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All about Ib and Ballet Arizona: repertoire and talent are blooming at Ib Andersen's revitalized BAZ.


During a clean-up rehearsal or Mosaik, Ib Andersen Ib Andersen (b. 1954) is a Danish dancer and choreographer. He is currently the artistic director of Ballet Arizona in Phoenix, Arizona.

Internationally admired as both a dancer and choreographer, Andersen’s contribution to the world of dance is the product of a
, artistic director of Ballet Arizona, bounds onto the stage with the litheness lithe  
adj. lith·er, lith·est
1. Readily bent; supple: lithe birch branches.

2. Marked by effortless grace: a lithe ballet dancer.
 of a cat. As he strides towards the dancers, he dispenses corrections and demonstrates steps to emphasize a point. He shows ballerina Natalia Magnicaballi a grand fond de jambe en l'air saying, "It should have this kind of grandeur," as his leg swoops away from his body out into space. To dancers practicing turns he whips off four pirouettes landing in a perfect fifth position. "Don't be cautious," he says. "Go for it, and hope for the best."

The "go for it" attitude could be the motto of Ballet Arizona, a company that was on the brink of extinction in 2000, when Andersen arrived and started building it into a formidable oasis in the desert. The company now performs topnotch Balanchine, Bournonville, and Petipa and also tackles Paul Taylor

For other people named Paul Taylor, see Paul Taylor (disambiguation).
Paul Taylor (born July 29, 1930) is one of the foremost American choreographers of the 20th century.
 and Twyla Tharp. Andersen's own two-hour, plotless ballet Mosaik, which premiered last April, established him as a first-rate choreographer. In June, BAZ topped itself with a four-day tribute to Balanchine, presenting Serenade serenade [Ital. sera=evening], term used to designate several types of musical composition. Opera and song literature yield numerous examples of the serenade sung or played by a lover at night beneath his beloved's window; outstanding is , Prodigal Son, Allegro Brillante, Apollo, Slaughter on Tenth Avenue Slaughter on Tenth Avenue is the name of a ballet by Richard Rodgers. It was choreographed by George Balanchine. It occurs near the end of Rodgers and Hart's 1936 Broadway musical comedy On Your Toes. , and--the acid test for any ballet company--Theme and Variations.

As recently as 2002, all this didn't seem possible. Susan Hendl, a ballet mistress of New York City Ballet New York City Ballet, one of the foremost American dance companies of the 20th cent. It was founded by Lincoln Kirstein and George Balanchine as the Ballet Society in 1946.  and member of the Balanchine Foundation, had set Allegro Brillante on BAZ that year. When asked to return to stage Theme and Variations for the Balanchine Festival, she had her doubts and responded with, "That's a stretch." When she got to Arizona last spring, however, she found a much-improved company. She believes, as does Andersen, that every Balanchine ballet is a tool. "People only get better--they can't help it," says Hendl. "It's the quick footwork, the speed, and the musicality."

But credit also goes to Andersen. Paola Hartley, who danced the leads in Theme and Apollo on two weeks' notice, says, "I don't know Don't know (DK, DKed)

"Don't know the trade." A Street expression used whenever one party lacks knowledge of a trade or receives conflicting instructions from the other party.
 if I could have handled such challenging roles before Ib. Now I have the confidence and the control." She goes on to say, "Every ballet Ib has choreographed has been extremely difficult. His ballets prepare you for Balanchine and Petipa. And the more Balanchine and Petipa we do, the more we are prepared for Ib's ballets. It's really a circle."

Mosaik, the Danish word for "mosaic," is Andersen's total concept ballet. He did it all--choreography, costumes, and sets. The choreography encompasses a wide range of moods and idioms. In Act I, an oblong shape framed by transparent panels is suspended overhead, while dancers move with T'ai Chi stealth or do intricate partnering that, at times, references Balanchine's leotard ballets. An athletic duet for Magnicaballi and Michael Cook has the pair flying at each other with split-second timing. Act II explodes with vividly colored sculptures made of aluminum strips that look like tangled ribbons. Andersen offers a spoof of the "Rose Adagio a·da·gio  
adv. & adj. Music
In a slow tempo, usually considered to be slower than andante but faster than larghetto. Used chiefly as a direction.

n. pl. a·da·gios
1.
" and a witty send-up of Petipa princes. The ballet ends with a rip-snortin' finale that earns the piece a standing ovation.

