international sensibility who is now an integral part of the Peridance family is Yarden Ronen, Director of Development and PR and Executive Director of Peridance Contemporary Dance Company.  Yarden has known Igal for about 13 years, since Igal was invited to be a guest choreographer once again at Bat-Dor where Yarden was dancing.

“He chose me to do a principal role in his piece and we became friends. That role really affected my life, so I’ve always had a really warm place in my heart for Igal,” he said.

When Yarden was dancing in NYC, he guested with Peridance Contemporary Dance Company several times and, in 2008 when Yarden was ready to stop performing, he called Igal for advice about moving on to a career after dancing. Their collaboration led to a new career path that kept Yarden within the field of dance but off the stage. “I did not want to teach and choreograph. I felt like I could contribute to the dance community, to dance education, to the artistic endeavor of dance overall much more as an arts director and administrator. I am very lucky because Igal lets me express myself, find my own voice and get creative. And now [as Executive Director] with the dance company it’s a lot of work but it’s quite amazing.”

And, what can we expect for the next 30 years?  After a huge Gala and festivities in the coming year, Peridance Capezio Center will continue to expand upon the definition of the dance studio.  They will strengthen the continuum from children’s program to pre-professional training to professional collegiate-level training to professional company.  They will expand the reaches of its resident Peridance Contemporary Dance Company, and make a name for its in-house Salvatore Capezio Theater.  Of course, Igal will continue to teach his open ballet classes each weekday morning and rehearse his company in the afternoon.  When asked about how many more anniversaries Peridance might have, Igal responds, “It’s really very fulfilling.  Another 30 years would be great!”

To find out more about Igal Perry and Peridance Capezio Center’s offerings as well as events for the 30th Anniversary, visit peridance.com.

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Misty Copeland of ABT


Misty Copeland, cover model for Discount Dance Supply, talks about life as a professional ballerina.

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Tom Gold Dance: A Fresh Face on Classical Dance


By Stephanie Wolf.

The New York dance scene is saturated with burgeoning choreographers and dance companies, giving Manhattinites an overwhelming catalogue of dance happenings to attend on any given night.  With so much established and new dance in the city, how is an ambitious choreographer to stand out?

Recognizing this surplus of dance, former New York City Ballet Soloist Tom Gold has decided to follow a less conventional approach to showcasing his choreography. By building an international touring company, Gold has succeeded in establishing a global presence with his troupe of dancers and avoided getting lost in the crowd. Now, riding on recent momentum from sold-out performances at the Guggenheim in Bilbao, Spain, Tom Gold Dance is evolving rapidly and ready to make its balletic mark on American soil.

Tom Gold Dance's Russell Janzen and Likolani Brown

Tom Gold Dance's Russell Janzen and Likolani Brown

The origins of TGD are almost out of the movies; glamorous and serendipitous. He formed the troupe in 1999 when he was invited to bring a group of dancers to the South of France. Word spread quickly and, shortly after, acclaimed international ballerina Alessandra Ferri asked Gold to help her assemble dancers to tour Italy.  From there, the Guggenheim in Bilbao extended an invitation to TGD and the company just completed its fourth year of performances as part of the museum’s Works & Process series. One opportunity led to the next, including tours to Bermuda, upstate New York, and more recently, Israel. Now Gold had a fledgling company. He enjoys the process and being “in charge of his life…and able to call the shots”—rather than at the mercy of an artistic staff’s creative will.

Yet founding a ballet company has not always been Gold’s ambition. He began experimenting with choreography in his high school years at the Chicago Academy for the Arts. But when Gold moved to Manhattan to join the New York City Ballet, “choreography took a back seat.” He asserts, “I’ve always loved dancing and choreographing,” but he was fully focused on dancing during his performing career. It wasn’t until well into his time with New York City Ballet that the choreographic itch came back into his life.

