Peter Martins
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Peter Martins (October 27, 1946 - ) is a Danish ballet dancer and choreographer. He danced with the Royal Danish Ballet and the New York City Ballet, and is currently NYCB's Ballet Master in Chief.
Born and raised in Denmark, Martins was studied at the School of the Royal Danish Ballet and danced with RDB from 1965-1969. He was already an international star when he joined NYCB in 1970 as a principal dancer at the invitation of company co-founder George Balanchine. Martins danced a wide variety of roles, although he may be most famous for "Apollo" and the Cavalier in The Nutcracker (Balanchine's version). He danced frequently with Suzanne Farrell, although they parted acrimoniously when she retired in 1989. Martins was Balanchine's choice to run the company, and he was made ballet master in 1981. He retired from dancing in 1983, and assumed the job of Ballet-Master-in-Chief in 1990.
Martins regularly choreographs new works for both NYCB and RDB. His first piece was "Calcium Light Night," set to music by Charles Ives and premiered in 1977. His more recent pieces include "Octet," "Frisandes" and the full-length ballets "The Sleeping Beauty" and "Swan Lake." He also did the choreography for the Barbie movies "Barbie in the Nutcracker" and "Barbie of Swan Lake." He was nominated for the 1986 Tony Award for Best Choreographer for "Song & Dance." Martins is a champion of contemporary music, working often with composer John Luther Adams. His autobiography, Far From Denmark was published in 1982, and his exercise regimen, NYCB Workout, first appeared in book form in 1997, with a DVD and a second series produced later.
His son, Nilas Martins (son of former ballerina and former Royal Danish Ballet associate director Lise la Cour), is a principal dancer at NYCB. Peter Martins had a long relationship with former NYCB ballerina Heather Watts. In 1991 he married NYCB principal dancer Darci Kistler. Their daughter, Talicia, was born in 1996.