August 12, 13, 14
Transcription
August 12, 13, 14
ANAHEIM BALLET and CHAPMAN UNIVERSITY in association with YOUTH AMERICA GRAND PRIX present Photo by Martin Levinne ANAHEIM INTERNATIONAL DANCE FESTIVAL 2011 August 12, 13, 14 CONTENT Welcome from the Mayor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 Welcome from AIDF . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 Presenters. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Schedule of Events . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 Award Recipients . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 Week-long Dance Exhibit – Anaheim MUZEO . . . . 7 Dance on Film – Mao’s Last Dancer . . . . . . . . . . . 7 Gala Program . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Stars of Tomorrow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 Aspiring Dancers Workshops . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 Dancers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 Master Teachers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 Thank You. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 |1| City of AnAheim Mayor ToM TaiT August 12, 2011 Welcome to the City of Anaheim! It is a distinct pleasure to welcome everyone to the Anaheim International Dance Festival 2011 being presented by the Anaheim Ballet, Chapman University and in association with the Youth America Grand Prix. I am very proud that Anaheim is hosting a festival that is exclusively focused on ballet and how it transforms passionate dancers into versatile artists. This is an opportunity to see and learn how dancers develop their unique talents through this incredible beautiful art form. They inspire others by their vision, creativity and artistic interpretation of musical compositions. They enrich the community by sharing with us all this remarkable world of dance. Ballet has a long and rich tradition of artistic excellence, and the Festival gives rise to young talent who will entertain and delight audiences for years to come with their ambitious and sophisticated renditions of great works. I applaud their contributions to the quality of life in Anaheim with their energy and uncompromising dedication and commitment to ballet. Congratulations to everyone involved in the Anaheim International Dance Festival. This will be a truly memorable experience, and I extend my sincere best wishes for continued success. Best wishes, Tom Tait Mayor |2| WELCOME Welcome to the Anaheim International Dance Festival 2011! With great pleasure Anaheim Ballet and Chapman University, in Association with Youth America Grand Prix, are pleased to present the second annual Anaheim International Dance Festival. It has been a wonderful year for Anaheim Ballet and the arts in Anaheim. Our signature online series “Anaheim Ballet: More Than Dance…” has now received over 36 million visits to its site, and our new mayor, Tom Tait, has unofficially though resolutely declared our beautiful city to be arts friendly. We know you’ll enjoy tonight’s performance whether you’re a first-time theater-goer or a seasoned dance enthusiast. Perhaps you were intrigued by this season’s “So You Think You Can Dance” or maybe you were transported by the sheer beauty of a recent ballet performance. Athleticism, passion, beauty and teamwork speak to us all; dance is a universal language. And tonight, you’re sure to be moved by that language as you watch Sleeping Beauty and her Prince at their wedding or the beautiful classic forms revitalized in the contemporary Caravaggio. An amazing team of artists has converged again from around the world uniting in Anaheim for an evening of unrivaled entertainment. The dancers this evening represent diverse companies: American Ballet Theatre, New York City Ballet, Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, San Francisco Ballet, Orlando Ballet, Staatsballett Berlin, Stuttgart Ballet, Les Ballets de Monte-Carlo, Prague State Opera and Ballet and Anaheim Ballet. Despite different dance disciplines and geographical bases, all of our performers have come together this evening with common goals… to entertain, inspire, and remind us of our universal humanity. AIDF is dedicated to bringing arts supporters together, cultivating new audiences via an immersion experience into the world of dance, and gathering the most highly talented international artists to share and develop their art form. “To watch us dance is to hear our hearts speak.” ~Hopi Indian saying IMPRESARIO COMMITTEE AIDF Julie Tait Honorary Chairperson Lawrence Rosenberg Delia Cabo Ashley Duree Liz Ericsen Lorri Galloway Rhonda Hedtke Lore Lapinsky Erin Longhofer Luis Mateos Dale Merrill Lawrence Rosenberg Sarma Lapenieks Rosenberg Mishal Montgomery Denny Newell Rayell Segerstrom Kathy Vargas Jacque Lollie Walker * * * Cathy Wills Sara Windal *in support of Anaheim Ballet |3| PRESENTERS Anaheim Ballet and Chapman University, in association with Youth America Grand Prix ANAHEIM BALLET’s, directed by Lawrence and Sarma company also performs for thousand of students annually Lapenieks Rosenberg, mission is to enlighten and entertain at the Segerstrom Center for the Arts, at the Cerritos audiences with classically rooted programming and Center for the Performing Arts and at public schools contemporary presentation. AB provides quality throughout Los Angeles, Riverside and Orange counties. performances to audiences of balletomanes as well as novice AB dancers are seen regularly on the internet series ballet-goers and acts as a haven to talented Southern “Anaheim Ballet: More Than Dance...” a global podcast, California artists and as a magnet to international talents. which has accrued over 36 million visits to date! Anaheim Ballet’s Educational Outreach and AB partners with numerous organizations including Lawrence & Sarma Rosenberg Directors Scholarship program STEP-UP! is committed to the the Segerstrom Center for the Arts, the Orange County promotion of classical ballet and providing its numerous benefits to Philharmonic Society, the Boys and Girls Club, Bruno Serato’s those otherwise not able to receive them. Caterina’s Girls Club, Fairmont Schools, the Mayor’s Gift of Anaheim Ballet is the city’s resident ballet company with three History, the Anaheim Children’s Festival and many charities distinct components: a professional performing company, an throughout Orange County. Anaheim Ballet is the recipient of the Arts Orange County academy, and a no-cost community outreach program for Outstanding Arts Organization Award and the Samueli Big Heart underserved youth. Award. AB’s alumni are currently dancing around the globe! AB presents concert performances throughout Southern California and on tour in Laughlin and Las Vegas, Nevada. The The CHAPMAN UNIVERSITY Department of Dance, under the direction of Dale Merrill, Acting Dean of the College of Performing Arts recently received accreditation from the National Association of Schools of Dance. The department mission is to develop wellrounded and versatile independent artists to excel in careers of teaching, choreography and performance of dance. As dance majors at Chapman, students participate in a strong professional training program with high quality productions while still enjoying the benefits of a small university. The Department of Dance has 100 YOUTH AMERICA GRAND PRIX (YAGP) is the world’s largest international student ballet scholarship competition held annually around the world and in New York City. Founded by two former dancers of the worldrenowned Bolshoi Ballet, Larissa and Gennadi Saveliev, YAGP provides extraordinary educational and professional opportunities to young dancers, including: active majors, 30 minors and produces five mainstage productions every year. Alumni of the Department of Dance can currently be found in the Los Angeles and touring companies of Wicked. A recent Chapman graduate was featured in the film Dreamgirls, two can be seen in the film adaptation of the musical Hairspray and two others were national