A ʻrogue Ballerinaʼ Gives a Candid Account of Ballet Culture Georgina Pazcoguin, a New York City Ballet Soloist, Has Written a Page-Turner of a Memoir

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

A ʻrogue Ballerinaʼ Gives a Candid Account of Ballet Culture Georgina Pazcoguin, a New York City Ballet Soloist, Has Written a Page-Turner of a Memoir 7/31/2021 Ballet Soloist’s ‘Swan Dive’ Is a Candid Account of Ballet Culture - The New York Times https://www.nytimes.com/2021/07/14/arts/dance/georgina-pazcoguin-swan-dive.html A ʻRogue Ballerinaʼ Gives a Candid Account of Ballet Culture Georgina Pazcoguin, a New York City Ballet soloist, has written a page-turner of a memoir. By Gia Kourlas July 14, 2021 The brave part wasn’t writing the book. “The brave thing,” Georgina Pazcoguin said in an interview, “is going to be walking into the rehearsal studio Aug. 3.” Like many ballet dancers these days (or so it seems), Pazcoguin has written a memoir. Hers is not timid. In “Swan Dive: The Making of a Rogue Ballerina,” this New York City Ballet soloist writes candidly about Peter Martins, the company’s former leader — she refers to him as her psychological abuser — as well as staff members and dancers, including Amar Ramasar, one of the male principals who lost his job after a photo-sharing scandal in 2018, and was later reinstated. Some of the experiences Pazcoguin relates are disturbing, others are just plain weird. She writes that for years, Ramasar would greet her in class “by sidling up close, whispering, ‘You look fine today,’ eyes locked on my chest, and then he’d zero in on the goal at hand by — surprise! — tweaking my nipples.” (In an email, Ramasar said “I flatly deny this allegation”; Martins didn’t respond to requests for comment.) She writes about the time the repertory director Jean-Pierre Frohlich, rehearsing the dancers in Jerome Robbins’s “The Concert,” told them to imagine the beauty of spring and “women walking around in tank tops and short dresses, shorts! You know … ’” He paused, she writes, before ending “with this crazy bomb: ‘It’s amazing more women aren’t raped these days.’” (Frohlich said he hadn’t read the book and had no comment.) Pazcoguin, 36, discusses her fraught relationship with Thomas A. Lemanski, the director of rehearsal administration. And the time she tore her A.C.L., and, “a greedy little principal ballerina literally whipped out her phone while I lay immobile and texted the ballet master and (the slimiest degree of opportunism) Peter Martins himself to pitch herself for the role.” It’s true that Aug. 3 — the day City Ballet begins rehearsals for its fall season — might be awkward for Pazcoguin. But as she sees it, the real story isn’t in the book; it’s what happens next, both for her personally and for the art form. https://www.nytimes.com/2021/07/14/arts/dance/georgina-pazcoguin-swan-dive.html 1/7 7/31/2021 Ballet Soloist’s ‘Swan Dive’ Is a Candid Account of Ballet Culture - The New York Times Pazcoguin, the company’s first female Asian American soloist, has been outspoken about her aim to bring equality to ballet. Heather Sten for The New York Times The company’s first female Asian American soloist — her father is Filipino and her mother is Italian — she is outspoken about her aim to bring equality to the ballet world. “Ballet is at a watershed moment,” said Pazcoguin, who with Phil Chan formed Final Bow for Yellowface, which aims to rid ballet of degrading and outdated depictions of Asian people. “We can either shift and become relevant or it’s going to fade off into the distance. That would be such a failure to me.” https://www.nytimes.com/2021/07/14/arts/dance/georgina-pazcoguin-swan-dive.html 2/7 7/31/2021 Ballet Soloist’s ‘Swan Dive’ Is a Candid Account of Ballet Culture - The New York Times When she first pitched a book to agents and publishers, Anthony Bourdain’s memoir “Kitchen Confidential” was on her mind. “I saw myself in him in a very weird way,” she said. “How he shook up that world and did it so honestly and coming from a place of love.” That part was important to her for her book: “I love ballet and I love this company and I believe in it one thousand percent.” She ended up writing two versions. The first “didn’t dive into anything,” she said. “I read it and I was like, ‘Wow, Gina, what a cop-out,’ and started again.” The second time, she didn’t leave out the painful stories, including the affair she had with a married principal dancer and the surgery she had to remove fat from her thighs after extreme dieting and exercise didn’t work. (Sad to say, but surgery was safer than starvation.) The book — laced