Waltraud Karkar.Waltraud Karkar walks through a bright and airy studio of her Central Wisconsin Central Wisconsin is a colloquial term for a region of Wisconsin. This region generally coincides with the Wausau-Rhinelander Television Market. Counties in Central Wisconsin
interj. Used to express a demand for silence. tr.v. shushed, shush·ing, shush·es To demand silence from by saying "shush": ," she says, as a silence unfamiliar to children between the ages of three and five fills the studio. "You'll frighten them away." The students are puzzled. Perfect. Madame Karkar knows that she has them, and their full attention. "Have you ever seen leaf fairies?" Karkar asks as she peers out the window. Her stuents, no bigger than pixies pixies prank-playing fairies; mislead travelers. [Br. Folklore: Briggs, 328–330] See : Mischievousness themselves, shake their heads. "No?" their teacher says in feigned feigned adj. 1. Not real; pretended: a feigned modesty. 2. Made-up; fictitious. Adj. 1. wonder. "Don't you have any trees in your backyards? That's where the leaf fairies live. When you go home after lessons today look for them. You'll see." The children, filled with curiosity, will do just that. They might not see the leaf fairies right away but they will discover something magical as they search. Of course, the magic is not of leaf fairies but of a teacher. Their teacher. "How many people stumble through life not noticing the beauty that surrounds them?" Karkar asks while relaxing between classes on a sofa in a lounge at her school. "I like my students to walk down the street and notice the architecture, notice paintings, notice the little worm crawling on the sidewalk. When I talk of leaf fairies with my youngest students, what it does is make the child aware of nature, and nature is an important part of dance. Do leaf fairies really exist? Of course they do. You simply have to believe." Uncompromising faith in the possibility of all things, perhaps just as much as faith in dance, is what Karkar has been teaching her students and her community for the past twenty-seven years. It is a philosophy that has served her well in establishing a school of artistic excellence in the most unlikely of locations--Wausau, population about 38,000, the largest city and cultural hub of Marathaon County, Wisconsin, better known for insurance, forestry, paper mills, and dairy farming dairy farming Form of animal husbandry that uses mammals, primarily cows, for the production of milk and products processed from it (including butter, cheese, and ice cream). than for the arts. Born in Germany, Karkar began dancing at age nine at the Landestheater in Darmstadt. She moved to the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. when she was eighteen and studied at the Stone-Camryn School of Ballet in Chicago, the Maria Gorkin School of Ballet in Switzerland, and the Joffrey school 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. . During six years of private lessons with Elvira Vecsey, ballerina and later ballet mistress bal´let` mis´tress n. 1. a woman who trains ballet dancers. Noun 1. ballet mistress - a woman who directs and teaches and rehearses dancers for a ballet company of the Budapest Opera House, Karkar learned the Russian method, which she now teaches. She met Joan Lawson, a Royal Ballet teacher and renowned for her rehabilitation, who stayed with her for two weeks. Together they worked fourteen hours a day on anatomy. "Most of my career and studied were geared toward teaching," Karkar says. "All that I am doing is carrying on the tratition that my teachers taught me and simply passing them on to my students." Karkar moved to Wausau with her husband, Jack, professor emeritus of business and economics at the University of Wisconsin, when she was in her late twenties, with four sons from a previous marriage and expecting a daughter with Jack. The Karkars intended to stay only a year or two. Now, nearly three decades later, Waltrud laughs at how this small community has grown on her and her family. "Even though we weren't going to stay, I started giving a few lessons in our home because some people were interested in ballet. In order to have the proper space, we had to take out the dining-room wall. That meant we didn't have a dining room or a living room anymore, but we did have a beautiful space." A few classes led to a modest, cramped school and eventually to a dignified and grand school with space for three studios with state-of-the-art flooring. The school's beauty and functionality (including a room for the certified Pilates therapist) would be the envy of any teacher. Three teachers form the permanent faculty, and guest teachers and choreographers arrive all year. Students number more than 200 from throughout the United States for ballet, yoga for adults, and a new jazz program, as well as a new daily ballet class for children aged ten and eleven. In addition to inviting companies to perform in an effort to broaden the artistic opportunities in the community, Karkar's summer program has become a showcase for world-renowned artists: Shamil Yagudin from the Bolshoi; Irina Kolpakova, former star and currently ballet mistress for 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. ; Vladilen Semenov, former head of the Vaganova Ballet Academy; and Gabriela Komleva of the Kirov Ballet, to name a few. Her professional students have performed with the Bolshoi, Milwaukee, and Arizona Ballets, North Carolina North Carolina, state in the SE United States. It is bordered by the Atlantic Ocean (E), South Carolina and Georgia (S), Tennessee (W), and Virginia (N). Facts and Figures Area, 52,586 sq mi (136,198 sq km). Pop. DanceTheatre, and other professional companies. Working with city officials, Karkar helped renovate a neglected outdoor amphitheater in Wausau's Stewart Park) once used in the 1920s by local devotees of Isadora Duncan), and she pioneered an artist-in-schools program for more than twenty years TWENTY YEARS. The lapse of twenty years raises a presumption of certain facts, and after such a time, the party against whom the presumption has been raised, will be required to prove a negative to establish his rights. 2. that has brought dance to over 100,000 children in Wausau and surrounding communities. "First and foremost," says Karkar, "I am an educator. My students do not simply learn a step but they come to understand dance, its importance, its history, its place in our world. If I can touch their souls and inspire them, then I have reached my goal as a teacher. If they remember to walk tall, to walk with self-confidence, and to appreciate the arts and the world around them, what beautiful children they become and what wonderful adults they will make." Under Karkar's direction, the school has staged and performed A Midsummer Night's Dream A Midsummer Night's Dream is a romantic comedy by William Shakespeare written sometime in the 1590s. It portrays the adventures of four young Athenian lovers and a group of amateur actors, their interactions with the Duke and Duchess of Athens, Theseus and Hippolyta, and , Viva Vivaldi, Les Patineurs, Act II of Swan Lake, Peter and the Wolf For other uses, see . Peter and the Wolf is a composition by Sergei Prokofiev written in 1936 after his return to the Soviet Union. It is a children's story (with both music and text by Prokofiev), spoken by a narrator accompanied by the orchestra. , Pas de Quatre pas de quat·re n. pl. pas de quatre A dance for four. [French : pas, step + de, of, for + quatre, four.] Noun 1. , excerpts from A Chorus Line and Can Can, and recently, Beatrix Potter's The Tales of Peter Rabbit, choreographed by Karkar's daughter, Annaluna. The school's yearly production of The Nutcracker is remarkable: The scenery is handpainted; the costumes are handmade in Russia; the production, for its twenty-fifth anniversary in Wausau, was accompanied by the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra The Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra (MSO) is an orchestra based in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. The symphony performs at the Marcus Center for the Performing Arts. The MSO presents more than 150 Classics, Classical Connections, Pops, and family concerts annually for more than 200,000 people . "My students mean the world to me,"' she concludes. "I try to instill in·still v. To pour in drop by drop. in stil·la tion n. an eagerness in them to do their best and to have
faith that anything is possible. I give them what I have and what I love
most."
Paul Kennedy is an author and a freelance writer living in Minocqua, Wisconsin. |
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stil·la
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