Washington_Ballet

The Washington Ballet

The Washington Ballet

Ensemble of professional ballet dancers


The Washington Ballet (TWB) is an ensemble of professional ballet dancers based in Washington, D.C. It was founded in 1976 by Mary Day and has been directed by Julie Kent since 2016.[1][2]

Quick Facts General information, Name ...

The Mary Day years (1976–99)

Mary Day (née Mary Henry Day; 25 January 1910 – 11 July 2006), a native of Washington, and her mentor, Lisa Gardiner (né Elizabeth C. Gardiner; 1894–1958), established the Washington School of Ballet in 1944.[3] In the 1950s, a pre-professional group of dancers trained at the school joined to perform at the National Cathedral and the D.C. Department of Recreation with the National Symphony Orchestra. This group also toured New York, West Virginia, and the Dominican Republic, where the troupe performed with Alicia Alonso in 1956.[4]

In 1961, the Washington Ballet School premiered Day's The Nutcracker[3] with the National Symphony Orchestra in Constitution Hall. In 1976, Day started The Washington Ballet, a company providing a professional showcase for the students of The Washington School of Ballet. Funded by a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts, Day hired Peter Grigsby as the first administrative director who took advantage of the Department of Labor's Comprehensive Employment and Training Act to hire dancers. He was followed by Alton Miller as director who expanded the touring of the company. The Washington Ballet founding company members included Madelyn Berdes, Patricia Berrend, James Canfield, Sharon Caplan, Robin Conrad, Lynn Cote, Laurie Dameron, John Goding, Robin Hardy, Jon Jackson, Brian Jameson, Terry Lacy, Christine Matthews, Ricardo Mercado, Julie Miles, Patricia Miller, Philip Rosemond, Helen Sumerwell and Allison Zusi.

Resident choreographer Goh

The company's first season consisted of three works by an up-and-coming choreographer/dancer from the Dutch National Ballet, Goh Choo San, who was resident choreographer at the founding of the company[5] and later became associate artistic director. Goh's teaching and choreographic demands in his first two years in Washington DC moved the company from being described as "pre-professional" to solidly professional level,[5] with Mikhail Baryshnikov showing interest in, and eventually dancing with, the company and Goh's choreography in 1979.[6]

In 1980, 17-year-old company member Amanda McKerrow was chosen as one of nine dancers to compete on the official U.S. dance team at the Fourth International Ballet Competition in Moscow. She partnered with Simon Dow and won the gold medal, becoming the first United States citizen to win the competition.[7] During the 1980s and 1990s, The Washington Ballet performed full seasons in Washington, D.C., and toured internationally to China, Japan, Malaysia, Singapore, Russia, Spain, and South America.

During his time at The Washington Ballet until his death in November 1987, Goh choreographed 19 ballets for the company.

Post-Goh years

Mary Day stepped down as artistic director of the company in 1999 and retired as school director in 2003. She died in 2006.[3]

The Septime Webre years (1999–2016)

In 1999, Septime Webre, a Cuban-American, joined The Washington Ballet as the artistic director. Works created for the Washington Ballet by Webre include Juanita y Alicia (2000), Carmen (2001), Journey Home (2002), Cinderella (2003), Oui/Non (2006), and State of Wonder (2006), as well as Carmina Burana, Fluctuating Hemlines, Where the Wild Things Are, and Peter Pan. The company has staged the works of such contemporary choreographers as George Balanchine, Twyla Tharp, Christopher Wheeldon, Mark Morris, Trey McIntyre, Edwaard Liang, and Nacho Duato, in addition to the more classical ballets, like Giselle, Coppélia, and La Sylphide. In October 2000, Webre led The Washington Ballet on an historic tour of Havana, making it the first American ballet company to perform in Cuba since 1960. In 2004, the Washington Ballet premiered Webre's The Nutcracker. Webre created his takes on The Great Gatsby in 2010 and The Sun Also Rises in 2013.[8]

Webre also initiated DanceDC, the Washington Ballet's outreach and education program that combines creative movement with an integrated language arts curriculum for D.C. public school children. Classical pre-ballet technique is taught to interested DanceDC students through a unique scholarship program called EXCEL! Nine boys and nine girls from the DanceDC schools are selected annually to receive on-site professional ballet technique training for an hour once a week at The Washington School of Ballet. In 2005, the company began The Washington Ballet at the Town Hall Education, Arts and Recreation Campus (TWB@THEARC), a home to community programs by the company as well as a branch of the Washington School of Ballet east of the Anacostia River.[9]