with expletives — is not without humor. It focuses on Pazcoguin’s time as a student at the City Ballet-affiliated School of American Ballet and in the company, which she joined in 2003. She began writing about three years ago, while Martins was still in charge. In 2018, he resigned from his post amid accusations of sexual harassment and physical and verbal abuse. (He has denied the allegations.) “Swan Dive” begins with Pazcoguin being summoned to meet Martins, in 2013. She was certain she was about to be fired. It had been two weeks since they’d had “a yelling match of epic proportions,” she writes. “It ended with me screaming as I ran down the hallway.” She braced herself for fat-shaming (it always came down to her thighs) or being told that she was not fully committed. But the encounter turned out differently: Martins promoted her to soloist, the rank she still holds. Pazcoguin with Andrew Scordato in George Balanchine’s “A Midsummer Night’s Dream.” Paul Kolnik Pazcoguin, to her distress, remains the only female soloist who has not performed the part of the Sugar Plum Fairy in “George Balanchine’s The Nutcracker.” As for being promoted to principal dancer? “It’s their move,” she said of the company’s current leaders, Jonathan Stafford (artistic director) and Wendy Whelan (associate artistic director). “It’s not my move. I have not given up on being promoted. I want to still think I’m in the running.” One point Pazcoguin makes in “Swan Dive” is that she has not been considered a classical dancer in terms of her roles, which tend toward the more theatrical and contemporary. (Her portrayal of Anita in Robbins’s “West Side Story Suite,” a version of the musical that City Ballet performs, is astonishing.) She said she would love a shot at performing lead roles in “Symphony in Three Movements” and “La Valse,” Balanchine ballets with inherent drama. “I’m not saying I want to be White Swan,” Pazcoguin said, referring to the role of Odette, the princess in “Swan Lake.” She burst into laughter. “I have a good handle on what I could have an interesting spin on, and it might not be who’s inhabited it before.” https://www.nytimes.com/2021/07/14/arts/dance/georgina-pazcoguin-swan-dive.html 3/7 7/31/2021 Ballet Soloist’s ‘Swan Dive’ Is a Candid Account of Ballet Culture - The New York Times In considering the path her dancing career has taken, Pazcoguin thinks back to when she was a student at the School of American Ballet; it coincided with the attacks of Sept. 11, which left her traumatized. She developed an eating disorder. “It was just a way for me to process this grief — it had nothing to do with weight,” she said. “That messed with my body. It really set it up for me to be a mess for the coming years.” At the time, her poor health led to a stress fracture, which prevented her from performing the lead in Balanchine’s “Ballo della Regina” at the school’s annual Workshop Performances. Merrill Ashley, the virtuoso ballerina for whom it was made, coached her in it. If she had performed “Ballo,” would Martins have later cast her in more classical, technical roles? “Or worse yet,” she said, “would I still have the same career?” In an interview, Ashley said she agreed with Pazcoguin that things might have gone differently had she been able to perform “Ballo.” “Her foot was so bad, and ‘Ballo’ is about the worst ballet you could try and dance with a bad foot,” Ashley said. Pazcoguin now believes that part of the reason she was held back in the company had to do with race. “A lot of feedback is presented in a correction,” she said. “Like you should correct this. Then you get the off comment, and you’re like, what? I can’t correct my features. And that’s when you’re like, what just happened?” If she had said anything at the time, “it would have turned out very badly for me,” she said, though, in retrospect, she realizes she was having some of those conversations behind the scenes. One was with Albert Evans, then a ballet master. Evans, just the second Black dancer to become a principal at City Ballet (he died in 2015), recognized that she was in pain. “He was like, ‘You just keep working,’” Pazcoguin said. “‘I see you.’ I didn’t realize we were having a conversation about race, but we were.” From left, Amar Ramasar, Robert Fairchild, Sara Mearns and Pazcoguin, who danced a villain role, in Peter Martins’s “Ocean’s Kingdom,” in 2011. Paul Kolnik She recalled that after Ashley watched her perform in Robbins’s “N.Y. Export/Opus Jazz” for the first time, she told her, “‘You have no idea how many people are asking me who the woman with the black hair was,’” Pazcoguin said.