favorites on the series “So You Think You Can Dance”. Choreography by Chapman alumni may be seen around the country, from Disneyland to the Academy Awards! • Opportunity to receive contracts to dance companies worldwide • Scholarships to leading dance schools in the U.S. and abroad • Performance opportunities on some of the world’s most prestigious stages and at dance festivals around the world Over 200 YAGP alumni are now dancing with 50 companies around the world, including American Ballet Theatre, New York City Ballet, Paris Opera Ballet, Houston Ballet, and San Francisco Ballet, among others. |4| SCHEDULE OF EVENTS OPENING CEREMONY Friday | August 12 | 6:30 p.m. Dodge College of Film and Media Arts Courtyard Chapman University Join dignitaries, dancers and dance fans as they kick off the opening of AIDF! Free! DANCE ON FILM Friday | August 12 | 7:00 p.m. Folino Theater | Chapman University Mao’s Last Dancer, directed by Bruce Beresford [director of Driving Miss Daisy]. A quest for freedom and the courage it takes to live your own life: the struggles, triumphs, intoxication of first love and celebrity life amid pain of exile. Q&A with legendary former Houston Ballet Artistic Director Ben Stevenson, currently Texas Ballet Theater Artistic Director, who helped set Li Cunxin’s true-life adventure in motion … reception follows at Chapman University’s Partridge Dance Center. $20 children & student ID | $30 general | www.ticketweb.com (search AIDF) or at the door GALA PERFORMANCE Saturday | August 13 | 8:00 p.m. - Dinner 6:00 p.m. City National Grove of Anaheim Ballet’s International Superstars! Special guests, dancers from American Ballet Theatre, New York City Ballet, Houston Ballet, Japan, Germany, and more. Featuring Alvin Ailey’s Clifton Brown, ABT’s Michele Wiles, and NYCB’s Charles Askegard! Featuring both classical and cutting edge performances! Tickets only: $20-$100 | Pre-performance Dinner, Tier 1 Ticket, & Reception w/commemorative gift $250 www.ticketmaster.com, by phone: 714 712-2700 or at Grove Box Office STARS OF TOMORROW PERFORMANCE Sunday | August 14 | 3:30 p.m. Waltmar Theatre | Chapman University Showcasing the future of dance from LA’s Spotlight Awards, YAGP, and more! Special guests plus announcement of AIDF Scholarship Award! $20 children & student ID | $30 general | www.ticketweb.com (search AIDF) or at the door ASPIRING DANCERS WORKSHOPS Saturday & Sunday | August 13 & 14 | 10:00 a.m.-1:30 p.m. Partridge Dance Center Studios | Chapman University Selected students ages 10-22 from Southern California dance schools, universities and college dance departments training with the top coaches in the dance world! WEEKLONG DANCE EXHIBIT Monday-Sunday | August 8-14 Anaheim MUZEO Tutus, dance artifacts, and photos of dance legends capture the magic of dance! Featuring photos by Donald Bradburn former west coast Dancemagazine editor. Photos: (top) Misty Copeland & Sascha Radetsky, (bottom) Drew Jacoby & Rubinald Pronk - AIDF 2010 Photos by Todd Lechtick |5| AWARD RECIPIENTS Lifetime Achievement Award: Ben Stevenson, O.B.E. Artistic Director, Texas Ballet Theater For his contributions to the world of international dance, Mr. Stevenson was named an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (O.B.E.) by Queen Elizabeth II in the New Year’s Honors List in December 1999. He has received numerous awards for his choreography including three Gold medals at the International Ballet Competitions of 1972, 1982, and 1986. In April 2000, he was presented with the Dance Magazine Award, one of the most prestigious honors on the American dance scene. In 2005, he was awarded the Texas Medal of Arts. The English National Ballet asked Mr. Stevenson to stage his first, and highly successful, production of The Sleeping Beauty in 1967, which starred dance legend Margot Fonteyn. In 1968, Rebekah Harkness invited him to New York to direct the newly formed Harkness Ballet. After choreographing Cinderella in 1970 for the National Ballet in Washington, D.C., he joined the company in 1971 as Co-Artistic Director with Frederic Franklin. That same year he staged a new production of The Sleeping Beauty in celebration of the inaugural season of The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts. In 1976 Mr. Stevenson was appointed the Artistic Director for Houston Ballet. For twenty-seven years Mr. Stevenson nurtured the company from a small provincial ensemble to one of the nation’s largest dance companies that has performed to critical acclaim throughout the world. He developed Houston Ballet’s repertoire by acquiring the works of the world’s most respected choreographers, commissioning new works, staging the classics and choreographing original works. Mr. Stevenson has almost annually traveled to China on behalf of the United States government as part of a cultural exchange program at the invitation of the Chinese government to teach at the Beijing Dance Academy and introduce Western dance forms including jazz and modern dance, to their students. Mr. Stevenson is the only foreigner to have been made an Honorary Faculty Member at both the Beijing Dance Academy and the Shenyang Conservatory of Music. His broadening of cultural exchange has been immortalized in Bruce Beresford’s film Mao’s Last Dancer. Lifetime Achievement Award: Jillana Director, The Jillana School Jillana received a scholarship at the School of American Ballet at age 11, where she was trained by George Balanchine. She was asked by Mr. Balanchine to join the New York City Ballet one year later and did her first performance with the Company on her thirteenth birthday. She rose directly to Principal and performed with the company for 20 years. Ballets choreographed for Jillana by Balanchine include: Liebeslieder Walzer, Midsummer Night’s Dream, and Don Quixote. Her repertoire includes the greatest Balanchine works such as Serenade, Swan Lake, Symphony in C, Nutcracker, Four Temperaments, Stars and Stripes, Apollo, and Prodigal Son and in ballets choreographed by Jerome Robbins, Frederick Ashton, Anthony Tudor, John Cranko, Todd Bolender and John Taras. She has also appeared as guest artist with other major ballet companies including American Ballet Theatre and National Ballet of Washington. Jillana’s television appearances included the “Tribute to Balanchine”, “Bell Telephone Hour”, “Show of Shows”, “Red Skelton Show” and “Noah and the Flood”, which |6| was choreographed for her by George Balanchine. Her strong presence and extended line created many memorable performances of some of the twentieth centuries greatest works with such partners as Jacques d’Amboise, Edward Villella, Arthur Mitchell, Jerome Robbins, Todd Bolender, Conrad Ludlow, Kent Stowell, André Eglevsky, Eric Bruhn and Rudolf Nureyev. Her love for inspiring and training aspiring young artists brought her to such endeavors as representing the School of American Ballet’s Ford Foundation Scholarship program for 10 years, teaching at the School of American Ballet and Joffrey Ballet School as well as company classes for the New York City Ballet, Ballet West and the Paris Opera Ballet. Jillana currently shares her legacy by coaching and staging Balanchine ballets around the world. She is the Director of the Jillana School and besides directing her school she is the mother of two, William and Ana, and with her husband Alan, Jillana resides in Southern California. EVENTS Week-long Dance Exhibit at Anaheim MUZEO The week-long dance exhibit at the dance world, from explosive action on stage to quiet moments backstage. His keen knowledge of Anaheim MUZEO features tutus, dance choreography and his eye for excellence are revealed with artifacts, and photos of dance legends that capture the magic of stunning effect in this unique and dance! Featuring photos valuable collection of rarely seen photographs. His dance by Donald Bradburn, photography encompasses former west coast superstars such as Mikhail Dancemagazine editor. A dancer and choreographer by profession and an Baryshnikov, Rudolf