CELEBRATING CARMEN DE LAVALLADE'S FIFTY-YEAR CAREER.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 CITY--"She is a luminous, articulate artist, a dream to work with and an inspiration to everyone who shares in her presence," says Donald McKayle Donald McKayle (born July 6, 1930, New York City) is a modern dance and Broadway choreographer, director, and performer who has worked with many choreographers such as Martha Graham, Alvin Ailey, Anna Sokolow, and Merce Cunningham. of Carmen Carmen throws over lover for another. [Fr. Lit.: Carmen; Fr. Opera: Bizet, Carmen, Westerman, 189–190] See : Faithlessness Carmen the cards repeatedly spell her death. [Fr. de Lavallade, who celebrates the fiftieth anniversary of her artistry this year. Her career as a performer, dancer, actress, director, writer, teacher, choreographer, coach, and mentor was celebrated with a gala anniversary tribute at the Hudson Theatre on June 5 and will continue with her own performances with Gus Solomons jr and Dudley Williams this fall. De Lavallade's Creole family migrated from Louisiana to California in the twenties. Carmen was born in Los Angeles on March 6, 1931. Of African, Indian, and Caucasian descent, she developed into an artist whom Duke Ellington called one of the most ravishing rav·ish·ing adj. Extremely attractive; entrancing. rav ish·ing·ly adv. in the world. Her cousin, Janet Collins, was the first person in their family to embrace an artistic life, dancing with Katherine Dunham and Talley Beatty, and becoming the first black dancer to perform with the Metropolitan Opera Ballet. Collins later became de Lavallade's artistic guide and one of a number of mentors. At fourteen, de Lavallade began studying ballet and modern dance. Soon after, she received a scholarship to study at Lester Horton's Dance Theater. With Horton's stage as her classroom, de Lavallade learned about music, painting, sculpture, lighting, scenery, acting, ballet, and modern and ethnic dancing. Horton had been developing his radical technique by experimenting with Bella Lewitzky. When Horton and Lewitzky split artistically, de Lavallade stepped into Lewitzky's place as Horton's primary muse, dancing Salome in The Face of Violence after Lewitzky generously taught her role to the teenager. After witnessing her debut with Horton's company, Lena Horne adopted de Lavallade as her protegee pro·té·gée n. A woman or girl whose welfare, training, or career is promoted by an influential person. [French, feminine of protégé, protégé; see protégé.] Noun 1. in 1950. Horton also arranged for de Lavallade to study ballet with the great Carmelita Maracci because "she can give you what I can't," he said. "Without a doubt, everything each of them taught me I still use today," says de Lavallade. De Lavallade had an enormous influence on the young Alvin Ailey both through her example as a performer and her introduction to Horton's technique. After Horton's death in 1953, Ailey was thrust into the position of resident choreographer, and de Lavallade's spirit became an early source of inspiration. An 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. beauty, de Lavallade was hired by Twentieth Century-Fox to appear in a number of films in the early fifties. Her most successful was Carmen Jones (1954), in which she danced with Ailey in sequences choreographed by Herbert Ross. When Ross was hired to take over the direction of the musical House of Flowers House of Flowers may refer to:
Leo [Lat.,=the lion], northern constellation lying S of Ursa Major and on the ecliptic (apparent path of the sun through the heavens) between Cancer and Virgo; it is one of the constellations of the zodiac. . Later that year she appeared as the leading dancer in the NBC-TV premiere of Amahl and the Night Visitors Amahl and the Night Visitors lame shepherd boy gives crutch as gift for Christ Child; first opera composed for television (1951). [Am. Opera: EB, VI: 792–793] See : Christmas . After starring on Broadway and with the Metropolitan Opera Ballet, de Lavallade performed in John Butler's opera and television work. Her favorite Butler piece was Carmina Burana (1959), which also starred her friend Mary Hinkson, the sublime Graham principal. Butler also choreographed Portrait of Billie [Holiday] (1960) on de Lavallade. Through Butler she met Agnes de Mille Noun 1. Agnes de Mille - United States dancer and choreographer who introduced formal dance to a wide audience (1905-1993) Agnes George de Mille, de Mille and subsequently danced in de Mille's 1965 productions of The Four Marys and The Frail Quarry as a guest artist with American Ballet Theatre American Ballet Theatre, one of the foremost