Recommended publications
  • Nutcracker Three Hundred Sixty-Seventh Program of the 2012-13 Season ______Indiana University Ballet Theater Presents
    2012/2013 Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky NutcrackerThe Three Hundred Sixty-Seventh Program of the 2012-13 Season _______________________ Indiana University Ballet Theater presents its 54th annual production of Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky’s The Nutcracker Ballet in Two Acts Scenario by Michael Vernon, after Marius Petipa’s adaptation of the story, “The Nutcracker and the Mouse King” by E. T. A. Hoffmann Michael Vernon, Choreography Andrea Quinn, Conductor C. David Higgins, Set and Costume Designer Patrick Mero, Lighting Designer Gregory J. Geehern, Chorus Master The Nutcracker was first performed at the Maryinsky Theatre of St. Petersburg on December 18, 1892. _________________ Musical Arts Center Friday Evening, November Thirtieth, Eight O’Clock Saturday Afternoon, December First, Two O’Clock Saturday Evening, December First, Eight O’Clock Sunday Afternoon, December Second, Two O’Clock music.indiana.edu The Nutcracker Michael Vernon, Artistic Director Choreography by Michael Vernon Doricha Sales, Ballet Mistress Guoping Wang, Ballet Master Shawn Stevens, Ballet Mistress Phillip Broomhead, Guest Coach Doricha Sales, Children’s Ballet Mistress The children in The Nutcracker are from the Jacobs School of Music’s Pre-College Ballet Program. Act I Party Scene (In order of appearance) Urchins . Chloe Dekydtspotter and David Baumann Passersby . Emily Parker with Sophie Scheiber and Azro Akimoto (Nov. 30 & Dec. 1 eve.) Maura Bell with Eve Brooks and Simon Brooks (Dec. 1 mat. & Dec. 2) Maids. .Bethany Green and Liara Lovett (Nov. 30 & Dec. 1 eve.) Carly Hammond and Melissa Meng (Dec. 1 mat. & Dec. 2) Tradesperson . Shaina Rovenstine Herr Drosselmeyer . .Matthew Rusk (Nov. 30 & Dec. 1 eve.) Gregory Tyndall (Dec. 1 mat.) Iver Johnson (Dec.
    [Show full text]
  • A STAR SPANGLED OFFICERS Harvey Lichtenstein President and Chief Executive Officer SALUTE to BROOKLYN Judith E
    L(30 '11 II. BROOKLYN ACADEMY OF MUSIC BOARD OF TRUSTEES Hon. Edward I. Koch, Hon. Howard Golden, Seth Faison, Paul Lepercq, Honorary Chairmen; Neil D. Chrisman, Chairman; Rita Hillman, I. Stanley Kriegel, Ame Vennema, Franklin R. Weissberg, Vice Chairmen; Harvey Lichtenstein, President and Chief Executive Officer; Harry W. Albright, Jr., Henry Bing, Jr., Warren B. Coburn, Charles M. Diker, Jeffrey K. Endervelt, Mallory Factor, Harold L. Fisher, Leonard Garment, Elisabeth Gotbaum, Judah Gribetz, Sidney Kantor, Eugene H. Luntey, Hamish Maxwell, Evelyn Ortner, John R. Price, Jr., Richard M. Rosan, Mrs. Marion Scotto, William Tobey, Curtis A. Wood, John E. Zuccotti; Hon. Henry Geldzahler, Member ex-officio. A STAR SPANGLED OFFICERS Harvey Lichtenstein President and Chief Executive Officer SALUTE TO BROOKLYN Judith E. Daykin Executive Vice President and General Manager Richard Balzano Vice President and Treasurer Karen Brooks Hopkins Vice President for Planning and Development IN HONOR OF THE 100th ANNIVERSARY Micheal House Vice President for Marketing and Promotion ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICE STAFF OF THE Ruth Goldblatt Assistant to President Sally Morgan Assistant to General Manager David Perry Mail Clerk BROOKLYN BRIDGE FINANCE Perry Singer Accountant Tuesday, November 30, 1982 Jack C. Nulsen Business Manager Pearl Light Payroll Manager MARKETING AND PROMOTION Marketing Nancy Rossell Assistant to Vice President Susan Levy Director of Audience Development Jerrilyn Brown Executive Assistant Jon Crow Graphics Margo Abbruscato Information Resource Coordinator Press Ellen Lampert General Press Representative Susan Hood Spier Associate Press Representative Diana Robinson Press Assistant PLANNING AND DEVELOPMENT Jacques Brunswick Director of Membership Denis Azaro Development Officer Philip Bither Development Officer Sharon Lea Lee Office Manager Aaron Frazier Administrative Assistant MANAGEMENT INFORMATION Jack L.