Nureyev, artist by training, Mr. Bradburn has Natalia Makarova, and renowned companies such as the Bolshoi captured timely, transitory and Ballet, American Ballet Theatre, intimate moments in his and New York City Ballet. photographs of legendary dancers and companies over the past 30 Monday-Sunday years. Mr. Bradburn and his camera Jillana’ s original Serenade costume [seen August 8-14 have painted a detailed portrait of the here] on display at Anaheim MUZEO The MUZEO, Southern California’s newest museum, a center for arts, knowledge, entertainment and culture, engages people of all ages via the showcases of prestigious and world-class traveling exhibits. A new model for urban cultural centers the MUZEO will features a unique variety of changing exhibitions, special events, lectures, classes and weekend festivals. The 25,000 square foot MUZEO complex encompasses Anaheim’s original Carnegie Library (built in 1908) and a new state-of-the art gallery space which has been seamlessly integrated into an urban setting, intimately surrounded by two connecting courtyards, apartment loft living and street-level retail outlets. Dance on Film – Mao’s Last Dancer From Academy Award nominees Bruce Beresford (director, Tender Mercies, Driving Miss Daisy), Jane Scott (producer, Shine) and Jan Sardi (screenwriter, Shine, The Notebook) comes the remarkable true story of ballet dancer Li Cunxin. Mao’s Last Dancer stars Chi Cao, a gifted dancer and principal at the Birmingham Royal Ballet making his impressive screen debut as Li. The cast is rounded out by Bruce Greenwood, Kyle MacLachlan, Joan Chen and Amanda Schull. Based on Li’s best selling autobiography, Mao’s Last Dancer is the epic story of a young poverty stricken boy from China and his inspirational journey to international stardom. The story begins when a young Li is taken from his peasant home by the Chinese government and chosen to study ballet in Beijing. Separated from his family and enduring countless |7| hours of practice, Li struggles to find his place in the new life he has been given. Gaining confidence from a kind teacher’s encouraging guidance and a chance trip to America, Li finally discovers that his passion has always been dance. Mao’s Last Dancer weaves a moving tale about the quest for freedom and the courage it takes to live your own life. The film poignantly captures the struggles, triumphs and the intoxicating effects of first love and celebrity amid the pain of exile. The film showcases ballet sequences from acclaimed choreographer Graeme Murphy. Special Guest Ben Stevenson, former Houston Ballet Artistic Director Ben Stevenson’s broadening of international cultural exchange is immortalized in Mao’s Last Dancer. Friday | August 12 | 7:00 p.m. Folino Theater | Chapman University GALA PROGRAM Gala Performance August 13, 2011 Anaheim International Dance Festival Gala Festive Overture Choreography: Sarma Lapenieks Rosenberg Music: Dmitri Shostakovitch Anaheim Ballet company members, alumni, and apprentices Speakers Julie Tait, Impresario Committee Honorary Chairperson & The Honorable Tom Tait, Mayor of the City of Anaheim Harlequinade Pas de Deux Aria Alekzander & Oliver Halkowich AIDF 2010 Dale Merrill, Acting Dean, College of Performing Arts, Chapman University Lawrence Rosenberg, Anaheim Ballet Director Academy Award Winning Actor George Chakiris, Special Guest Lifetime Achievement Awards Variation from Grand Pas Classique Choreography: Victor Gsovsky Music: Daniel Auber Constantine Allen FALTZ (World Premiere) Choreography: Jeroen Verbruggen Music: Joseph Maurice Ravel Mari Kawanishi and Stephan Bourgond Pas De Deux from Sleeping Beauty Ballet Choreography: Marius Petipa Music: Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky Maria Kochekova and Issac Hernandez Take Five Choreography: Earl Mosley Music: Dave Brubeck Clifton Brown Pas de Deux from Swan Lake Act II Choreography: Marius Petipa, Lev Ivanov Music: Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky Isabella Boylston and Gennadi Saveliev Caravaggio Choreography: Mauro Bigonzetti Music: Bruno Moretti Elisa Carrillo Cabrera and Mikhail Kaniskin Don Quixote Pas de Deux Ana Sophia Scheller & Joseph Phillips AIDF 2010 Tchaikovsky Pas de Deux* Choreography by George Balanchine ©The George Balanchine Trust Music: Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky Michele Wiles and Charles Askegard Intermission |8| Le Corsaire Pas de Deux Elza Leimane-Martinova & Raimonds Martinovs - AIDF 2010 GALA PROGRAM Gala Performance August 13, 2011 “Who Cares”* “The Man I Love” from Who Cares? Choreography by George Balanchine ©The George Balanchine Trust Music: George Gershwin, Hershy Kay orchestration Michele Wiles and Charles Askegard One Overture Choreography: Jorma Elo Music: W. A. Mozart/Franz Biber Maria Kochetkova One Overture was choreographed by Jorma Elo exclusively for Maria Kochetkova as part of REFLECTIONS Project, a co-production of the Bolshoi Theatre, Segerstrom Center for the Arts and Ardani Artists. Le Corsaire Pas de Trois Choreography: Marius Petipa Music: Adolphe Adam, Riccardo Drigo Isabella Boylston, Gennadi Saveliev, Isaac Hernandez Gopak Gennadi Saveliev – AIDF 2010 Como Neve al Sole Choreography: Rolando D’Alesio Music: Frédéric Chopin Rebecca King and Alexander Jones I Wanna Be Ready Choreography: Alvin Ailey Music: Traditional Clifton Brown Le Grand Pas de Deux** Choreography: Christian Spuck Composer: Gioachino Rossini “La gazza ladra” Costume: Nicole Krahl World Premiere: 31 Dec 1999 Stuttgart Ballet Elisa Carrillo Cabrera and Mikhail Kaniskin Ciao! Finale mnemosyne Mari Kawanishi & William Bracewell AIDF 2010 Que Todos os ais São Meus Marcelino Sambé - AIDF 2010 *The Balanchine ballets presented in this program are protected by copyright. Any unauthorized recording is prohibited without the expressed written consent of The George Balanchine Trust and Anaheim Ballet. The performance of Tschaikovsky Pas de Deux and “The Man I Love” from Who Cares?, Balanchine Ballets, are presented by arrangement with The George Balanchine Trust and have been produced in accordance with the Balanchine Style® and Balanchine Technique® Service standards established and provided by the Trust. **Le Grand Pas de Deux is performed with permission from Christian Spuck. |9| STARS OF TOMORROW Stars of Tomorrow August 14, 2011 Featuring The up-and-coming talent of the dance world Welcome to Tomorrow! All Participants Staged by Larissa Saveliev Special Guests Aria Alekzander Houston Ballet & Clifton Brown Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater Plus Stellar students from select Southern California and international dance schools, colleges and universities* Announcing The Marybelle Musco Chapman University AIDF Scholarship Award 2011 *See page 11 for school listings |10| ASPIRING DANCERS WORKSHOPS Workshops August 13-14, 2011 Distinguished Guest Master Teachers Ben Stevenson Texas Ballet Theater, Artistic Director Aria Alekzander Jillana Darci Kistler and Clifton Brown Elisa Carillo Cabrera Alexander Greschenko Mikhail Kaniskin Gennadi Saveliev Larissa Saveliev Invited Schools and Organizations Academy of Music and Performing Arts, Ballet Academy / Wilhelmstrasse. 