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Pacific Northwest Ballet Announces New Principals and Soloists

Pacific Northwest Ballet’s newly-promoted principal dancer Clara Ruf Maldonado. Photo © Angela Sterling.

Following the opening night world premiere performance of AfterTime, Pacific Northwest Ballet (PNB) Artistic Director Peter Boal announced the promotion of four corps de ballet dancers to the rank of soloist, and two soloists being elevated to principal dancers: Mark Cuddihee, Ashton Edwards, Juliet Prine, and Yuki Takahashi are now soloists, and Christopher D’Ariano and Clara Ruf Maldonado are PNB’s newest principal dancers.

In front of McCaw Hall’s red curtain, Mr. Boal brought out each dancer one at a time to announce and congratulate their promotions. He started the evening’s celebration by inviting Mark Cuddihee to the stage.

“Originally from Greenville, SC, Mark Cuddihee came to our school in the summer of 2017 and joined the company in 2019,” began Mr. Boal. “Mark’s clarity of line and crisp technique were on display in George Balanchine’s Square Dance opposite Sarah-Gabrielle Ryan. His unique ability to sail through the air and devour space was notable in Balanchine’s Rubies. He demonstrated skilled partnering and an endearing devotion to his Aurora, Ashton Edwards, in The Sleeping Beauty. Mark’s winsome irreverence in Marco Goecke’s Mopey showed another side, and left us wondering where his talents will take him next. Please join me in congratulating Mark on his promotion to soloist.”

Mr. Boal then welcomed Ashton Edwards to the stage. “From Flint, Michigan, Ashton came to us in the summer of 2019 and joined PNB as an apprentice in 2021. I can still picture the radiant joy on their face at the Chicago audition. Ashton stepped into the limelight with that trademark joy and go-for-broke dancing in Justin Peck’s The Times Are Racing. Ashton has a way of leaping over the footlights as evidenced in their meddlesome Puck in George Balanchine’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream and as the high-kicking, gravity-defying principal in Rubies. Their thoughtful work on the character of Aurora cemented the uncanny abilities of this extraordinary artist. Join me in applauding Ashton on their promotion to soloist.”

Mr. Boal then called out Juliet Prine. “Originally from Minneapolis, Minnesota, Juliet came to PNB School’s summer course in 2014 and joined the company in 2019. She has been an absolute leader in the corps de ballet while frequently stepping into soloist and principal roles. Her performance of Rubies was electrified. She was a crystalline Princess Florine dancing with the Bluebird in The Sleeping Beauty, and offered sheer comedic genius as the nurse in Jean-Christophe Maillot’s Roméo et Juliette. Every year Juliet shines in The Nutcracker as the Sugar Plum Fairy, Dewdrop, and about a dozen other roles and characters. Congratulations to Juliet on her well-deserved promotion to soloist.”

“Let us next welcome Yuki Takahashi to the stage,” Mr. Boal continued. “Originally from Tokyo, Japan, Yuki came to us in the summer of 2016 and joined the company in 2019. Like Juliet, she has been a quiet force in the corps, guiding the ensemble to achieve a shared approach to every ballet. Yuki has a natural affinity for the works of George Balanchine evidenced in spectacular performances of Sugar Plum opposite Dylan Calahan. Other triumphs in the Balanchine repertoire include nuanced performances in Emeralds and a bravura turn in Square Dance. Yuki is as at home in many choreographers’ works but deserves special mention for performances in Alejandro Cerrudo’s Black on Black on Black and One Thousand Pieces.”

Mr. Boal then turned his attention to PNB’s two newest principal dancers, first bringing Christopher D’Ariano out. “Originally from the Bronx, NY, Christopher first came to PNB in the summer of 2015 and joined the company in 2017. His reverence for the works of George Balanchine was on clear display opposite Clara Ruf Maldonado in Duo Concertante. He too inhabits the choreography of Alejandro Cerrudo with a winning combination of fluidity and precision. He offered standout performances opposite James Kirby Rogers in Ulysses Dove’s Dancing on the Front Porch of Heaven and reached a new plateau in his career with his debut as Prince Desiree in The Sleeping Beauty. A choreographer of note, a dancer of tremendous talent and integrity, please join me in congratulating Christopher D’Ariano on his promotion to principal.”

And last but not least, Mr. Boal welcomed Clara Ruf Maldonado to the stage. “Originally from New York, New York, Clara came to PNB School’s summer course in 2011, joining the company in 2018. Before coming to PNB, Clara trained at the School of American Ballet in New York and appeared as Clara in New York City Ballet’s The Nutcracker. Her innate ability to shine in ballets by Balanchine was evident in everything from Agon to Duo Concertante to The Nutcracker. This past season Clara debuted and triumphed in roles that are considered defining benchmarks of a ballerina – Princess Aurora and Juliette. Clara’s ability to embody a character, or music, or a choreographer’s vision, extends far beyond story ballets. In Crystal Pite’s The Seasons’ Canon she captured the chorographer’s own awe in the presence of natural surroundings in a way that represented all of humanity. Let us applaud Clara Ruf Maldonado on her well-deserved promotion to principal!”

Prior to opening night, Mr. Boal also announced that PNB will be hiring Luke Gutierrez, LeeAnaca Moore, and Mckenzie Wilson from the ranks of the PNB School’s Professional Division, and Jory Lutherfrom The Joffrey Ballet’s studio company, to join the company as apprentices.

For more information, visit https://www.pnb.org/

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