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WILLIAM MARRIE

Charismatic dancer William Marrie captured the spotlight early in his career and never let go. His death on November 16, 2002, just two days short of his 34th birthday, was shockingly tragic, but he left the world as he lived it--hard and fast. His motorcycle collided with a cab in New York City New York City: see New York, city.
New York City

City (pop., 2000: 8,008,278), southeastern New York, at the mouth of the Hudson River. The largest city in the U.S.
, and his sorrowing friends recall that Marrie often alluded to his early death on his beloved Ducati, a present he bought himself when he was promoted to principal dancer A principal dancer is similar to a soloist in dance. However, principals are hired by a ballet or dance company to perform not only solos, but also pas de deux. A principal may be male or female.  at The National Ballet of Canada National Ballet of Canada, the leading Canadian ballet company. Based in Toronto, it was founded (1951) by Celia Franca (1921–2007) and modeled on Sadler's Wells (now the Royal Ballet).  in 2001. He left the company in March 2002 to join the Twyla Tharp/Billy Joel Broadway hit Movin' Out as the second-cast lead, a role that garnered him rave reviews. "We had been 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.
 six months before we found William," says Tharp, "and he hooked us with his daring, drive, and intensity."

Montreal-born Marrie became a ballet and Broadway star despite the fact that he had only begun dance training when he was 19. He first entered L'Ecole Superieure de Danse du Quebec in 1987, and joined NBC NBC
 in full National Broadcasting Co.

Major U.S. commercial broadcasting company. It was formed in 1926 by RCA Corp., General Electric Co. (GE), and Westinghouse and was the first U.S. company to operate a broadcast network.
 in 1990 after his graduation. Then-Artistic Director Reid Anderson cast Marrie as Petruchio in Cranko's The Taming of the Shrew shrew, common name for the small, insectivorous mammals of the family Soricidae, related to the moles. Shrews include the smallest mammals; the smallest shrews are under 2 in. (5.1 cm) long, excluding the tail, and the largest are about 6 in. (15 cm) long.  in 1992, and the corps de ballet corps de bal·let  
n.
The dancers in a ballet troupe who perform as a group.



[French : corps, corps + de, of + ballet, ballet.
 newcomer gave an explosive performance that unleashed a dancing actor of immense talent--a stage animal who could brilliantly bury formidable technique in characterization and make ballet look easy. Says former principal dancer Gizella Witkowsky, who was Martial's Kate: "He was over the top in energy, sometimes totally out of control--like a mustang, wild and full of spirit." This untamed quality allowed Marrie to excel in demi-character roles, whether the brooding hero in Cranko's Onegin or the dashing Danilo in Hynd's The Merry Widow merry widow
n.
A short strapless corset with half cups for the breasts and long garters.



[Originally a trademark.]
.

Marrie was the complete male, a man among men, a Casanova among women, and was adored by both. He lived life to the full and his carousing ca·rouse  
intr.v. ca·roused, ca·rous·ing, ca·rous·es
1. To engage in boisterous, drunken merrymaking.

2. To drink excessively.

n.
Carousal.
 was legendary, but he was also tender, sensitive, and vulnerable. On one hand, he was a big kid who collected comic books; on the other, he was a suave French-Canadian who was a gourmet chef and a rare-wine savant sa·vant  
n.
1. A learned person; a scholar.

2. An idiot savant.



[French, learned, savant, from Old French, present participle of savoir, to know
. Says former NBC soloist Sarah Green
''Sarah Greene is the name of a British television presenter

For the Irish/English novelist, fl. 1790-1835, see .

Sarah Green (1981- ) is an American journalist and writer. She currently writes a sports column for the Boston Metro.
: "William was a powerful, passionate personality who lived like he loved and danced like he lived. He bored a hole into your heart."

MADAME HALINA (LUTOMSKI)

Madame Halina (Lutomski), a dancer and dance teacher regarded by her students as a mentor, died February 6, 2002, at the age of 77. Born in Poland and trained in the Russian classical ballet tradition, she opened Madame Halina's School of Dance Arts in Elmira, New York Elmira is a city in Chemung County, New York, USA. It is the principal city of the 'Elmira, New York Metropolitan Statistical Area' which encompasses Chemung County, New York. The population was 30,940 at the 2000 census. It is the county seat of Chemung County. , after World War II.

As founder and artistic director of the Elmira-Coming Ballet Company, later known as the Twin Tiers Ballet Company, she choreographed, produced, and directed numerous full-length ballets locally and across the United States. She was presented with the Steuben Crystal and Gold Award, given by the mayor of Elmira, for "outstanding leadership, unselfish devotion, and foresight in the development of a regional ballet company: the Twin Tiers."

