Maclovia Ruiz
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Maclovia Ruiz (1910 – 2005) was a dancer in the 1930s with the San Francisco Ballet. She also had the lead role in a piece choreographed by George Balanchine for the 1936 production of Carmen at the Metropolitan Opera House.
Born in Guadalajara, Jalisco, in Mexico, Ms. Ruiz moved with her family to San Francisco in the U.S. state of California as a child and was taught folk dancing by her father. She would perform in neighborhood clubs, but local dance schools discriminated against her because of her skin color and ethnic background.[citation needed] At the age of ten (10) she finally gained acceptance into the Peters Wright Dance School, where she studied interpretive dance while performing on the vaudeville circuit outside of class.
When she was 23, she gained entry to the San Francisco Ballet. She went on to perform with the Metropolitan Opera Company and Balanchine's American Ballet Company. She also danced in Samuel Goldwyn's 1938 movie musical extravaganza, The Goldwyn Follies.
Throughout her career, Ms. Ruiz continued dancing in nightclubs, performing flamenco throughout Spain and South America. Ms. Ruiz continued to dance well into her 70s, teaching ballroom and Spanish dance and offering movement classes to the elderly and the disabled.
[edit] Personal life
In 1948, she met and married the photographer John Mailer; they divorced after five years. She never remarried, and is survived by their son, Michael Mailer.
She died from complications of pneumonia, aged 95, on December 31, 2005.