19 / 80801, Munich, Germany Anaheim Ballet School / 280 E. Lincoln Avenue / Anaheim, CA 92805 Ballet Arte / 742 Genevieve St. / Solana Beach, CA 92075 Backhausdance / P.O. Box 5890 / Orange, CA 92863 Burbank School of the Ballet / 2518 W Burbank Blvd. / Burbank, CA 91505 California Conservatory of Dance / 25732 Taladro Circle / Mission Viejo, CA 91914 California State University, Fullerton / 800 N. State College Blvd. / Fullerton, CA 92831 California State University, Long Beach / 1250 Bellflower Blvd. / Long Beach, CA 90840 Chapman University Dance Department / One University Drive / Orange, CA 92866 Chula Vista Ballet / 870 Jetty Lane / Chula Vista, CA 91914 Dmitri Kulev Classical Ballet Academy / 23091 Del Lago Drive / Laguna Hills, CA 92653 John Cranko School / Urbanstraße 94 / D-70190 Stuttgart, Germany Emi Aiba Ballet School / 238 Moro, Komoro / Nagano, Japan Inland Dance Academy / 2584 E. Highland Ave. / Highland, CA 92346 Kova Ballet Conservatory / 1446 S. Robertson Blvd. / Los Angeles, CA 90035 Lauridsen Ballet Centre / 1261 Sartori Avenue / Torrance, CA 90501 Long Beach Ballet / 1122 East Wardlow Road / Long Beach, CA 90807 Loretta Livingston & Dancers / Los Angeles, CA Los Angeles Ballet Academy / 18138 Sherman Way / Reseda, CA 91335 Los Angeles County High School of the Arts / 5151 State University Dr. / Los Angeles, CA 90032 Lovett Dance Center / 106 W. 1st Street / Tustin, CA 92870 Lula Washington Dance Theatre / 3773 Crenshaw Blvd. / Los Angeles, CA 90016 Maple Conservatory / 1824 Kaiser Avenue / Irvine, CA 92614 Media City Ballet / 237 E. Palm Avenue / Burbank, CA 91502 Megumi Ballet School / Studio M 151 Floor Building 2 Seiko-cho / Fukuoka, japan Orange County Dance Center / 5872 Edinger Avenue / Huntington Beach, CA 92649 Orange County High School of the Arts / 1010 N. Main St. / Santa Ana, CA 92701 Pacific Coast Academy of Dance / 183 Avenida La Pata / San Clemente, CA 92673 Performing Arts Workshop / 1105 2nd Street / Encinitas, CA 92024 Riverside Ballet Arts / 3840 Lemon Street / Riverside, CA 92501 The Rock School for Dance Education / 1101 South Broad Street / Philadelphia, PA 19147-4410 San Diego Academy of Ballet / 4696 Ruffner Street / San Diego, CA 92111 Shirley Winters Ballet / 6688 North Cedar Avenue / Fresno, CA 93710 Southland Ballet Academy / 9527 Garfield Avenue / Fountain Valley, CA 92708 The Marat Daukayev School of Ballet / 731 South La Brea Avenue / Los Angeles, CA 90036 University of California, Irvine / 4000 Mesa Rd. / Irvine, CA 92697 University High School / 4771 Campus Dr. / Irvine, CA 92612 V & T Dance / 23601 Ridge Route Drive, Suite A / Laguna Hills, CA 92653 Westside Ballet / 1709 Stewart Street / Santa Monica, CA 90404 Yuri Grigoriev School of Ballet / 12932 Venice Boulevard / Los Angeles, CA 90066 |11| DANCERS Aria Alekzander Aria Alekzander was born in Laguna Beach, California, where she began her training at Anaheim Ballet. Ms. Alekzander danced the role of Clara in San Francisco Ballet’s The Nutcracker for two consecutive years, and appeared in youth roles with San Francisco Ballet and American Ballet Theatre. She was awarded a scholarship to the San Francisco Ballet School, and attended the American Ballet Theatre Summer Intensive programs in Orange County and New York. Ms. Alekzander was runner-up, at the age of fourteen, at the Los Angeles Music Center Spotlight Awards, won the Orange County Performing Arts Center’s Tomorrow’s Stars Award, was awarded the Los Angeles Youth America Grand Prix title, and was a finalist in the NYC Youth America Grand Prix. She joined Screen Actors Guild at an early age and has appeared in various stage, television, and film productions. She has also been frequently featured as a principal by the Disney corporation in live and broadcast productions. Ms. Alekzander joined American Ballet Theatre Studio Company in 2006 and the Houston Ballet in 2007. Ms. Alekzander’s repertoire includes soloist and principal roles in such works as Ben Stevenson’s Sleeping Beauty and Nutcracker, Stanton Welch’s Marie, Pecos Bill, The Core, staging of La Bayadere, Jerome Robbin’s Fancy Free, and John Cranko’s Taming of the Shrew. Ms. Alekzander has appeared in Pointe Magazine and was featured as Dance Spirit’s “Photo of the Year” 2008 and in the feature column “The Dirt” 2010. Ms. Alekzander is a “Gaynor Minden Artist”. Charles Askegard Charles Askegard was born in Minneapolis, Minnesota, and began his dance training at the age of five with Loyce Houlton and the Minnesota Dance Theatre. He continued his studies in Minneapolis until the age of 16, spending one summer at the School of American Ballet (SAB), the official school of New York City Ballet, in 1983. Mr. Askegard joined American Ballet Theatre as a member of the corps de ballet in 1987, and was promoted to soloist in 1992. In 1997, he left ABT to join New York City Ballet as a soloist. He was promoted to principal in 1998. In 2002, Mr. Askegard appeared in the nationally televised Live from Lincoln Center broadcast, “New |12| York City Ballet’s Diamond Project: Ten Years of New Choreography” on PBS, dancing in Them Twos and in May of 2004 he appeared in the Live From Lincoln Center broadcast of “Lincoln Center Celebrates Balanchine 100,” dancing in Vienna Waltzes. In addition to his appearances with New York City Ballet, Mr. Askegard has been a guest artist with Pacific Northwest Ballet, Ballet Etudes of South Florida, Bavarian State Ballet, Philippine Ballet Theatre, The Daring Project and the Stars of American Ballet. He can also be seen in the documentary Ballet, directed by Fred Wiseman. DANCERS Stephan Bourgond Stephan Bourgond was born in Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario, Canada in 1985. He joined the National Ballet School in Toronto in 1996 from where he graduated in 2003 with academic honors, the Eric Bruhn Prize and the Stephen Godfrey Scholarship. He then moved to Germany, and after one year in the Hamburg Ballet School joined the Hamburg Ballet where he began his professional career dancing the repertoire of John Neumeier. In 2006 he joined Les Ballets de Monte Carlo where he was soon promoted to Demi-Soloist in 2008. In Monte Carlo, Stephan has danced roles from the repertoire of Jean- Christophe Maillot such as The King (La Belle), Paris (Romeo et Juliette), Faust (Faust), Lysander (Le Songe), and The Father (Cendrillion) and performed pieces such as Artifact Suite from William Forsythe and In Memorium by Sidi Larbi Cherkaoui. He was featured as a soloist in the creation of Sheherazade by JeanChristophe Maillot and created many other pieces with guest choreographers such as Johan Inger (In Exact), Shen Wei (7 to 8 and...) Marco Goecke (Whiteout, Le Spectre, Beautiful Freak in Hamburg), Alonzo King (Writing Ground) and Emio Greco (Corps du Ballet). Isabella Boylston Born in Sun Valley, Idaho, Isabella Boylston began dancing at the age of three. While training at the Academy of Colorado Ballet, she won the gold medal in 2001 at the Youth America Grand Prix Finals in New York City. In 2002, she began training at the Harid Conservatory in Boca Raton, Florida, on a full scholarship. There she performed numerous leading roles, including Medora in Le Corsaire, the pas de trois from Paquita, Lise in La Fille mal gardée and the Sugarplum Fairy in The Nutcracker. Boylston joined the ABT Studio Company in 2005, the main company as an apprentice in May 2006 and the corps de ballet in March 2007. Her repertory with the Company includes the Ballerina in The Bright Stream, Moss in Cinderella, Aurora in Coppélia, an Odalisque in Le Corsaire, a flower girl in Don Quixote, the second girl in Fancy Free, the peasant pas de deux and Moyna in Giselle, a Harlot in Romeo and Juliet, Princess Florine and the Fairy of Fervor in The Sleeping Beauty, the pas de trois and the Polish Princess in Swan Lake, the Tchaikovsky Pas de Deux, the lead in Theme and Variations and roles in Ballo della Regina, Birthday Offering, Brief Fling, Désir, Everything Doesn’t Happen at Once and From Here On Out. She created leading roles in Lauri Stallings’ Citizen, Alexei Ratmansky’s Dumbarton and Christopher Wheeldon’s Thirteen Diversions. Boylston won the 2009 Princess Grace Award and was nominated for the 2010 Prix Benois de la Danse. She was promoted to Soloist in June 2011. ©Andrew Eccles Clifton Brown Clifton Brown trained at various schools including Take 5 Dance Academy, Ballet Arizona, New School for the Arts and The Ailey School, where he was a student in the Ailey/Fordham B.F.A. Program in Dance. In 1999 he joined the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater where he was featured in many works, named Assistant Rehearsal Director, served as Judith Jamison’s choreographic assistant and still performs as a guest artist. Mr. Brown has received a Donna Wood Foundation