In a trend of edgy, contemporary dance, Gold sticks to what he knows best, classical ballet.  His company performs “ballet at its best [with] beautiful movement and beautiful dancers.” The repertoire is a “nice range of American ballet,” including works by George Balanchine, Jerome Robbins, Twyla Tharp, as well as Gold’s own choreography. There’s usually a narrative because Gold loves to use movement to tell a story, and he often pulls his choreographic inspiration from music. “I always try to do something that is challenging, educational, but entertaining for the audience. I want the audience and dancers both to have a great time,” he says enthusiastically, “like sugar, but it’s educational. It goes down easy but it will teach you something.”

Currently, the company is mostly comprised of dancers from major companies like New York City Ballet, American Ballet Theatre, and Pacific Northwest Ballet. But Gold hopes to build his own roster of dynamic artists and, eventually, bring in more emerging choreographers. It’s still in “the infant stage,” but prospering rapidly. Recently TGD gained its nonprofit status and is now actively fundraising to enable more domestic performances and expansion.

Tom Gold DanceThe company is based in Manhattan, using the city as a “springboard.” And while Gold intends to build a stronger national presence, particularly in New York, he loves travel and believes “global growth” will always be at the heart of Tom Gold Dance.

Down the road, the company has a lot to look forward to. At the beginning of November, it tours to Cuba for the International Ballet Festival of Havanna, performing works by Tharp, Balanchine and Gold. It’s a huge honor for the troupe as the festival is one of the oldest of its kind in the world and occurs only every two years. Additionally, Gold plans to expand the company’s New York performance season and there is the possibility of a tour to Hawaii in 2014. Energized and excited for the future of his company, Gold’s passion for choreographing, his dancers, and the art form in general shines through. His infectious attitude will surely take the troupe far.

Top photo:
Tom Gold Dance’s Amanda Hankes, Sara Mearns and Abi Stafford. Photo by Arthur Elgort.
Photos courtesy of Dan Dutcher Public Relations.

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American Amber Miller of Eifman Ballet, Russia


By Rebecca Martin

Eifman Ballet is arguably Russia’s most exciting modern ballet company. The company’s namesake, director and choreographer, Boris Eifman, is considered the face of modern dance in Russia. His company comprises young, slim, and acrobatic dancers that are tall with long limbs – the minimum height for females is 174cm and males is 185cm.

The company’s only non-Russian dancer is America’s Amber Miller, who has trained with Ellison Ballet’s Professional Training Program in New York City and won first place in both contemporary and classical categories at the Youth America Grand Prix.  She was also featured on the web series Dance 212 which followed Amber’s training and life prior to her appointment with Eifman Ballet.

Dance Informa managed to catch Amber during her vacation before getting stuck into rehearsals for an international tour

You turned down a contract with Houston Ballet in the US to join Eifman Ballet.  What was it about Eifman Ballet that enticed you?

Deciding to turn down Houston Ballet and join Eifman Ballet was a difficult decision for me. Houston Ballet is such an amazing company with many talented dancers and is extremely close to my home in Dallas. I never, in a million years, thought I would have the chance to go to Russia, let alone dance in a Russian company. So, when I was offered the contract from Eifman Ballet, I felt I couldn’t turn it down. Boris Eifman is such an imaginative choreographer and all of his ballets are so different from anything else out there. Getting the chance to be a part of the Eifman Ballet company and perform throughout the world at many of the great theatres has been an incredible experience!

Amber Miller of Eifman Ballet

Amber Miller of Eifman Ballet. Photo by Rachel Neville

What professional/dance challenges have you encountered since joining Eifman Ballet?