She is survived by two sons, a daughter, and their families.

LAVALETTE TOOTIKIAN

Lavalette Tootikian (Lalla Lezli), dancer and artist's model, died in surgery on June 23, 2002, after complications from an automobile accident Ask a Lawyer

Question
Country: United States of America
State: Utah

Say you're at a red light in a left hand turning lane and the light turns green so you let up slightly on the break antedating moving forward and the vehicle
. She was 91.

Lalla Lezli (a name she adopted when her niece had trouble pronouncing pro·nounc·ing  
adj.
Relating to, designed for, or showing pronunciation: a pronouncing dictionary. 
 Lavalette) danced with her sister, Karoun Tootikian, in Ruth St. Denis's troupe and was well known for performing The Cobras after Miss Ruth's death in 1968. Lezli also danced in her sister's ethnic dance company, which performed traditional dances from Armenia.

A former student of Lezli's, Wendy Uyeda, remembers her as a remarkable and ageless human being. "Lalla would tell us that `the audience wants to believe you are someone else, so you have to arrive and leave as that person you are portraying.'"

Perhaps due to her abilities to change character, Lezli was beloved for her work of more than fifty years as an artist's model. She was still posing at the time of her death. An exhibit of drawings, paintings, and sculptures inspired by Lezli was held in her honor on November 16, 2002, at the Chouinard House in South Pasadena. She is survived by a sister, Grace Jacobian.

MEREDITH BAYLIS

Meredith Baylis died July 26, 2002, in Burbank, California, from complications following heart surgery at age 72. A member of Serge Denham's Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo

Ballet company formed in Monte Carlo in 1932. The name derived from Sergey Diaghilev's Ballets Russes, which dissolved after his death in 1929. Under René Blum and Col. W.
 from 1951 until it disbanded in 1962, Baylis performed soloist and principal roles with the troupe. She also served as a rehearsal and administrative assistant to Denham during the company's American tours.

A native of Burbank, Baylis was the great-niece of Lillian Baylis, who founded England's Old Vic Theatre in London and invited Ninette de Valois Dame Ninette de Valois, OM, CH, DBE (June 6, 1898 – March 8, 2001) was the founder of London's renowned Royal Ballet. Born Edris Stannus in Baltiboys, County Wicklow, Ireland, Stannus began dancing in 1908 at age ten, and became noticed throughout England because of  to stage opera ballets and dance performances, which ultimately led to the establishment of the Sadler's Wells Ballet.

Although she enjoyed a successful performing career, Baylis's true gift proved to be teaching. After joining the faculty of Robert Joffrey's American Ballet Center in 1969, Baylis gained a loyal following of students who realized that her strict discipline represented sincere concern for their development. In addition to establishing and presiding over the Joffrey Summer Program, she offered a dance program for deaf children. Baylis also has been credited as having given Ron Reagan a scholarship to the Joffrey School during her tenure.

PEPSI BETHEL

Alfred "Pepsi" Bethel, the jazz dancer and choreographer whose mastery of the lindy hop made him a legend around the world, died August 30, 2002, in the Bronx. He was 83.

Bethel, who was renowned in 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
 social dance circles, became an expert lindy lin·dy or Lin·dy  
n. pl. lin·dies
A lively swing dance for couples. Also called lindy hop.



[From Lindynickname of Charles Augustus Lindbergh.
 hopper while a young dancer at the legendary Savoy Ballroom in Harlem during the 1930s. Later, the dancer who got his nickname from his favorite drink widened his repertoire to include other social dances--the cakewalk, boogie, calypso Calypso, in Greek mythology
Calypso (kəlĭp`sō), nymph, daughter of Atlas, in Homer's Odyssey. She lived on the island of Ogygia and there entertained Odysseus for seven years.
, and the Charleston. But it was the lindy, particularly the acrobatic moves that thrilled crowds, that became Bethel's hallmark.

Bethel performed with several companies, including the Mura Dehn Jazz Ballet. In the 1960s he founded his own company, the Pepsi Bethel Authentic Jazz Dance Theater, which performed African, jazz, social, and folk dances.

In 1969, the Bethel and Dehn companies performed in nine African countries as part of a special U.S. State Department-sponsored tour. Bethel also served as a consultant and choreographer for several stage productions, and in 1980 he was honored for his choreography in the program "Celebration of Men in Dance" at the Thelma Hill Performing Arts Center A performing arts center, often abbreviated PAC, is a multi-use performance space that can be adapted for use by various types of the performing arts, including dance, music and theatre.  in Brooklyn.