Award, a Level 1 ARTS award given by the National Foundation for Advancement in the |13| Arts, and was a 2005 nominee in the U.K. for a Critics Circle National Dance Award for best male dancer. In 2007, Mr. Brown received a “Bessie” Award in recognition of his work with the Ailey company, and in 2008 received a Black Theater Arts Award. He has performed with Earl Mosley’s Diversity of Dance and as a guest artist with Nevada Ballet and the Miami City Ballet. Mr. Brown teaches master classes in dance as well as being licensed to teach GYROTONIC® and GYROKINESIS®. DANCERS ©Ulrich Beuttenmueller Elisa Carrillo Cabrera Elisa Carrillo Cabrera was born in Mexico. She began her training at the Escuela Nacional de Danza Clásica in Mexico, and upon graduation in 1997, she continued her studies at the English National Ballet School. Ms. Cabrera joined the Stuttgart Ballett as a member of the corps de ballet in 2000. She was promoted to demi-soloist in 2004, and soloist in 2006. In the following year, 2007, she joined Staatsballett Berlin as a demi-soloist, and since 2009 has been a soloist dancer. During 2004 to 2006, Ms. Cabrera achieved outstanding results from Mexico’s Concurso Nacional de Danza Clásica Infantil y Juvenil, receiving Bronze, Silver, and Gold medals. Invited to perform on the most distinguished stages around the world, she has performed in various countries such as France, Japan, China, US, Korea, Italy, Kairo, Switzerland, Singapore, Hong Kong and Luxemburg. Ms. Cabrera is currently a soloist in the Staatsballett Berlin. ©David Allen Isaac Hernandez Isaac Hernandez was born in Guadalajara, Mexico and first trained with his father, Hector Hernandez, followed by the Philadelphia’s Rock School for Dance Education. He performed with ABT II prior to joining SF Ballet in 2008, and was promoted to Soloist in 2011. Hernandez has danced a variety of featured roles including the pas de trois and Spanish in Tomasson’s Swan Lake; and Nutcracker Prince, Spanish, Chinese, and Russian in Tomasson’s Nutcracker. His repertory also includes lead roles in Balanchine’s “Emeralds” and Tchaikovsky Pas de Deux; Possokhov’s Diving into the Lilacs and Fusion; Ratmansky’s Russian Seasons; Tomasson’s Concerto Grosso, On a Theme of Paganini, and Prism; and Wheeldon’s Within the Golden Hour. His awards include the gold medal at the USA International Ballet Competition in Jackson, Mississippi in 2006, the bronze medal and special award from the Kirov ballet at Moscow’s International Ballet Competition in 2005, and first place in the Cuba International Competition in 2004. Alexander Jones Alexander Jones was born in Rochford, Essex, Great Britain. He received his ballet training at the Royal Ballet School in London and graduated in 2005. In 2005/06 Mr. Jones joined the Stuttgart Ballet’s Corps de ballet. In the season 2007/08 he was promoted to Demi-Soloist, in 2008/09 to Soloist. In April of 2011 he was promoted to Principal dancer following his performance in Romeo and Juliet. At the Stuttgart Ballet, Mr Jones has danced major roles such as the title role in Hamlet (Kevin O’Day), Colas in La fille mal gardée (Sir Frederick Ashton) and Petrucchio in The Taming of the Shrew (John Cranko). In April 2011, Artistic Director Reid Anderson promoted Alexander Jones to Principal dancer right on stage. |14| Mr. Jones has performed Count Paris in Romeo and Juliet, a Cavalier of the Princess of Spain, Benno in Swan lake, Hilarion and Peasant Pas de Deux in Giselle, the Torero in Carmen, Gurn in La Sylphide, Gaston Rieux in in Lady of the Camellias, Cassio in Othello, Prince and the Bluebird in Sleeping Beauty, and “R” in R.B.M.E. He has performed in works by such choreographers as John Cranke, Kenneth MacMillan, Jerome Robbins, Maurice Bejart, Jiří Kylián, William Forsythe, Reid Anderson, John Neumier, Hans Von Manen, Glen Tetley, Christian Spuck and Mauro Bigonzetti. Mr. Jones has had works created for him by: Demis Volpi, Douglas Lee, Wayne McGregor, Bridget Breiner, and Kevin O’Day. DANCERS Mikhail Kaniskin Mikhail Kaniskin was born in Moscow, Russia. He began his training at the Bolshoi Ballet School. He continued his training at the John Cranko School of Stuttgart Ballet in Germany. In 1996, Mr Kaniskin was invited to participate at Prix de Lausanne, where shortly afterwards, he was invited to join the Stuttgart Ballet. In 2001, he was promoted to Demi-Soloist, in 2002 became a Soloist, and in the beginning of the 2004 season was promoted to Principal Dancer. Mr. Kaniskin has performed most of the repertoire of the Stuttgart Ballet, both in Germany and abroad. Mr. Kaniskin has toured the United States, Canda, China, Japan, Italy and Korea. In 2007, Mr. Kaniskin joined the Berlin State Opera Ballet as a Principal Dancer. In 2009, he was invited to perform as a guest artist with the Mariinsky Ballet. Mari Kawanishi Born in Tokyo, Ms. Kawanishi started ballet training at the age of seven at the Tachibana Ballet School in Japan. When she was twelve, she was accepted to the Elmhurst School for Dance in England and studied there for four years. In 2006, Ms.Kawanishi received a scholarship to the John Cranko School in Stuttgart, Germany from the Youth America Grand Prix New York Finals. She then joined the Royal Ballet School in London in 2007, where she performed with the Royal Ballet in the Nutcracker, Sleeping Beauty, Romeo and Juliet, and Cinderella. She graduated the school in 2010 and joined the Dresden Semperoper Ballet where she performed pieces such by William Forsythe, George Balanchine, David Dawson and Johan Inger. Ms. Kawanishi is joining the Staatsballett Berlin. Rebecca King Native of Baltimore, Maryland, Rebecca King trained with Olga Tozyiakova. While still a student there she won laureateship from the International Ballet Competition in Varna, Bulgaria, and was a 2008 Youth America Grand Prix New York Finalist. Ms. King also received the Grand Prix from the International Ballet Competition in Artek, Russia. In 2006 she was engaged as soloist by the Ukraine National Ballet, appearing in the Pas de Trois and Dance of the Large Swans in Tchaikovsky’s Swan Lake; as Ingrid in Peer Gynt; and in the Pas d’Action |15| and Pas de Trois in La Bayadère. From the 2008/09 season, she has been demi soloist and, since 2009/10, soloist of the Prague State Opera ballet company, dancing among other roles the Swan Lake Pas de Trois, Big Swans, Odile/Odette, the title part in Cinderella, and the leading role of Anastasia in the production of The Sleeping Beauty – The Czar’s Last Daughter. Ms. King is currently a Soloist with the National Theatre in Prague, Czech Republic and a Permanent Guest Artist with the Prague State Opera, Czech Republic. DANCERS ©David Allen Maria Kochetkova Born in Moscow, Maria Kochetkova trained at the Bolshoi Ballet School for eight years before dancing with The Royal Ballet and English National Ballet in London. She joined the San Francisco Ballet as a Principal Dancer in 2007. Her classical repertoire includes the title role in Giselle, Aurora in The Sleeping Beauty, Kitri in Don Quixote, Juliet in Romeo & Juliet, Odette-Odile in Swan Lake, Clara and the Sugar Plum Fairy in The Nutcracker and the title role in Alice in Wonderland. She has also performed in George Balanchine’s Coppelia (as Swanilda), Divertimento No. 15, Jewels (Emeralds and Rubies), Serenade and Theme and Variations, Symphony in C (2nd movement), William Forsythe’s in the middle, somewhat elevated and Artifact Suite, Kenneth MacMillan’s Winter Dreams, Frederick Ashton’s Symphonic Variations, Wayne McGregor’s Chroma (opening night for US premiere) and ballets by David Dawson, Derek Deane, Jorma Elo, Mark Morris, Yuri Possokhov, Alexei Ratmansky, Jerome Robbins, Helgi Tomasson, Christopher Wheeldon and Hans Van Manen. Ms. Kochetkova has created principal roles in Yuri Possokhov’s Diving into the Lilacs, Raymonda Pas de Deux and Classical Symphony, Helgi Tomasson’s |16| On a Theme of Paganini and Trio, and Christopher Wheeldon’s Within the Golden