    [Show full text]
  • October 2020 New York City Center
    NEW YORK CITY CENTER OCTOBER 2020 NEW YORK CITY CENTER SUPPORT CITY CENTER AND Page 9 DOUBLE YOUR IMPACT! OCTOBER 2020 3 Program Thanks to City Center Board Co-Chair Richard Witten and 9 City Center Turns the Lights Back On for the his wife and Board member Lisa, every contribution you 2020 Fall for Dance Festival by Reanne Rodrigues make to City Center from now until November 1 will be 30 Upcoming Events matched up to $100,000. Be a part of City Center’s historic moment as we turn the lights back on to bring you the first digitalFall for Dance Festival. Please consider making a donation today to help us expand opportunities for artists and get them back on stage where they belong. $200,000 hangs in the balance—give today to double your impact and ensure that City Center can continue to serve our artists and our beloved community for years to come. Page 9 Page 9 Page 30 donate now: text: become a member: Cover: Ballet Hispánico’s Shelby Colona; photo by Rachel Neville Photography NYCityCenter.org/ FallForDance NYCityCenter.org/ JOIN US ONLINE Donate to 443-21 Membership @NYCITYCENTER Ballet Hispánico performs 18+1 Excerpts; photo by Christopher Duggan Photography #FallForDance @NYCITYCENTER 2 ARLENE SHULER PRESIDENT & CEO NEW YORK STANFORD MAKISHI VP, PROGRAMMING CITY CENTER 2020 Wednesday, October 21, 2020 PROGRAM 1 BALLET HISPÁNICO Eduardo Vilaro, Artistic Director & CEO Ashley Bouder, Tiler Peck, and Brittany Pollack Ballet Hispánico 18+1 Excerpts Calvin Royal III New York Premiere Dormeshia Jamar Roberts Choreography by GUSTAVO RAMÍREZ
    [Show full text]
  • WHERE the BOYS ARE SAB’S Boys Program Celebrates Tenth Anniversary
    School of American Ballet Newsletter/Fall 2002 WHERE THE BOYS ARE SAB’s Boys Program Celebrates Tenth Anniversary ate afternoon visitors to SAB usually find the hall- vivid memories of his early years at SAB, dutifully com- ways teeming with young girls and boys, a colorful ing to class every afternoon to hang out with . girls. "At Lscene that more often than not leads newcomers to that age, you want camaraderie. I missed it. The boys spontaneously exclaim, "There are so many boys!" The today are psyched to come here to be with their pals. And sight of young boys pursuing ballet in large numbers it's much more inspiring for them when their classes can may still be unexpected to some, but at SAB it has become include learning how to do multiple pirouettes and dou- the norm—the result of a decade-long effort to increase ble tours. That's what they see Damian Woetzel and the School’s male enrollment and ultimately to bolster the Ethan Stiefel doing. That's what's going to inspire them to number of young men pursuing professional ballet continue with ballet. The co-ed children's classes when I careers. was a kid were much more focused on the girls—on barre work and preparing to dance en pointe." Just over 10 years ago, an internal review of SAB's pro- grams pointed up what Chairman of Faculty Peter As the Boys Program enters its eleventh year, it has tallied Martins believed was a major weakness: a longstanding 216 participants, including 57 who are still working their dearth of male students in the Children's Division.
