Willam Christensen

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Willam F. Christensen (1902-October 14, 2001) was an American ballet dancer, choreographer and founder of the San Francisco Ballet and Ballet West in Salt Lake City, Utah. He is known for bringing the Russian ballet The Nutcracker to the United States, as well as staging the first American performances of Swan Lake and Coppelia. Christensen's Nutcracker was first staged in 1944 in San Francisco, where it remains an annual tradition. Christensen is often credited with helping to rejuvenate American dance. Christensen left the San Francisco Ballet in the care of his brother, Harrold, to help choreograph a stage production at the University of Utah in the summer of 1948. While there, he was asked to stay on and help the University create a department of Ballet. He agreed, and spent the remainder of his life working in Utah and the intermountain west. This was purportedly the first accredited University to have a ballet department in the US. While in Utah, Christensen also founded Ballet West. Author Debra Hickenlooper Sowell wrote that Willam, Harrold, and Lew Christensen are the closest thing the United States has to a European-style Ballet Dynasty.

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