Showing posts with label Dance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dance. Show all posts

Friday, October 18, 2019

Alicia Alonso, Cuba's ballet legend, dies at age 98


Legendary Cuban ballerina Alicia Alonso, who achieved global acclaim in the 1940s and went on to run the internationally renowned National Ballet of Cuba for decades, died on Thursday at age 98, state-run media said.

"Alicia Alonso has gone and left an enormous void, but also an unbeatable legacy," President Miguel Diaz-Canel said in a post on Twitter. "She positioned Cuba at the altar of the best of dance worldwide. Thank you Alicia for your immortal work."

One of the greatest 20th century ballerinas, Alonso used her star power to make a sometimes elitist art form popular on her Caribbean island, forging the world's largest ballet school with a unique bravura style.

Alonso immediately identified herself with the 1959 revolution and, with her dance partner of many years, the Russian Igor Youskevich who died in 1994, performed for the bearded guerrillas of Fidel Castro's rebel army after they took power in Havana. She remained closely associated with the Communist government until the end.

So revered is Alonso in Cuba -- where a perfume carries her name and the huge Coppelia ice cream parlor is named after one of her signature roles -- that she carried the rare title of prima ballerina assoluta, reserved for only the most exceptional of dancers.

"As the daughter of a small Caribbean island, Alonso confronted all the barriers, those who said ballet was an art of developed countries, that the Latino physique and temperament could not adjust to the needs of classical dance," Cuban-born Carlos Acosta, former principal guest artist of the Royal Ballet, said in a statement on Thursday.

"Alicia Alonso destroyed all these prejudices when she made her entrance on the stage."

'HIGHEST LEVELS OF EXCELLENCE'

Alonso's breakout role was "Giselle" in New York on Nov. 2, 1943, when she replaced British dancer Alicia Markova, who fell ill, in the newly formed company that would become the American Ballet Theatre (ABT).

For her debut in the ethereal 1841 French Romantic role, Alonso had learned the steps with her hands while recovering from eye surgery.

"Her imprint on ABT as one of the charter members of Ballet Theatre is immeasurable," said Kevin McKenzie, artistic director of the New York-based company, in a statement on Thursday. "Alicia's grace, intelligence and courage will surely leave a lasting impact on our art form."

Petite with an angular face, Alonso danced until her 70s despite having trouble walking, and continued to direct her company with the help of trusted artists who served as her eyes.

"She has a very vivid imagination which allows her to see things in her mind as they would appear on stage," Suki John, an American scholar on Cuban dance whom Alonso had invited to choreograph for the National Ballet of Cuba, told Reuters in a July 2015 interview. "She developed this visual acuity as a young dancer when she had one of her first operations on her eyes."

Alonso for years did not name a successor because, she said, "I will live until I'm 200," according to several of her dancers and collaborators. Critics accused her of holding onto power for too long, even as her health faltered.

Dancer Viengsay Valdés, who was named deputy artistic director in January, is widely expected to take over the company.

Together with her first husband Fernando Alonso and his brother Alberto, the ballerina forged a national ballet style that Castro used to showcase Cuban culture.

With Alonso's prodigious speed, turning ability and attention to stylistic detail as a benchmark, the Cuban school -- which has about 3,000 students -- fused the best from the Russians, French, Italians, British and Americans with Latino flair and Afro-Cuban sensuality.

"We Cubans were born to dance as a people, thanks to the mix of races, the Spanish and the African, both lovers of dance," Alonso told Reuters in 2004. "Cuban dancers immediately stand out with their expressive way of performing the great classics or the moderns."

POLISHING IN ISOLATION

According to Alonso's own account in a 1981 biography, Castro asked her how much money she needed to organize the National Ballet.

"I said $100,000," she recalled.

"We will give you $200,000," he replied.

Alonso choreographed and polished a small repertoire of classic masterpieces in isolation from the rest of the world, creating a style for her company that some critics have called old-fashioned but others have commended as preserving elements neglected outside Cuba.

"Her legacy is a devotion to the classical perfection of ballet," Jane Hermann, U.S. agent for the National Ballet of Cuba since 1978, said in a phone interview on Thursday.

Many Cuban dancers who defected on international tours during the Cold War or left afterward earned Alonso's disdain, although some male stars had a freer license to work abroad.

Born on Dec. 21, 1921, Alonso first appeared on stage in Havana in 1931. She married fellow student Fernando at the age of 16 and they soon moved to New York, joining Ballet Caravan, the precursor of New York City Ballet.

By the late 1940s she had performed starring roles, particularly Giselle, at the old Metropolitan Opera House in New York and London's Covent Garden. In 1946, Mademoiselle magazine listed her as one of the 10 most distinguished women in the world.

Her vision, which started to deteriorate at age 19, became so bad that she had trouble seeing her fellow dancers and relied on stage lights to guide her. A series of operations in the early 1970s improved her vision.

In 1948, the Alonsos founded the Alicia Alonso Ballet Company in Havana, but she continued to dance for a while with the American Ballet Theatre. Her ballet company folded in 1956 through lack of funds. The National Ballet was formed after the revolution.

Fernando and Alicia Alonso had one daughter, Laura Alonso, herself an accomplished dancer, who was born in 1938.

source: news.abs-cbn.com

Tuesday, September 24, 2019

How Bailey Muñoz overcame challenges to win 'So You Think You Can Dance'


After four months of competing in the hit show “So You Think You Can Dance,” Las Vegas-based Filipino-American Bailey “Bailrok” Muñoz has finally come home.