    [Show full text]
  • Qurrat Ann Kadwani: Still Calling Her Q!
    1 More Next Blog» Create Blog Sign In InfiniteBody art and creative consciousness by Eva Yaa Asantewaa Tuesday, May 6, 2014 Your Host Qurrat Ann Kadwani: Still calling her Q! Eva Yaa Asantewaa Follow View my complete profile My Pages Home About Eva Yaa Asantewaa Getting to know Eva (interview) Qurrat Ann Kadwani Eva's Tarot site (photo Bolti Studios) Interview on Tarot Talk Contact Eva Name Email * Message * Send Contribute to InfiniteBody Subscribe to IB's feed Click to subscribe to InfiniteBody RSS Get InfiniteBody by Email Talented and personable Qurrat Ann Kadwani (whose solo show, They Call Me Q!, I wrote about Email address... Submit here) is back and, I hope, every bit as "wicked smart and genuinely funny" as I observed back in September. Now she's bringing the show to the Off Broadway St. Luke's Theatre , May 19-June 4, Mondays at 7pm and Wednesdays at 8pm. THEY CALL ME Q is the story of an Indian girl growing up in the Boogie Down Bronx who gracefully seeks balance between the cultural pressures brought forth by her traditional InfiniteBody Archive parents and wanting acceptance into her new culture. Along the journey, Qurrat Ann Kadwani transforms into 13 characters that have shaped her life including her parents, ► 2015 (222) Caucasian teachers, Puerto Rican classmates, and African-American friends. Laden with ▼ 2014 (648) heart and abundant humor, THEY CALL ME Q speaks to the universal search for identity ► December (55) experienced by immigrants of all nationalities. ► November (55) Program, schedule and ticket information ► October (56) ► September (42) St.
    [Show full text]
  • Bruhn, Erik (1928-1986) Erik Bruhn (Second from Left) Visiting Backstage at by John Mcfarland the New York City Ballet
    Bruhn, Erik (1928-1986) Erik Bruhn (second from left) visiting backstage at by John McFarland the New York City Ballet. The group included (left Encyclopedia Copyright © 2015, glbtq, Inc. to right) Diana Adams, Entry Copyright © 2002, glbtq, Inc. Bruhn, Violette Verdy, Sonia Arova, and Reprinted from http://www.glbtq.com Rudolph Nureyev. Erik Bruhn was the premier male dancer of the 1950s and epitomized the ethereally handsome prince and cavalier on the international ballet stage of the decade. Combining flawless technique with an understanding of modern conflicted psychology, he set the standard by which the next generation of dancers, including Rudolf Nureyev, Mikhail Baryshnikov, Peter Schaufuss, and Peter Martins, measured their success. Born on October 3, 1928 in Copenhagen, Bruhn was the fourth child of Ellen Evers Bruhn, the owner of a successful hair salon. After the departure of his father when Erik was five years old, he was the sole male in a household with six women, five of them his seniors. An introspective child who was his mother's favorite, Erik was enrolled in dance classes at the age of six in part to counter signs of social withdrawal. He took to dance like a duck to water; three years later he auditioned for the Royal Danish Ballet School where he studied from 1937 to 1947. With his classic Nordic good looks, agility, and musicality, Bruhn seemed made for the August Bournonville technique taught at the school. He worked obsessively to master the technique's purity of line, lightness of jump, and clean footwork. Although Bruhn performed the works of the Royal Danish Ballet to perfection without any apparent effort, he yearned to reach beyond mere technique.