I went to school at Ellison Ballet in New York City and we mainly focused on pure classical ballet. Edward Ellison, the owner and Director of Ellison Ballet, does a tremendous job with pre-professional dancers and he gave me the skills necessary to dance professionally. Coming to Eifman Ballet was a little difficult at first because it is mainly contemporary, so I had to learn how to loosen up and use my technique in a different way while learning a completely new style. I also had to step in for a few performances when someone became sick or injured. While on tour in Berlin, I actually found out an hour before the show that I had to dance for a girl who had gotten sick! All of the dancers really helped me. During intermission we actually rehearsed the second act so I would know exactly where to go. It was definitely a stressful, but extremely gratifying experience.

What personal challenges have you faced?

I have experienced some personal challenges since moving to Russia. This was my first year away from home, so getting used to living without my family was definitely difficult at first. Thank the Lord for Skype and Facebook! It was also extremely challenging when I first moved because I did not know any Russian at all. Luckily, all the dancers are really nice and have helped me so much to learn the language and to help me get around St. Petersburg.

Tell us some highlights of working with such a wonderful company.

I have always wanted to travel and see the world. With Eifman Ballet, I have been able to do that. I’m still amazed at all the wonderful places we get to travel to and the beautiful theatres we get to perform in. Another major highlight is getting the chance to work with Boris Eifman. Watching him create new ballets is such an incredible experience and I am constantly amazed with the choreography and ideas he is able to produce.

What interesting cultural differences have you encountered?

Before moving to Russia, I was expecting everything to be completely different from the United States. Apart from the language, things are not all that different. There are a lot of restaurants, stores, malls, etc that are the same as in the United States. I spend my free time with friends doing mostly what I did in the States…eating, shopping, and enjoying time together.

Are you more Odette or Odile?

I am definitely more of an Odette. I’m a shy and quiet person most of the time, especially when I first meet someone.

Photos by Rachel Neville

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Swan Lake Quiz


By Rain Francis.

How well do you know the ballet classic?

1. Who composed the original score for Swan Lake?

a) Prokofiev

b) Mozart

c) Stravinsky

d) Tchaikovsky

2. Who choreographed the original production of Swan Lake, which premiered in 1877, one year after the composer’s death?

a) Marius Petipa

b) George Balanchine

c) Michel Fokine

d) Julius Reisinger

3. The black swan’s name is?

a) Odette

b) Odile

c) Ophelia

d) Octavia

4. Name this character from Swan Lake:

a) Siegfried

b) Carabosse

c) Von Rothbart

d) Dr. Coppelius

5. Matthew Bourne’s version of Swan Lake is well known particularly because:

a) The corps de ballet consists of black swans, not white swans

b) The swans are danced by men instead of women

c) It does not use any of the original score

d) All of the above

6. As part of their 2012 season, The Australian Ballet presented Swan Lake at New York’s Lincoln Center. Who is the choreographer of this version?

a. Stephen Baynes

b. Graeme Murphy

c. Twyla Tharp

d. Christopher Wheeldon

7. In the 2011 film Black Swan, which dance company was used as the corps de ballet?

a) New York City Ballet

b) Miami City Ballet

c) Pennsylvania Ballet

d) Mariinsky Ballet

8. Who danced the roles of Odette/Odile in the premiere of Petipa/Ivanov’s Swan Lake?

a) Pierina Legnani

b) Olga Nikolayeva

c) Anna Pavlova

d) Tamara Karsavina

9. How many dancers traditionally perform the dance of the Cygnets?

a) two

c) three

c) four

d) six

10. True or false: Swan Lake was the first ballet to be staged by Mikhail Mordkin, the first Artistic Director of what is now known as American Ballet Theatre?

 

Answers: 1 – d, 2 – d, 3 – b, 4 – c, 5 – b, 6 – a, 7 – c, 8 – a, 9 – c, 10 – True

Top photo: Adam Bull & Amber Scott in The Australian Ballet’s Swan Lake. Photography Jim McFarlane.

Character photo: Christopher Saunders as Von Rothbart. Copyright John Ross. Photo source: www.ballet.co.uk/gallery/jr-royal-ballet-swan-lake-roh-1008/jr_swan_saunders_onsteps_067_500

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