Read more on Balitang America.

source: news.abs-cbn.com

Wednesday, October 31, 2018

Jay Ledford’s journey as a Filipino-American transgender ballerina


A Filipino-American transgender is slowly tiptoeing her way to performance stages across the United States one grand jete at a time.

When she was 17 months old, Jay, who was born in Leyte, moved to Indiana after the Ledford family adopted her.

As a toddler, Jay prodded her foster parents to enroll her in ballet school.

"I was the only boy at my studio in Indiana, and all I ever wanted was to wear a leotard," Jay said.

Her parents "un-enrolled" her from the ballet studio after the school said boys were not allowed to dance in leotards.

"My parents un-enrolled me and took me to a studio across town, where I enrolled as a female," she said.

Five years into learning pirouettes and splits and arabesques, Jay bagged full scholarships for summer ballet intensives at the Kirov Academy, the Rock School of Dance, and Pittsburgh Ballet Theater.

Jay brought her skills and dancing dreams wherever the family moved.

When the Ledford family decided to live in Salisbury, Maryland in 2008, Jay trained at the Salisbury Dance Academy and performed with the Eastern Shore Ballet Theater in major roles in the "Nutcracker," "Coppelia," and "The Seven Dwarfs," and many others.

Jay also performed at Disney World in Orlando in Florida.

When the family relocated to Delaware in 2015, Jay started training with Michele Xiques, director of First State Dance Academy.

Jay became a full-time ballet dancer in 2017 after she graduated from high school. It was also when she fully embraced her gender.

"While at the Kirov, I began truly figuring out who I was," she said.

"It was a difficult period of time because I wasn't sure who I could trust."

Jay eventually admitted to being a transgender through a social media post.


"Those final months of the school year were the greatest, because I was able to finally be myself—everyone treated me as me, and nothing different," she said.

"That Instagram post sparked so many direct messages about how inspirational I was to people, or how my story had helped others come out to their own families," she said.

Despite the support she received, opportunities are still "being taken away" because of her gender, Jay said.

"A lot of companies and studios where I danced as a male aren't receptive to me as a female," she said.

"It's definitely hard because you want to be accepted everywhere, but unfortunately, it's not like that," she said.

Jay -- just like her 5-year-old self who refused to drop her ballet shoes when told that she could not dance in leotards -- is nowhere near giving up.

She is training to audition for some ballet companies and colleges where she hopes to further her training en pointe and choreography.

"I'm taking the next year off to train fully as a female and master my pointe technique," she said.

"I hope to end up in a company, and would absolutely love to dance Giselle, Juliet, Odette/Odile, and Aurora—you know, the roles that every little girl dreams of doing when she grows up and finally becomes a ballerina," she said. -- with a report from Jon Melegrito

source: news.abs-cbn.com

Monday, March 17, 2014

Search is on for PH's top ballet dancers


MANILA – The Cultural Center of the Philippines (CCP) has begun accepting applications for its first national ballet competition.

The CCP National Ballet Competition 2014 will be held from November 5 to 8 at the Tanghalang Aurelio Tolentino (Little Theater). It is open to male and female solo ballet dancers in the junior and senior categories who can perform both classical variations and original or contemporary pieces.

The junior category includes ballet dancers aged 13 to 18 years old by November 4, 2014. On the other hand, the senior category is open to those who are above 18 years and one day old to 25 years old.

Five adjudicators – four Filipinos and one from the Asian region – will evaluate the competition, with the dancers to be scored based on technique and artistry.

Winners in both junior and senior categories will receive P35,000 (first prize), P25,000 (second prize) and P15,000 (third prize) and the Trudl Dubsky Award for Choreography.

A maximum of 15 finalists will be accepted for each category, with the deadline for submission of applications on July 31, 2014.

For more information, visit the CCP website.

source: www.abs-cbnnews.com

Wednesday, December 5, 2012

Psy teaches Rico Hizon 'Gangnam Style'


SINGAPORE – Singapore-based Filipino broadcaster Rico Hizon got a private lesson from Korean superstar Psy on how to dance his worldwide hit “Gangnam Style” during the singer’s visit to Singapore over the weekend.

The 34-year-old Psy performed at the Marina Bay Sands last Saturday, December 1, as part of his whirlwind tour.



An hour before he took the stage, Psy met with members of the Singapore media, including Hizon, who works for the BBC.

During his one-on-one meeting with the Korean, Hizon said their interview wouldn’t be complete without Psy teaching him how to dance “Gangnam Style” -- and the singer gamely taught the Filipino the basic steps.

In the interview, Psy said his name is actually short for “psycho.”




“What I thought was, I was crazy about music, dancing and performing so that kind of psycho,” he said.

Psy also revealed that he is working on currently working on an album for the international market, which is targeted for release next March.

But the singer admitted that he doesn’t expect his next single to be as big as “Gangnam Style,” which now has more than 850 million hits on the video-sharing site YouTube.

“I can say I’m gonna do my best. But I can not beat ‘Gangnam Style’ that’s for sure That’s one time only. It’s a phenomenon,” he told Hizon.

“Gangnam Style” is actually a track from Psy’s sixth album.

“I’ve done same kind of thing for 12 years, the same kind of song for 12 years, the same kind of dance for 12 years, but all of a sudden this happens. I didn’t do anything on purpose. Honestly, I did not put in any effort to be in the international (stage). It’s so strange, weird,” Psy said in the interview.

source: abs-cbnnews.com