Hour and Number 9. Ms. Kochetkova performs as a guest artist with the Bolshoi and Stanislavsky Theaters in Moscow, the Mikhailovsky Theater in St. Petersburg, the Tokyo Ballet in Japan including performances as Kitri in Don Quixote for the opening night of the 2009 NBS World Ballet Festival in Tokyo and with the Bolshoi's Reflections project (2011) at the Segerstrom Center for the Arts in Orange County and the Bolshoi Theatre in Moscow. Ms. Kochetkova performed the Grand Pas de Deux in San Francisco Ballet’s Nutcracker which was broadcast by PBS in 2008 and won the solo gold medal in the NBC series Superstars of Dance which was watched by over 10 million viewers. Ms. Kochetkova’s prizes and awards include the Isadora Duncan Award for the role of Giselle and medals at the International Ballet Competitions in Seoul (Gold, 2005), Rome (Gold, 2005), Riety (Gold, 2005), Luxembourg (Gold, 2003), Varna (Silver and the Press Jury Prize, 2002), Moscow (Bronze, 2001). She is also a winner of the Prix de Lausanne (2002). DANCERS Gennadi Saveliev Born in Moscow, Russia, Gennadi Saveliev began his ballet studies at the Bolshoi Ballet School at the age of nine. He has studied with such distinguished teachers and coaches as Sergei Berezhnoi, Pyotr Pestov, Mikhail Lavrovsky, Stanley Williams at the School of American Ballet, Eleanor D’Antuono and Cynthia Gregory. At 18 he joined the Bolshoi Ballet Grigorovich Company where his repertoire included the Chinese Doll in The Nutcracker, one of the four cavaliers in Raymonda and the pas de trois in Swan Lake. Mr.Saveliev has also danced with the Nevada Dance Theatre, Tulsa Ballet, Los Angeles Classical Ballet and the New Jersey Ballet. Saveliev won the Silver Medal at the 1996 New York International Ballet Competition and was a finalist at the Nagoya Ballet Competition in 1999. Mr. Saveliev joined American Ballet Theatre as a member of the corps de ballet in January 1996. His repertoire with the company includes roles in La Bayadère, Bruch Violin Concerto No. 1, Coppélia, Le Corsaire, Diana and Acteon, Diversion of Angels, Don Quixote, The Dream, Christopher Wheeldon’s VIII, Fall River Legend, Flames of Paris, Giselle, Manon, The Merry Widow, The Nutcracker, Offenbach in the Underworld, Onegin, On the Dnieper, Pillar of Fire, Prince Igor, Raymonda, Romeo and Juliet, The Sleeping Beauty, Swan Lake, Sylvia, The Taming of the Shrew, Ballet Imperial, In The Upper Room, The Leaves Are Fading, Les Sylphides, Symphonie Concertante, Theme and Variations and Without Words, as well as roles in Black Tuesday, Clear, HereAfter, Jabula, Overgrown Path, Petite Mort and Symphony in C. He created leading roles in Rabbit and Rogue and Seven Sonatas. Mr. Saveliev is a member of “Angel Corella and Friends” and “Stiefel and Stars” touring companies and is also the founder and artistic director of Youth America Grand Prix, America’s first student ballet scholarship competition. Mr. Saveliev was promoted to American Ballet Theatre Soloist in August 2002. Mr. Saveliev was recently featured on ‘So, You Think You Can Dance” presenting his signature performance of Gopak. Michele Wiles Born in Baltimore, Maryland, Michele Wiles received her early training in Washington, D.C. At the age of ten, she received a full scholarship to the Kirov Academy of Ballet in Washington, D.C. where she studied from 1991 to 1997. Ms. Wiles also participated in the summer programs at The Joffrey Ballet and The Royal Ballet before joining American Ballet Theatre’s Studio Company (now ABT II) in 1997. In 1996, Ms. Wiles was a Gold Medal winner at the 18th International Ballet Competition in Varna, a Bronze Medal winner in Nagoya, Japan and a finalist at the Paris International Dance Competition. She was a Princess Grace Foundation – U.S.A. Dance Fellowship recipient for 1999-2000 and won the Erik Bruhn Prize in 2002. Ms. Wiles joined American Ballet Theatre in 1998 and was promoted to Soloist in 2000 and to Principal Dancer in 2005. Her roles with the Company include Polyhymnia in Apollo, Gamzatti and a Shade in La Bayadère, the Fairy Godmother and the Winter Fairy in Ben Stevenson’s Cinderella, Aurora in Coppélia, Medora and an Odalisque in Le Corsaire, Kitri, Queen of the Driads |17| and a flower girl in Don Quixote, Hermia in The Dream, Myrta in Giselle, Grand Pas Classique, His Experiences in HereAfter, Lescaut’s Mistress in Manon, the Sugar Plum Fairy and the Snow Queen in Kevin McKenzie’s The Nutcracker, Hagar in Pillar of Fire, the Siren in Prodigal Son, Raymonda and Clemence in Raymonda, Princess Aurora and Lilac Fairy in The Sleeping Beauty, Odette-Odile, the pas de trois and the Polish Princess in Swan Lake, Ceres and the title role in Sylvia, the fourth movement in Symphony in C, the pas de six in The Taming of the Shrew, the Tchaikovsky Pas de Deux, and leading roles in Baker’s Dozen, Ballet Imperial, Ballo della Regina, Black Tuesday, The Brahms-Haydn Variations, Dark Elegies, Diversion of Angels, Drink To Me Only With Thine Eyes, Études, Glow - Stop, In The Upper Room, The Leaves Are Fading, Marimba, One of Three, Petite Mort, Sinfonietta, Symphonie Concertante, Theme and Variations and workwithinwork. She created leading roles in Concerto No. 1 for Piano and Orchestra, Dumbarton, Gong, One of Three and Within You Without You: A Tribute to George Harrison. DANCERS and Constantine Allen Constantine ‘Costa’ Allen is 18 years old and a student at the John Cranko Schule in Stuttgart, Germany. He has just completed one year in the two year Academy program under the tutelage of Mr. Petr Pestov. Prior to this Mr. Allen studied for four years with scholarship at the Kirov Academy of Ballet in Washington, D.C. with teachers Mr. Anatoli Kucheruk and Mr. Vladimir Djouloukhadze. He won the Grand Prix Award and the Outstanding Dancer Award in February of 2011 at the Tanzolymp Competition in Berlin, Germany. He recently danced at the Berlin State Opera Ballet’s Japan Gala in May of 2011. Mr. Allen was a finalist in Jackson IBC in June of 2010 and is a two time bronze medalist at the Youth America Grand Prix. Anaheim Ballet John Ajayi, Amber Ajluni, Elan Alekzander, Allyson Barkdull, Daniel Benavides [courtesy Orlando Ballet, AB alumnus], Amanda Fairweather, Shiori Fujita [AB apprentice], Oscar Gonzales, Enton Hoxha, Claire Keeley, Jorge Richard Lagunas, Denny Newell, Vanessa Sah, Amanda Smith, Sara Soto, Adrian Veloz, Victoria-Rose Viren [AB apprentice] Special Guest George Chakiris, Academy Award Winning Dancer and Actor Academy Award winning actor George Chakiris has established an international career in film, television and theater. His acting, singing, and dancing credits include nearly two dozen films, several acclaimed minseries in Europe and Japan, BBC performances and concert tours in Las Vegas and around the globe. His dynamic performance as Bernardo in the film classic “West Side Story” earned Mr. Chakiris an Oscar and a Golden Globe Award. In 1991 Mr. Chakiris was summoned to Paris and awarded the status of “Officer de L’Orde des Arts et des Lettres” by the French Government’s Minister of Culture for his contribution to the arts. The son of immigrant Greek parents, Mr. Chakiris was born in Norwood, Ohio and raised in both Arizona and California. In California, he was a member of the choir at St. Luke’s Episcopal Church in Long Beach California, a group that was noted for having performed in dozens of films. Mr. Chakiris appeared with them in a concert sequence in MGM’s Song of Love, starring Katherine Hepburn, which left a strong impact on his future career. Prior to starring in West Side Story, Mr. Chakiris appeared in films with Cyd Charisse, Mitzi Gaynor, Donald O’Connor, Debbie Reynolds, Danny Kaye, Bing Crosby, Gene |18| Kelly, and Rosemary Clooney. He was in the film classics There’s No Business Like Show Business, Brigadoon, White Christmas, and Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, starring Marilyn Monroe. Mr. Chakiris relocated to Manhattan in pursuit of an acting career and landed an