WENDY HILTON

Wendy Hilton, a historical-dance performer, choreographer, scholar, and teacher, died of cancer in Manhattan on September 21, 2002. She was 71.

Hilton made a profound contribution to the international understanding of and appreciation for early dance, particularly of the Baroque era. Her 1981 book, Dance of Court and Theater: The French Noble Style, 1690-1725, is a valuable reference.

Born in England, Hilton trained in ballet in London and was introduced to historical dance through her studies at the Rambert School. She subsequently studied and performed Renaissance and Baroque dance with Belinda Quirey, forming her own company, the Domenico Dance Ensemble, in 1960.

Hilton came to the United States in 1969 to head the dance division of Rosalyn Tureck's International Bach Society. Her collaborations with Tureck in New York established her performing career. A gifted teacher, she held distinguished appointments at The Juilliard School and at a summer Baroque dance and music workshop at Stanford University that continued for more than twenty-five years. Her choreography was featured in productions at Juilliard and at the New York City Opera The New York City Opera (NYCO) is based in Philip Johnson's New York State Theater at Lincoln Center.

The company was founded in 1944 with the aim of an opera company that would be financially accessible to a wide audience, innovative in its choice of repertory, and a home
, notably in Thea Musgrave's Mary, Queen of Scots Mary, Queen of Scots
 orig. Mary Stuart

(born Dec. 8, 1542, Linlithgow Palace, West Lothian, Scot.—died Feb. 8, 1587, Fotheringhay Castle, Northamptonshire, Eng.) Queen of Scotland (1542–67).
, and in performances with numerous orchestras and early-music ensembles.

JEAN-PIERRE PERREAULT

Jean-Pierre Perreault, a visual artist and director/choreographer of Montreal's La Fondation Jean-Pierre Perreault, died on December 4, 2002, after a long struggle with cancer. He was 55.

Perreault was a unique and uncompromising leader in Canadian contemporary dance. His large repertoire of works, with their huge, self-designed and painted sets include Joe (1983), a seminal work for a bleak regiment of thirty-two dancers in baggy overcoats and fedoras who foundered and slid up and down a steep ramp, their work boots beating an oppressive, rhythmic tattoo. Joe was the first of a series of pieces that peeled layers from the darkness of the human psyche. Each succeeding dance would expand the chink of light or hope that Joe began.

Born in Longueuil, Quebec, Perreault was a fine-art student when he met Jeanne Renault, founder of Le Groupe de la Place Royale, Montreal's first permanent contemporary dance company. He joined the troupe in 1965, and by 1971 he was co-director, along with Peter Boneham.

From the outset, Perreault's choreography showed the integrity to his artistic vision that would mark subsequent work. Decidedly experimental, Les Bessons (1972) was the first of twenty-three works he made for the company before resigning his post in 1981 to become an independent choreographer and eventually to teach at the Universite du Quebec a Montreal. In 1984 he established the foundation that bears his name and began working on the massive architectural scale that became his trademark.

The outspoken and intuitive Perreault began choreographing by drawing and painting. Little black squiggles on paper would become bigger, black, human shapes onstage. He transformed an old church in a low-income residential area into an experimental theater and warmly welcomed visits by his neighbors. In 2001 he inaugurated this Espace Choregraphique with the last of a series of installations at which the public, seated in private cubicles, viewed ongoing excerpts of his works.

Even though they were expensive to tour, his dances traveled throughout Europe, the U.S., and Canada. Perreault was also in demand as a choreographer for organizations as diverse as The National Ballet of Canada and the first New York International Festival of the Arts
For the festival in Detroit, see Detroit Festival of the Arts


The Festival of the Arts, or simply Festival is a three day arts festival in Grand Rapids held on the first Friday, Saturday, and Sunday of June.
, which he helped inaugurate in·au·gu·rate  
tr.v. in·au·gu·rat·ed, in·au·gu·rat·ing, in·au·gu·rates
1. To induct into office by a formal ceremony.

2.
 in 1988. His paintings and drawings were also exhibited around the world.

Perreault used to say he was difficult to work with, yet dancers from all over Canada vied to be in his productions, and he received several major national honors. He once said, "I have no idea what I am going to do until I arrive at the rehearsal hall with a composer and begin to make a dance. I churn through the process like a drowning man who fights for survival."
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Title Annotation:death notices
Publication:Dance Magazine
Geographic Code:1CANA
Date:Mar 1, 2003
Words:1732
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