| Return of the Nutcracker |
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| Written by Editor |
| Tuesday, 04 December 2012 11:46 |
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Artistic Director William Starrett’s award-winning choreography combines with a cast of local and professional dancers, new costumes and magical special effects. The company’s 30 professional dancers will share the stage with over 20 talented local children, ages 4 to 18. “Our ballet mistress and I have really been working on bringing out the lyricism of our female dancers complimenting the magnificent Tchaikovsky score, paying even greater attention to the quality of the movements particularly during our new Snow Sequence from the Land of Snow. I’ve also created a new Candy Cane divertissement from the Land of the Sweets during Act II inspired by the recent Summer Olympic Games” The Nutcracker, which tells the story of a young girl named Clara who is taken on a magical journey as a reward for saving the life of her beloved Nutcracker Price, was first performed in St. Petersburg in 1892. The American version began in 1940 when the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo suddenly took refuge and was based in America due to the Second World War and presented its production in New York City. George Balanchine, the famed founder and choreographer of our current New York City Ballet, was the company’s ballet master. Alexandra Danilova was the reigning prima ballerina and a soloist of the company, while Merriam Lanova, Danilova’s understudy and look-alike alternate, danced many of her performances for years. Upon Lanova’s retirement in the late 1960’s, she started a regional company in the San Francisco area called Ballet Celeste. There, a young William Starrett learned the original Ballet Russe production from Lanova herself playing the famed role of the Nutcracker Prince, at age 14. The USC Beaufort Center for the Arts presents the Columbia City Ballet’s Nutcracker for one performance only on Tuesday, Dec. 18 at 7 p.m. Tickets are $35, $30, $25 and $15 for students. Tickets can be purchased by calling (843) 521-4145 or visit the USCB Center for the Arts on 810 Carteret St. For more information about USCB Center for the Arts visit www.uscbcenterforthearts.com.
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