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DanceView Times, New York edition |
Off the Wall to Wall Wall
to Wall Balanchine By
Nancy Dalva
Edward Villella, Founding Artistic Director, Miami City Ballet, and former Principal Dancer, New York City Ballet: With a name like Villella, how can you not want do a tarantella? Violette Verdy, former Principal Dancer, New York City Ballet, to Maria Kowroski, Principal Dancer, NYCB, in a coaching session: Reach! Villella on Verdy: She taught me phrasing....I saw her in First Movement, Symphony in C and I thought, "Oh, wow, you’re supposed to do that, too." I thought it was just physical....eventually, she taught me to partner. Verdy: They helped one another so beautifully and so readily! Lourdes Lopez, former Principal Dancer, New York City Ballet, and Executive Director, The George Balanchine Trust: My best friends I’ve known since I was fourteen—from the School of American Ballet. Villella: What he was giving was so incredibly extraordinarily brilliant, and it fit like a beautiful suit. Lopez: Mr. Balanchine hated to hear dancers on stage. The two times I heard him scream...were to corps dancers...because their pointe shoes were new. Villella: Miami is still not a cultural destination. Eddie Bigelow, former dancer and Company Manager of the New York City Ballet: There was never any money. There was never enough money. A certain kind of fastidious care about spending money has been part of the school and company. It’s still there today although you wouldn’t think that....In Europe, they had lived in a froth of rich people and surroundings but they had nothing that they could count on....Mr. Kirstein had some money, but it wasn’t nearly enough. Villella: Other major choreographic works are three to five times that][the cost of] a Balanchine work... We can point a finger at Mr. B. And say, "Thank you very much for spreading this around." I constantly say to Barbara [Horgan, Trustee and General Director of The George Balanchine Trust], "Thank you for letting us survive." Lopez: One of the things that has been verified since I have been working at the Balanchine Foundation is Balanchine’s generosity....Never once would he say [to members of his company who wanted to perform his work in ensembles, or as guests], "Well, dear, can you write a check for five hundred dollars....?" He truly believed if a dancer can’t dance he doesn’t last. We were in the right time in the right place doing what we love to do. We have a responsibility to give back. Nancy Reynolds, former dancer, New York City Ballet, and Director of Research, The George Balanchine Trust: We have thirty tapes with no end in sight...As long as there is a wonderful old dancer around and a camera, we will continue. Merrill Ashley, former Principal Dancer, New York City Ballet: [coaching Stars and Stripes]: When I did this section, Balanchine said to me, "Do whatever you want." Of course he was there to make sure we didn’t do anything wrong. ...Balanchine said, "This is a classical pas de deux. It’s not meant to be cute." Ashley: The minute you lock your elbows, the energy stays within you. Ashley [asked about being tossed in the air by her partner in Stars and Stripes]: I like it. It’s like flying. It’s fun. It’s fun! Ashley: I liked to do everything fast, so it was a problem when he asked me to slow down.... Ashley: He [Balanchine] partnered me all the time. He was an excellent partner. A wonderful partner. Allegra Kent, former Principal Dancer, New York City Ballet, during a George Balanchine Foundation coaching session of Bugaku, on tape: "Your hands are telling a story. They’re never still." David Hays, designer of many Balanchine works: The wonderful thing about the old City Center was that you could do things on impulse. Hays: I said to him, What should I do? He said, "Do what you do. Those were the only instructions." Hays: [Balanchine was like ] Joseph Conrad. English was not his native language. This language has washed freshly over him...In terms of language, he also loved puns. Hays: About the old City Center–-they called me a “minimalist,” but we had so little money! Hays: Lincoln [Kirstein] has marvelous conceptions about what artist you could copy or emulate....Lincoln was always so much there that when he wasn’t quite there it was news. Hays: You never got praise from [Balanchine]. You just felt it. And you never got blame.. . . I don’t think I’ve said enough about his eye. My god, it was keen! Hays: Balanchine said, "The conventions of Petipa are intolerable for the current day." Reynolds [on Kirstein]: He could know all these things because he never slept. Bigelow: I worked for two czars, two absolute monarchs. One was an irresistible force, and the other was an immovable object. Bigelow [on Kirstein and Balanchine]: Collaboration? It was more like an extremely difficult and successful marriage. Bigelow: [The Russians] came to New York and there were a lot of people around. It was a very bubbly place then. Hays: As with few other people I’ve worked with, Balanchine never left you depressed...As Eddie Villella has said, we loved him. Photo: Left to right: Merrill Ashley, Gelsey Kirkland, and Colleen Neary in the Jewels variation from The Sleeping Beauty (1967). School of American Ballet Workshop. Photographer: Martha Swope. The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts, Jerome Robbins Dance Division. Originally
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