audition for the London cast of the smash Broadway musical West Side Story and was chosen to play the role of Riff, the leader of the Jets. Jerome Robbins who conceived West Side Story, co-directed and choreographed the film version cast Mr. Chakiris as Bernardo, leader of the Sharks. It was the role that would lead him to the Academy Award. In Italy Mr. Chakiris starred with Claudia Cardinale in the politically intriguing Bebo’s Girl, and later in the romantic film The Theft of the Mona Lisa. His European popularity was reaffirmed when he starred in the French film The Young Girls of Rochefort, with Catherine Deneuve and Gene Kelly. Mr. Chakiris has also starred with Yul Brynner, Richard Widmark, Charleton Heston, Cliff Robertson, Dirk Bogarde, and Lana Turner. Mr. Chakiris’s career and most prominently his role in West Side Story epitomizes the power that dance holds in the cultural life of our nation… MASTER TEACHERS Ben Stevenson, O.B.E. Artistic Director, Texas Ballet Theater Mr. Stevenson, a native of Portsmouth, England, received his dance training at the Arts Educational School in London. Upon his graduation he was awarded the prestigious Adeline Genee Gold Medal, the highest award given to a dancer by the Royal Academy of Dancing. At the age of eighteen he partnered Alicia Markova in Where the Rainbow Ends and soon after was invited to join the Sadler’s Wells Royal Ballet by Dame Ninette de Valois, where he worked closely with Sir Frederick Ashton, Sir Kenneth MacMillan, and John Cranko. A few years later Sir Anton Dolin invited him to dance with London Festival Ballet where, as a Principal Dancer, he performed leading roles in all the classic ballets. In 1967 English National Ballet asked Mr. Stevenson to stage his first, and highly successful, production of The Sleeping Beauty which starred Margot Fonteyn. In 1968 Rebekah Harkness invited him to New York to direct the newly formed Harkness Ballet. After choreographing Cinderella in 1970 for the National Ballet in Washington, D.C., he joined the company in 1971 as Co-Artistic Director with Frederic Franklin. That same year he staged a new production of The Sleeping Beauty in celebration of the inaugural season of The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts. In 1976 Mr. Stevenson was appointed the Artistic Director for Houston Ballet. For twenty-seven years Mr. Stevenson nurtured the company from a small provincial ensemble to one of the nation’s largest dance companies that has performed to critical acclaim throughout the world. He developed Houston Ballet’s repertoire by acquiring the works of the world’s most respected choreographers, commissioning new works, staging the classics and choreographing original works. In 1978 during his tenure with the Houston Ballet, Mr. Stevenson traveled to China on behalf of the United States government as part of a cultural exchange program. Since then he has returned almost every year at the invitation of the Chinese government to teach at the Beijing Dance Academy and introduce Western dance forms including jazz and modern dance, to their students. He was instrumental in the creation of the Choreographic Department at the |19| Beijing Dance Academy in 1985 and is the only foreigner to have been made an Honorary Faculty Member at both the Beijing Dance Academy and the Shenyang Conservatory of Music. In July 2003 Mr. Stevenson became Artistic Director of Texas Ballet Theater. Over the past several years, Texas Ballet Theater has experienced tremendous growth. He has continued to expand the company’s repertoire, staging both the classics and choreographing original works. The international Company now includes dancers from countries around the world, including England, Cuba, Ukraine, Israel, Brazil and the United States. Texas Ballet Theater’s education programs have also grown, as enrollment at the Dallas and Fort Worth Academies have reached full capacity. Texas Ballet Theater is the resident ballet company at the two premier performance venues in North Texas, the Nancy Lee & Perry R. Bass Performance Hall in Fort Worth and the new AT&T Performing Arts Center Margot and Bill Winspear Opera House in Dallas. As a choreographer Mr. Stevenson has created some of the world’s most breathtaking ballets, including the full-length works Swan Lake, Romeo and Juliet, Cinderella, The Nutcracker, The Sleeping Beauty, and original productions of Peer Gynt (which opened Norway’s Bergen Festival Gala in 1983), Coppélia, Don Quixote, Dracula, The Snow Maiden and Cleopatra. His repertoire of original works also includes both romantic and neoclassic pas de deux that have received critical acclaim and international awards. Additionally, he has staged his ballets for English National Ballet, American Ballet Theatre, Paris Opera Ballet, National Ballet of Canada, La Scala in Milan, Munich State Opera Ballet, Joffrey Ballet, London City Ballet, Ballet de Santiago, and for many companies in the United States. As a teacher, Mr. Stevenson has trained and influenced thousands of dancers from around the globe. His students have performed with the world’s most renowned companies, including The Royal Ballet, Paris Opéra Ballet, Les Grandes Ballets Canadien, The National Ballet of China, Birmingham Royal Ballet, American Ballet Theatre, New York City Ballet, San Francisco Ballet and more. MASTER TEACHERS Jillana Jillana received a scholarship at the School of American Ballet at age 11, where she was trained by George Balanchine. She was asked by Mr. Balanchine to join the New York City Ballet one year later and did her first performance with the Company on her thirteenth birthday. By-passing soloist she became a Principal six years later and performed with the company for 20 years. Ballets choreographed for Jillana by Balanchine include, Liebeslieder Walzer, Midsummer Night’s Dream, and Don Quixote. Balanchine ballets in her repertoire include Serenade, Swan Lake, Symphony in C, Nutcracker, Four Temperaments, Stars and Stripes, Apollo, and Prodigal Son. She has performed in ballets choreographed by Jerome Robbins, Frederick Aston, Anthony Tudor, John Cranko, Todd Bolender and John Taras. Jillana also has appeared as a guest artist with other major ballet companies including American Ballet Theatre and National Ballet of Washington, and in numerous television shows, including the Tribute to Balanchine, Bell Telephone Hour, Show of Shows, Red Skeleton Show and Noah and the Flood, which was choreographed for her by George Balanchine. She also appeared in the Broadway musical, Destry Rides Again, directed and choreographed by Michael Kidd. Jillana’s partners have included: Jacques d’Amboise, Edward Villella, Arthur Mitchell, Jerome Robbins, Todd Bolender, Conrad Ludlow, Kent Stowell, André Eglevsky, Eric Bruhn and Rudolf Nureyev. Jillana was a representative for the School of American Ballet’s Ford Foundation Scholarship program for 10 years. Jillana has taught at the School of American Ballet and the Joffrey School as well as company classes for the New York City Ballet, Ballet West and the Paris Opera Ballet. She was on the faculty of the University of California at Irvine for 12 years. Jillana was Guest Lecturer at the University of Iowa and Southern Methodist University. She taught at the Dance Aspen Summer School for 11 years, the last two serving as its Director. Currently Jillana is the Director of the Jillana School. In addition, she is teaching, staging Balanchine ballets throughout the world and writing an autobiography concentrating on her 20 years with George Balanchine. Besides directing her school she is the mother of two, William and Ana, and with her husband Alan, resides in Southern California. ©Paul Kolnik Darci Kistler Darci Kistler was born in Riverside, California, the youngest of five children and the only girl. Always athletic, Ms. Kistler enjoyed many sports, including skiing, waterskiing, swimming, tennis, football, and dirt biking, before she began studying ballet. At the age of 12 she began studying