    [Show full text]
  • New York City Ballet MOVES Tuesday and Wednesday, October 24–25, 2017 7:30 Pm
    New York City Ballet MOVES Tuesday and Wednesday, October 24–25, 2017 7:30 pm Photo:Photo: Benoit © Paul Lemay Kolnik 45TH ANNIVERSARY SEASON 2017/2018 Great Artists. Great Audiences. Hancher Performances. ARTISTIC DIRECTOR PETER MARTINS ARTISTIC ADMINISTRATOR JEAN-PIERRE FROHLICH THE DANCERS PRINCIPALS ADRIAN DANCHIG-WARING CHASE FINLAY ABI STAFFORD SOLOIST UNITY PHELAN CORPS DE BALLET MARIKA ANDERSON JACQUELINE BOLOGNA HARRISON COLL CHRISTOPHER GRANT SPARTAK HOXHA RACHEL HUTSELL BAILY JONES ALEC KNIGHT OLIVIA MacKINNON MIRIAM MILLER ANDREW SCORDATO PETER WALKER THE MUSICIANS ARTURO DELMONI, VIOLIN ELAINE CHELTON, PIANO ALAN MOVERMAN, PIANO BALLET MASTERS JEAN-PIERRE FROHLICH CRAIG HALL LISA JACKSON REBECCA KROHN CHRISTINE REDPATH KATHLEEN TRACEY TOURING STAFF FOR NEW YORK CITY BALLET MOVES COMPANY MANAGER STAGE MANAGER GREGORY RUSSELL NICOLE MITCHELL LIGHTING DESIGNER WARDROBE MISTRESS PENNY JACOBUS MARLENE OLSON HAMM WARDROBE MASTER MASTER CARPENTER JOHN RADWICK NORMAN KIRTLAND III 3 Play now. Play for life. We are proud to be your locally-owned, 1-stop shop Photo © Paul Kolnik for all of your instrument, EVENT SPONSORS accessory, and service needs! RICHARD AND MARY JO STANLEY ELLIE AND PETER DENSEN ALLYN L. MARK IOWA HOUSE HOTEL SEASON SPONSOR WEST MUSIC westmusic.com Cedar Falls • Cedar Rapids • Coralville Decorah • Des Moines • Dubuque • Quad Cities PROUD to be Hancher’s 2017-2018 Photo: Miriam Alarcón Avila Season Sponsor! Play now. Play for life. We are proud to be your locally-owned, 1-stop shop for all of your instrument, accessory, and service needs! westmusic.com Cedar Falls • Cedar Rapids • Coralville Decorah • Des Moines • Dubuque • Quad Cities PROUD to be Hancher’s 2017-2018 Season Sponsor! THE PROGRAM IN THE NIGHT Music by FRÉDÉRIC CHOPIN Choreography by JEROME ROBBINS Costumes by ANTHONY DOWELL Lighting by JENNIFER TIPTON OLIVIA MacKINNON UNITY PHELAN ABI STAFFORD AND AND AND ALEC KNIGHT CHASE FINLAY ADRIAN DANCHIG-WARING Piano: ELAINE CHELTON This production was made possible by a generous gift from Mrs.
    [Show full text]
  • JUNE 27–29, 2013 Thursday, June 27, 2013, 7:30 P.M. 15579Th
    06-27 Stravinsky:Layout 1 6/19/13 12:21 PM Page 23 JUNE 2 7–29, 2013 Two Works by Stravinsky Thursday, June 27, 2013, 7:30 p.m. 15, 579th Concert Friday, June 28, 2013, 8 :00 p.m. 15,580th Concert Saturday, June 29, 2013, 8:00 p.m. 15,58 1st Concert Alan Gilbert , Conductor/Magician Global Sponsor Doug Fitch, Director/Designer Karole Armitage, Choreographer Edouard Getaz, Producer/Video Director These concerts are sponsored by Yoko Nagae Ceschina. A production created by Giants Are Small Generous support from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, Clifton Taylor, Lighting Designer The Susan and Elihu Rose Foun - Irina Kruzhilina, Costume Designer dation, Donna and Marvin Matt Acheson, Master Puppeteer Schwartz, the Mary and James G. Margie Durand, Make-Up Artist Wallach Family Foundation, and an anonymous donor. Featuring Sara Mearns, Principal Dancer* Filming and Digital Media distribution of this Amar Ramasar , Principal Dancer/Puppeteer* production are made possible by the generos ity of The Mary and James G. Wallach Family This concert will last approximately one and Foundation and The Rita E. and Gustave M. three-quarter hours, which includes one intermission. Hauser Recording Fund . Avery Fisher Hall at Lincoln Center Home of the New York Philharmonic June 2013 23 06-27 Stravinsky:Layout 1 6/19/13 12:21 PM Page 24 New York Philharmonic Two Works by Stravinsky Alan Gilbert, Conductor/Magician Doug Fitch, Director/Designer Karole Armitage, Choreographer Edouard Getaz, Producer/Video Director A production created by Giants Are Small Clifton Taylor, Lighting Designer Irina Kruzhilina, Costume Designer Matt Acheson, Master Puppeteer Margie Durand, Make-Up Artist Featuring Sara Mearns, Principal Dancer* Amar Ramasar, Principal Dancer/Puppeteer* STRAVINSKY Le Baiser de la fée (The Fairy’s Kiss ) (1882–1971) (1928, rev.