international dance companies of the 20th cent. It was founded in 1937 as the Mordkin Ballet and reorganized as the Ballet Theatre in 1940 under the direction of Lucia Chase and Rich Pleasant. . Despite her success, she did face the segregation that was a part of dance during that era: she was not allowed to perform with Glen Tetley on The Ed Sullivan Show because a white man could not partner a black woman on TV. Instead she danced with Ailey dancer Claude Thompson. "We are not going to fly out of orbit if we create a golden race," she said recently, referring to people of mixed descent. "I know it makes people very nervous, but loosen up, it's the twenty-first century." Although Holder and de Lavallade often worked together and he created two of her trademark solos, Three Songs for One (1963) and Come Sunday (1968), the two have not been limited by their partnership. "God bless Geoffrey Holder," says de Lavallade. "He let me do what I wanted to do, and we are not in competition with each other." She performed with Josephine Baker, Donald McKayle, Louis Johnson, Sophie Maslow, and on and off with Ailey. In his 1958 Ariette Oubliee, Ailey played a Marcel Marceau-like character yearning for the moon (de La vallade). Ailey choreographed The Roots of the Blues (1961) after de Lavallade suggested that he join her in Stella Adler's acting classes. "It turned out to be a dynamite duet," remembers de Lavallade. Ailey's 1964 homage to Ruth St. Denis Denis, king of Portugal: see Diniz. and Ted Shawn, The Twelve Gates, was created for de Lavallade and James Truitte. "I was the fallen woman in a wild red velvet dress," she says. De Lavallade became Tetley's muse when he started building his company in the mid-sixties, and she is still one of his dearest friends. "Carmen is a great artist who has transformed everything she has touched," observes Tetley. "We danced every couple in the Bible, from Adam and Eve Adam and Eve In the Judeo-Christian and Islamic traditions, the parents of the human race. Genesis gives two versions of their creation. In the first, God creates “male and female in his own image” on the sixth day. to Saul and the Witch of Endor Witch of Endor conjures up Samuel for distressed Saul. [O.T.: I Samuel 28:3–25] See : Witchcraft . I held her, supported her, and lifted her and loved every minute because we were faster than the speed of lightning and nobody could touch us." In 1970, de Lavallade joined the faculty of Yale University to teach movement to actors, and became a well-respected actress with the Yale Repertory Theater Company. Her students have included Henry Winkler, Sigourney Weaver, and Meryl Streep. She continued to dance as well as choreograph for herself, for Dance Theatre of Harlem Dance Theatre of Harlem, the first black classical ballet company. The group was founded in Harlem, New York City, by Arthur Mitchell, then of the New York City Ballet, the first black principal dancer of a classical company of international standing. , and for Joyce Trisler Danscompany. Most recently she restaged Nightscape night·scape n. 1. A view or representation of a night scene. 2. A night scene considered together with all the elements and features constituting it: , her 1974 solo to Alberto Ginastera music, for the Alvin Ailey Repertory Ensemble. In the early 1990s, de Lavallade choreographed a number of productions at the Metropolitan Opera. She choreographed Al Pacino in Oscar Wilde's Salome and made a cameo appearance in the John Sayles film Lone Star. Currently, she is appearing in Adam Sandler's new film, Big Daddy. From her work in academia--she also directed the dance department at Adelphi University for three years--de Lavallade has developed her own way of creating performers. "I take time with people," she says. "Why let somebody leave without knowing what they are doing? It's about being responsible for themselves as artists." She has also graciously accepted that it is her turn to mentor young artists such as Desmond Richardson and Dwight Rhoden. She continues to dance in a trio with Solomons and Williams, learning choreography by Holder, Nick Leichter, David Parsons, and Blondell Cummings. She is preparing to direct Lena Horne's eighty-first birthday celebration at Avery Fisher Hall Avery Fisher Hall, located in New York City, is a part of the Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts complex. It is the home of the New York Philharmonic Orchestra. The hall contains 2,738 seats. in October. Reflecting on her full artistic circumference, de Lavallade highlights the fact that "without the artist, we would never know our history." |
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