with Irina Kosmovska in Los Angeles, and that same year she attended a summer session at the School of American Ballet (SAB), the official school of New York City Ballet. Two years later, she received a full scholarship to SAB. Ms. Kistler participated in two SAB Workshops. In 1979, she danced a principal role in Jean-Pierre Bonnefoux’s Haydn Concerto, choreographed especially for the Workshop, and danced the pas de deux from the opera William Tell by August Bournonville, staged by Stanley Williams. In 1980, Ms. Kistler danced the principal role in George Balanchine’s one-act Swan Lake. She prepared for the role by studying extensively with Alexandra Danilova. |20| Ms. Kistler joined New York City Ballet as a member of the corps de ballet in April 1980, was promoted to the rank of soloist in 1981, and became a principal dancer in 1982. She has danced leading roles in numerous works choreographed by Balanchine, including Agon, Apollo, Bugaku, Concerto Barocco, Episodes, George Balanchine’s The Nutcracker™, Diamonds from Jewels, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Mozartiana, Orpheus, Prodigal Son, Robert Schumann’s “Davidsbündlertänze,” La Sonnambula, Symphony in C (Second Movement), Tzigane, Variations Pour Une Porte et Un Soupir, Vienna Waltzes, Walpurgisnacht Ballet, and Western Symphony. In addition, Ms. Kistler has danced leading roles in Jerome Robbins’ Afternoon of a Faun, In G Major and In the Night, and Peter Martins’ Papillons, Songs of the Auvergne and Valse Triste. Jerome Robbins created leading roles for Ms. Kistler in Andantino, Gershwin Concerto, and Piccolo Balletto. In addition, Martins has created many MASTER TEACHERS leading roles for Ms. Kistler including; Adams Violin Concerto, Burleske, The Chairman Dances, Guide to Strange Places, Harmonielehre, Morgen, The Sleeping Beauty, Stabat Mater, Symphonic Dances, Symphony No. 1, Tala Gaisma, Thou Swell, and Todo Buenos Aires, and the role of Lady Capulet in Romeo + Juliet. Additional principal roles created for Ms. Kistler include Ulysses Dove’s Red Angels and Robert La Fosse’s Danses de Cour. Ms. Kistler starred as the Sugarplum Fairy in the 1993 film version of New York City Ballet’s production of George Balanchine’s The Nutcracker™. In addition to her performing career, Ms. Kistler has been a member of SAB’s faculty since 1994, and in 2008 she created a new children’s program at SAB that lowered the starting age for students from 8 to 6 years old. She retired from New York City Ballet during the spring 2010 season and now teaches full time. Alexander Greschenko Alexander Greschenko was born in Moscow and began his dance training at the age of ten at the prestigious Moscow Choreographic School where his teacher was Igor Uksusnikov, a soloist with the Bolshoi and Kirov Ballet. After graduating with the highest honors, he was invited to join the Bolshoi Ballet. Mr. Gresschenko was a soloist with the Bolshoi Ballet for nine years where he danced the entire classical ballet repertoire including the Grand Pas de Deux from Raymonda, the Black Man in Mozart and Salieri and roles in the Golden Age, Swan Lake, Spartacus, Giselle, Don Quixote, Macbeth, and The Nutcracker. While at the Bolshoi, he trained under the legendary Russian ballet master Asaf Messerer. Mr. Greschenko also danced in original ballets by Vladimir Vasiliev and Ekaterina Maximova. In addition to his career as a soloist with the Bolshoi, he is also recognized for his talents as a musician and has been invited to perform as a musician (guitarist) with the Bolshoi Orchestra and Chamber Ensemble of the Bolshoi Orchestra. As a soloist with Bolshoi Ballet, Mr. Greschenko has toured the United States, Central and South America, Japan, Australia, and many other countries worldwide. In 1989, Mr. Greschenko moved to the United States and joined the Princeton Ballet as a principal dancer. In 1990, he moved to Los Angeles and joined Los Angeles Classical Ballet where he performed for two years dancing principal roles in the productions of The Nutcracker, Midsummer Night’s Dream, On Occasion and Aymara. Mr. Greschenko is currently a sought after guest teacher by many universities, colleges ballet schools, and companies as a valuable and dynamic teacher and performer. Larissa Saveliev Ms. Saveliev was trained at the Bolshoi Ballet Academy in Moscow. As a member of Bolshoi Ballet, she has toured throughout Russia, England, France, Belgium, Italy, Spain, Brazil, Egypt, and Japan. Her repertoire includes most of the ballets from the classical repertoire, including Swan Lake, Les Sylphides, Sleeping Beauty, Coppelia, The Nutcracker, Le Corsaire, Raymonda, and Giselle, as well as works by Yuri Grigorovich, George Balanchine, Anthony Tudor, and Agnes de Mille. Since coming to the United States in 1995, Ms. Saveliev has continued her dance career with such companies as the Los Angeles Classical Ballet, The New Jersey Ballet, and Tulsa Ballet. In 1999, she was chosen to choreograph for the Princess Grace Awards Ceremony. A respected dance educator, Ms. Saveliev appears as a master teacher and stages classical ballet productions at schools around the country. Ms. Saveliev is the co-founder of Youth America Grand Prix. Additional Master Teachers Aria Alekzander, see page12; Clifton Brown, see page 13; Elisa Carrillo Cabrera, see page 14; Mikhail Kaniskin, see page 15; Gennadi Saveliev, see page 17 |21| THANK YOU Presenting Sponsor City of Anaheim Brookfield Homes S. Paul and Marybelle Musco Ted and Rae Segerstrom Sponsor a Dancer Table Sponsor Etoile Contributor Disneyland Resort Kaiser Permanente OC Rayell Segerstrom Hon. Mayor Tom Tait and Mrs. Julie Tait Yellow Cab Co. Anaheim Gardenwalk Related Company Anaheim Marriott Tait & Associates Hilton Anaheim Target George Kallins Dr. and Mrs. Gus and Lara Reed J. Levecke Foundation Tooma Darren and Jacque Lollie Walker Boeing Craig and Rosali Wildvank Patron of the Arts Anaheim Disposal, A Republic Services Company Anaheim Transportation Network Discount Dance Supply Harbor Distributing Pat Mahoney and Jolynn Benn and Family Northgate Market Dr. Andy Plisko and Cathy Wills Hon. Loretta Sanchez, U.S. Congresswoman g Hotel Accomodations Photography Doubletree by Hilton Hotel Anaheim - Orange County Todd Lechtick Martin Levinne Restaurants Acapulco Restaurant of Orange Anaheim Public Utilities Ruby's Diner of Anaheim Bruno Serato, Anaheim White House Yves Bistro of Anaheim Transportation Bentley Newport Beach Boys and Girls Club – Anaheim Larry Slagle, Yellow Cab Co. Souvenir Program We Do Graphics, Inc. 2011 With Special Thanks To Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater American Ballet Theatre Houston Ballet John Cranko School Les Ballets de Monte-Carlo New York City Ballet Orlando Ballet Prague State Opera and Ballet San Francisco Ballet School of American Ballet Staatsballett Berlin Stuttgart Ballet Texas Ballet Theater Welcome Baskets Disneyland Resort City of Anaheim Anaheim/OC Visitor & Convention Bureau Liz Ericsen Gaynor Minden Anaheim Muzeo Target Trader Joe’s Jacque Lollie Walker Public Relations Marty DeSollar Special Thanks Shelley King Disney VoluntEARS, Lidia Chavez, Ava Colella, Ashley Duree, Tracy Barrios, Nasim Elliot, Heather Houston, John Kirby, Erin Longhofer, Rosalinda Monroy, Mishal Montgomery, Denny Newell, Brynne Rechenmacher, Vanessa Sah, SicShot Productions, Carly Steele, Elizabeth Tusken, JC Velazquez, Mary Anne Villalobos, Sara Windal, Mary Wyman, Cathy Yerkes |22| COMING DECEMBER 4 & 11 to the city national grove of anaheim Anaheim Ballet’s FREE Video Series Over 36 million visits Watch and Subscribe at www.youtube.com/anaheimballet www.anaheimballet.org www.facebook.com/anaheimballet info@anaheimballet.org Raise money for ANAHEIM BALLET just by searching the Internet with GoodSearch – www.goodsearch.com – powered by Yahoo! 280 East Lincoln Ave. Anaheim, California 92805 Company (714) 490-6150 School (714) 520-0904 Fax (714) 520-0914 Anaheim Ballet is a 501(c)(3) not for profit organization