    [Show full text]
  • Atheneum Nantucket Dance Festival
    NANTUCKET ATHENEUM DANCE FESTIVAL 2011 Featuring stars of New York City Ballet & Paris Opera Ballet Benjamin Millepied Artistic Director Dorothée Gilbert Teresa Reichlen Amar Ramasar Sterling Hyltin Tyler Angle Daniel Ulbricht Maria Kowroski Alessio Carbone Ana Sofia Scheller Sean Suozzi Chase Finlay Georgina Pazcoguin Ashley Laracey Justin Peck Troy Schumacher Musicians Cenovia Cummins Katy Luo Gillian Gallagher Naho Tsutsui Parrini Maria Bella Jeffers Brooke Quiggins Saulnier Cover: Photo of Benjamin Millepied by Paul Kolnik 1 Welcometo the Nantucket Atheneum Dance Festival! For 177 years the Nantucket Atheneum has enriched our island community through top quality library services and programs. This year the library served more than 200,000 adults, teens and children year round with free access to over 1.4 million books, CDs, and DVDs, reference and information services and a wide range of cultural and educational programs. In keeping with its long-standing tradition of educational and cultural programming, the Nantucket Atheneum is very excited to present a multifaceted dance experience on Nantucket for the fourth straight summer. This year’s performances feature the world’s best dancers from New York City Ballet and Paris Opera Ballet under the brilliant artistic direction of Benjamin Millepied. In addition to live music for two of the pieces in the program, this year’s program includes an exciting world premier by Justin Peck of the New York City Ballet. The festival this week has offered a sparkling array of free community events including two dance-related book author/illustrator talks, Frederick Wiseman’s film La Danse, Children’s Workshop, Lecture Demonstration and two youth master dance classes.
    [Show full text]
  • The Balanchine Trust: Dancing Through the Steps of Two-Part Licensing
    Volume 6 Issue 2 Article 2 1999 The Balanchine Trust: Dancing through the Steps of Two-Part Licensing Cheryl Swack Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.law.villanova.edu/mslj Part of the Entertainment, Arts, and Sports Law Commons, and the Intellectual Property Law Commons Recommended Citation Cheryl Swack, The Balanchine Trust: Dancing through the Steps of Two-Part Licensing, 6 Jeffrey S. Moorad Sports L.J. 265 (1999). Available at: https://digitalcommons.law.villanova.edu/mslj/vol6/iss2/2 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by Villanova University Charles Widger School of Law Digital Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Jeffrey S. Moorad Sports Law Journal by an authorized editor of Villanova University Charles Widger School of Law Digital Repository. Swack: The Balanchine Trust: Dancing through the Steps of Two-Part Licen THE BALANCHINE TRUST: DANCING THROUGH THE STEPS OF TWO-PART LICENSING CHERYL SWACK* I. INTRODUCTION A. George Balanchine George Balanchine,1 "one of the century's certifiable ge- * Member of the Florida Bar; J.D., University of Miami School of Law; B. A., Sarah Lawrence College. This article is dedicated to the memory of my mother, Allegra Swack. 1. Born in 1904 in St. Petersburg, Russia of Georgian parents, Georgi Melto- novich Balanchivadze entered the Imperial Theater School at the Maryinsky Thea- tre in 1914. See ROBERT TRAcy & SHARON DELONG, BALANci-NE's BALLERINAS: CONVERSATIONS WITH THE MUSES 14 (Linden Press 1983) [hereinafter TRAcY & DELONG]. His dance training took place during the war years of the Russian Revolution.