In the empty theater where Mosaik premiered the night before, a weary Andersen slumps in a seat, his lanky body resembling a broken umbrella. But his glacial blue eyes reflect a glint of triumph. "I must say, the audiences have embraced everything I have done here," says the artistic director. But, he recalls, four years ago it was almost over before it began.

"My first day here, working with the dancers was like a funeral," says Andersen. "We had a big press conference to announce that, unless we raised $460,000 in 10 days, we would have to close. People were crying left and right. I had just started and nobody knew who I was or what I could do." But Phoenix art patrons responded in record time, raising money in just five days. Andersen went to work bringing his pedigree dance training, experience and prestige to bear on the BAZ dancers.

Kendra Mitchell, a native of Phoenix, talks about how valuable Andersen's explanations of every step of Calliope calliope, in music
calliope, in music, an instrument also called steam organ or steam piano in which steam is forced through a series of whistles controlled by a keyboard.
 in Apollo were to her. "He pushes yen' hard, has high expectations, and at the same time he inspires confidence," she says. She respects not only his vision but also his physicality. It is by following his movements that she grasps what he means because, she says, "It is still in his body."

Born in Copenhagen, Andersen started ballroom lessons at age 4, as was the custom in Denmark. He decided then that dancing was for him. At age 7 he was accepted to the Royal Danish Ballet Royal Danish Ballet, one of the oldest major ballet companies, established at the opening of Denmark's Royal Theater in Copenhagen in 1748. The company was developed over the centuries by three great masters.  School, where he studied under Vera Volkova, the leading authority on the Vaganova system; Hans Brenaa, premier teacher of the Bournonville style; and Stanley Williams, before he arrived in the U.S. and became a popular teacher at the School of American Ballet The School of American Ballet is located in New York City, in Lincoln Center. It is considered one of the most prestigious and notable ballet schools in the United States and teaches some of the most talented young dancers in the country. . Andersen joined the Royal Danish Ballet in 1972 and zoomed to principal dancer by 1975 at age 20. At 25, his restless spirit brought him to New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
. He auditioned for Balanchine, who hired him as a principal dancer and threw him into dozens of ballets in a matter of months. He felt as if his well-grounded Danish technique had been set free and sped up. In Balanchine ballets, he says, everything is "up in the air ... limitless ... expansive." For 10 years the dynamic Dane danced with astonishing a·ston·ish  
tr.v. as·ton·ished, as·ton·ish·ing, as·ton·ish·es
To fill with sudden wonder or amazement. See Synonyms at surprise.
 grace, fleetness, and buoyancy, becoming one of the brightest stars of NYCB NYCB New York City Ballet
NYCB New York Community Bank
.

Fellow Dane Nikolaj Hubbe, currently a principal dancer with NYCB, says, "Ib was my big idol when I was a kid. lie was the great young hope of the RDB See Oracle Rdb.

1. Rdb - Oracle Rdb
2. rdb - A roll-your-own database, created in the Unix toolkit philosophy. It appears to be written in the awk language, and is very compatible with awk. It uses awk's syntax and can be combined with awk commands.
. For City Ballet too, Ib had an impact. It was his musicality, his sensitivity, and his flair. He knew what was needed in the moment, and he understood the intent of the ballets."

While in New York, Andersen indulged his passion for painting, an interest he developed in his early teens. He would spend every, Monday, his day off, in art classes, and he rented an art studio in downtown Manhattan. "I was totally hooked."