Julie Kent (2016-2023)

In February 2016, Webre announced he'd be stepping down at the end of June.[10] A month later, the company announced Julie Kent, recently retired after dancing with the American Ballet Theatre for 29 years, would take the company's reins starting July 1, 2016.[11] In October 2022, it was announced that Kent would leave the company at the end of the 2022-23 season after accepting an artistic director position at Houston Ballet.[12]

Edwaard Liang (2023-present)

In October 2023, the company announced Edwaard Liang as the incoming artistic director. [13] He will officially begin directing the company in the spring of 2024. [14]

Repertoire

More information Title, Choreographer ...

Company dancers

As of February 2024.

Company

[15]

  • Andrea Allmon
  • Rafael Bejarano
  • Nardia Boodoo
  • Kimberly Cilento
  • Nicholas Cowden
  • Gilles Delellio
  • Kateryna Derechyna
  • Jessy Dick
  • Nicole Graniero
  • Eun Won Lee
  • Lope Lim
  • Ariel Martinez
  • Tamako Miyazaki
  • Javier Morera
  • Ashley Murphy-Wilson
  • Stephen Nakagawa
  • Andile Ndlovu
  • Maki Onuki
  • Samara Rittinger
  • Oscar Sanchez
  • Noura Sander
  • Stephanie Sorota
  • Brittany Stone
  • Vladimir Tapkharov

Studio Company

[16]

  • Rony Baseman
  • Abigail Brent
  • Catherine Doherty
  • Misha Glouchkova
  • Andrey Marciano
  • Alejandro Molina Leon
  • Ethan Slocomb
  • Paolo Tarini
  • Harry Warshaw
  • Jie-Siou Wu

References

  1. Kaufman, Sarah L. (5 February 2016). "Washington Ballet's Septime Webre to step down in June". The Washington Post. Retrieved 7 March 2016.
  2. Kaufman, Sarah L. (7 March 2016). "ABT star Julie Kent is Washington Ballet's new artistic director". The Washington Post. Retrieved 7 March 2016.
  3. Kisselgoff, Anna (23 July 2006). "Mary Day, Teacher of Ballet, Dies at 96". New York Times. Retrieved 23 January 2012.
  4. Shor, Donna (December 2020). "Around Town with Donna Shor". Washington Life Magazine. Retrieved 3 February 2021.
  5. {{cite news first = Carolyn last = Kelemen title = Washington Ballet's Three Faces of Goh | nespaper =. [{The Washington Times}] location = Washington, D.C., United States oages = cover date = May, 1987 last = Welsh | first = Anne Marie | title = Choo San Goh puts Washington on the ballet map | newspaper = Washington Star | location = Washington, D.C., United States | pages = C-1 | date = 16 April 1979 }}
  6. Kaufman, Sarah (3 May 2013). "Washington Ballet's 'Hemingway: The Sun Also Rises'". Washington Post. Retrieved 5 May 2013.
  7. Milloy, Courtland (2012-11-20). "On Mississippi Ave. SE, a place of light and learning". The Washington Post. Retrieved 3 February 2021.
  8. Kaufman, Sarah L. (2016-02-05). "Washington Ballet's Septime Webre to step down in June". The Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved 2016-09-18.
  9. Kaufman, Sarah L. (2016-03-07). "ABT star Julie Kent is Washington Ballet's new artistic director". The Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved 2016-09-18.
  10. Kaufman, Sarah L. (2022-10-21). "Washington Ballet artistic director Julie Kent is stepping down". The Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved 2023-12-21.
  11. Seibert, Brian (2023-10-24). "Edwaard Liang Appointed Artistic Director of Washington Ballet". The New York Times. ISSN 1553-8095. Retrieved 2023-12-21.
  12. "Edwaard Liang". Retrieved 2023-12-21.
  13. "Artists". www.washingtonballet.org. Retrieved 16 Feb 2024.
  14. "Artists". www.washingtonballet.org. Retrieved 16 Feb 2024.

Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Washington_Ballet, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.