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On the rise: Brian Letendre making magic in Broadway's Mary Poppins, even while sitting still.


Many dancers are celebrated for their grace or flexibility. Brian Letendre has earned kudos for remaining perfectly still. As a statue-come-to-life in the box-office-busting Mary Poppins, Letendre not only must pull off double tours en l'air but--perhaps even more of a challenge--turn convincingly to stone. In a show full of gasp-inducing stagecraft stage·craft  
n.
Skill in the techniques and devices of the theater.


stagecraft
the art or skill of producing or staging plays.
See also: Drama

Noun 1.
, Letendre's low-tech effect and strong classical technique have given him one of the most memorable roles now on Broadway.

"Everyone in the show is very different, and part of the process is finding out how people move because we don't insist that you do steps in a certain way," explains Mary Poppins resident choreographer Tom Kosis. "It was Brian's ballet technique Ballet technique is the method by which ballet steps are performed or taught. The core technique of ballet is the same throughout the World, with some minor regional variations, and various training methods have been devised, which produce a different physicality of performance and  that choreographer Matthew Bourne This article is about a British ballet and dance choreographer. For Matthew Bourne the British jazz musician, see Matthew Bourne (musician).

Matthew Bourne (born 13 January 1960) is a British ballet and dance choreographer.
 really hooked on to."

To see Letendre transform from marbleized mar·ble·ize  
tr.v. mar·ble·ized, mar·ble·iz·ing, mar·ble·iz·es
To marble.

Adj. 1. marbleized - patterned with veins or streaks or color resembling marble; "marbleized pink skin"
 mannequin to magically unfrozen figure is to experience a sense of childhood wonder. It's not just Letendre's physical control or fluid line. It's his effortless dynamic shift from one extreme to another.

But despite racking up an impressive roster of work in recent years--from originating a role in the flop Urban Cowboy to winning a spot in Twyla Tharp's Movin' Out--Letendre's route to Broadway has been more detour than direct. Born and raised on New York's Staten Island Staten Island (1990 pop. 378,977), 59 sq mi (160 sq km), SE N.Y., in New York Bay, SW of Manhattan, forming Richmond co. of New York state and the borough of Staten Island of New York City. , Letendre, 27, suffered from weight problems as a child, and didn't begin serious dance training until age 15.

At the time, he had been accepted to the voice program at LaGuardia High School for the Performing Arts, but due to his weight and inexperience was rejected from the dance program. One year later, with classes at Broadway Dance Center under his belt and a physique closer to the chiseled-cheekbone look he sports today Sports Today is a long-running radio show on Melbourne, Australia radio station 3AW.

It currently airs on Monday to Thursday between 6pm-8pm and is hosted by Gerard Healy and Dwayne Russell.

Previously, it was hosted by the late David Hookes and Gerard Healy.
, he won a spot in it. "Even when I was heavy as a kid, I always moved," Letendre recalls. "I loved the aesthetic of classical ballet Noun 1. classical ballet - a style of ballet based on precise conventional steps performed with graceful and flowing movements
ballet, concert dance - a theatrical representation of a story that is performed to music by trained dancers
 and the quirkiness of contemporary ballet Contemporary ballet is a form of dance influenced by both classical ballet and modern dance. It takes its technique and use of pointework from classical ballet, although it permits a greater range of movement that may not adhere to the strict body lines set forth by schools of ."

Once on the road to a dance career, Letendre made up for lost time, supplementing his high school training with classes taught by Francis Patrelle at Ballet Academy East and taking guest roles in local high school musicals on Staten Island. And he soon reaped the rewards with a National Foundation for the Advancement of the Arts scholarship, a mention by Jennifer Dunning in The 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
 Times as "very promising," and, finally, an acceptance to Juilliard.

Which meant that he had to dismantle everything he had learned up to that point. "They take you apart and put you back together and put the icing on and send you out," Letendre says of Juilliard's training. But he was in capable hands, working closely with teachers like Carolyn Adams Carolyn Adams, (born May 6, 1946),[] later known as Mountain Girl and Carolyn Garcia, was a Merry Prankster and the wife of Jerry Garcia. After growing up in Poughkeepsie, New York, Adams met Neal Cassady in 1965; Cassady immediately gave her the name , who remembers him as straightforward, curious, and compassionate. "He had an aesthetic and a belief system going," she recalls. "There are a lot of kids who have beautiful technique and perfect attendance, and that's all wonderful. But Brian worked with a certain purpose."

Letendre also trained under the late Benjamin Harkarvy, then director of Juilliard's dance division, who had "the eye of a hawk," he remembers. "He could look at what you're doing and say, 'Brian, on your sixth and seventh pirouette, your rib is shifting off your hip and that's why you're falling out,' " Letendre recalls. "And that, for my brain, was dissecting dis·sect  
tr.v. dis·sect·ed, dis·sect·ing, dis·sects
1. To cut apart or separate (tissue), especially for anatomical study.

2.
 it far too much, but he would fix you, and it would work."

Harkarvy's methods worked faster than Letendre anticipated. He had a role in his first show, Carousel, at New Jersey's Paper Mill Playhouse Paper Mill Playhouse is a regional theatre located in Millburn, New Jersey, less than 25 miles away from Manhattan. Due to its location, it can draw from the pool of actors (and audience members) who live in New York City. , by the time graduation rolled around. A manager and an Equity card followed, as did My Fair Lady, also at Paper Mill. Then, in 2003, Letendre got his first big Broadway break, Urban Cowboy. The thrill, however, was short-lived: The show closed in just under two months.

But Letendre rolled with the punches. "I was so eager to be working. I remember seeing the closing notice and seeing people crying and panicking and looking around, and thinking, 'Should I be crying too?'" Though Letendre had already auditioned for Movin' Out nearly 10 times, he put himself back through the ringer, and this time emerged with the part of James in hand. With increasingly strong Broadway credentials, Letendre got a Mary Poppins role in relatively short order.

So what's next? While Letendre doesn't list specific professional goals, saying, "I just want stuff to sink my teeth into," he does have a personal one. "I want to own an apartment in New York, maybe have a cottage to go to somewhere," he says. Then he adds with a smile, "Be as legitimately successful as people who aren't in this industry."

Erica Orden writes and edits for The New York Sun.
COPYRIGHT 2007 Dance Magazine, Inc.
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Copyright 2007, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Orden, Erica
Publication:Dance Magazine
Date:Jun 1, 2007
Words:775
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