When a hip injury, turned arthritic, Andersen opted for early retirement at age 35. In the first four years after he stopped performing, he choreographed for RDB, NYCB and companies in Brazil, Slovenia, Flanders, Norway, and Japan. And he was staging Balanchine, Bournonville, Fokine, and Robbins all over the world. He taught at the English National Ballet English National Ballet, founded in 1950 as the "Festival Ballet" inspired by the then imminent Festival of Britain, is one of the leading ballet companies in the United Kingdom founded by Alicia Markova and Anton Dolin, with the financial backing of Polish impresario Julian  School, then spent two years as ballet master with Pittsburgh Ballet Theatre Pittsburgh Ballet Theatre is an American professional ballet company based in the Cultural District of Downtown Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States. History
In 1965 Yugoslavian choreographer Nicolas Petrov joined the dance faculty at the Pittsburgh Playhouse.
 under Patricia Wilde, another former star of NYCB.

After years of the itinerant life, Andersen took a hiatus from ballet and came to Arizona to paint. Why Arizona? Because there are no winters and he loves the desert, the clarity of the light, and the vivid colors. "This environment burns into your soul," he says. For two years he focused on painting, while still taking occasional choreography and staging jobs. In 1999, he had recently returned from staging Giselle in Montreal and, by chance, learned that BAZ was performing the same ballet. He went to see it and ran into friends who informed him that the company was looking for Looking for

In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with.
 a new artistic director and would he be interested. Andersen applied for the position, and six months later was approved by the board.

Since taking over BAZ, Andersen has accomplished miracles. In his first year, he staged Apollo, updated The Nutcracker, commissioned Dwight Rhoden to choreograph two ballets, and created two new works himself. He invited Hubbe to stage and dance the lead in excerpts from Bournonville's Napoli. In 2003, he mounted the full-length Swan Lake (staged by Olga Evreinoff) and presented his own Romeo and Juliet Romeo and Juliet

star-crossed lovers die as teenagers. [Br. Lit.: Romeo and Juliet]

See : Death, Premature


Romeo and Juliet

archetypal star-crossed lovers. [Br. Lit.
 and Eugene Loring's Billy the Kid. For the October season Hubbe returned to BAZ to stage Bournonville's La Sylphide with Magnicaballi (see "25 to Watch" page 59) in the leading role.

Ballet Arizona has extensive outreach programs that reach over 20,000 people a year. Their Glass Act initiative involves children in creating their own dances; the Ballet Under the Stars series draws new and old fans to free performances in nearby parks; and Dansmart sends BAZ dancers into public schools, libraries, and senior centers.

Now in its 18th season, BAZ still occupies a building at the back of a Phoenix strip mall that is badly in need of a paint job. But the place resounds with vitality. Guest stager and New York City Ballet alumna Zipporah Karz works the dancers hard in Serenade, and guest ballet master Ben Huys, also a NYCB alumnus ALUMNUS, civil law. A child which one has nursed; a foster child. Dig. 40, 2, 14. , gives a beautifully articulated company class.

In his windowless office amid the tufts of tulle Tulle (tl, Fr. tül), town (1990 pop. 18,685), capital of Corrèze dept., S central France. Firearms and other goods are made there. Tulle was built around a 7th-century monastery. , mounds of paperwork, and prototypes of Mosaik sculptures, Andersen talks about his wish list for the company. At the top of his agenda is finding an impresario to arrange a tour. He's expanding the repertoire to include Twyla Tharp's Nine Sinatra Songs, a new Petipa (either Raymonda or Paquita) and Coppelia. More Balanchine will follow: Agon and a repeat of Theme. And the company will reprise re·prise  
n.
1. Music
a. A repetition of a phrase or verse.

b. A return to an original theme.

2. A recurrence or resumption of an action.

tr.v.
 Mosaik and present new works by Andersen and guest choreographers.

He hopes to expand from 29 dancers now to 50--but no more, because he likes knowing every dancer's needs and strengths. The company now has 35 work weeks, up from 32 last year. Andersen says, "I want to take this company as far as it can go. The sky is the limit."

Astrida Woods is the dance editor and critic of Show Business Weekly, and contributes to DM as well as Hamptons, Gountry, and Oprah.
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Author:Woods, Astrida
Publication:Dance Magazine
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jan 1, 2005
Words:1585
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