    [Show full text]
  • Spring Ballet
    Six Hundred Fifty-Fifth Program of the 2014-15 Season _______________________ Indiana University Ballet Theater presents Spring Ballet Swan Lake (Act II) Choreography by George Balanchine Staged by Patricia Blair and Daniel Duell Music by Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky Duets Choreography by Merce Cunningham Staged by Banu Ogan Music by John Cage Rubies Choreography by George Balanchine Staged by Paul Boos Music by Igor Stravinsky Michael Vernon, Artistic Director, IU Ballet Theater Stuart Chafetz, Conductor Patrick Mero, Lighting Design _________________ Musical Arts Center Friday Evening, March Twenty-Seventh, Eight O’Clock Saturday Afternoon, March Twenty-Eighth, Two O’Clock Saturday Evening, March Twenty-Eighth, Eight O’Clock music.indiana.edu Swan Lake (Act II) Choreography by George Balanchine* ©The George Balanchine Trust Music by Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky Original Scenery and Costumes by Rouben Ter-Arutunian Premiere: November 20, 1951 | New York City Ballet City Center of Music and Drama Staged by Patricia Blair and Daniel Duell Stuart Chafetz, Conductor Violette Verdy, Principal Coach Shawn Stevens, Ballet Mistress Guoping Wang, Ballet Master Odette, Queen of the Swans Raffaella Stroik (3/27) Elizabeth Edwards (3/28 mat ) Natalie Nguyen (3/28 eve ) Prince Siegfried Matthew Rusk (3/27) Colin Ellis (3/28 mat ) Andrew Copeland (3/28 eve ) Swans Bianca Allanic, Mackenzie Allen, Margaret Andriani, Caroline Atwell, Morgan Buchart, Colleen Buckley, Danielle Cesanek, Leah Gaston (3/28), Bethany Green (3/28 eve ), Rebecca Green, Cara Hansvick
    [Show full text]
  • Duncan Stewart, CSA and Benton Whitley, CSA, Casting Directors
    Duncan Stewart, CSA and Benton Whitley, CSA, Casting Directors/Partners Paul Hardt, Christine McKenna-Tirella, CSA Casting Director Ian Subsara, Emily Ludwig Casting Assistant Resume as of 3.15.2019 _________________________________________________________________ CURRENT & ONGOING: HADESTOWN Theater, Broadway – Walter Kerr Theater March 2019 – Open Ended Mara Isaacs, Hunter Arnold, Dale Franzen (Prod.) Rachel Chavkin (Dir.), David Newmann (Choreo.) By: Anais Mitchell CHICAGO THE MUSICAL Theater, Broadway – Ambassador Theater May 2008 – Open Ended Barry and Fran Weissler (Prod.) Walter Bobbie (Dir.), Ann Reinking (Choreo.) By: John Kander & Fred Ebb CHICAGO THE MUSICAL Theater, West End – Phoenix Theater March 2018 – Open Ended Barry and Fran Weissler (Prod.) Walter Bobbie (Dir.), Ann Reinking (Choreo.) By: John Kander & Fred Ebb ZOEY’S EXTRAORDINARY PLAYLIST NBC Lionsgate TV Pilot March 2019 Richard Shepard (Dir.), Austin Winsberg (Writer) NY Casting AUGUST RUSH Theater, Regional – Paramount Theater January 2019 – June 2019 Paramount Theater (Prod.) John Doyle (Dir.), JoAnn Hunter (Choreo.) By: Mark Mancina, Glen Berger, David Metzger PARADISE SQUARE: An American Musical Theater, Regional – Berkeley Repertory Theatre December 2018 – March 2019 Garth Drabinsky (Prod.) ________________________________________________________________________ 1 Stewart/Whitley 213 West 35th Street Suite 804 New York, NY 10001 212.635.2153 Moisés Kaufman (Dir.), Bill T. Jones (Choreo.) By: Marcus Gardley, Jason Howland, Larry Kirwan, Craig Lucas, Nathan
    [Show full text]