San Francisco Ballet

The San Francisco Ballet (SFB) is a ballet company, founded in 1933 as the San Francisco Opera Ballet. The company is currently based in the War Memorial Opera House, San Francisco, under the direction of Helgi Tomasson. SFB is the first professional ballet company in the United States. It is among the world's leading dance companies, and along with American Ballet Theatre, and the New York City Ballet has been described as part of the "triumvirate of great classical companies defining the American style on the world stage today."[1]

Contents

History

1938–1950

The company's first major production was Coppélia in 1938, choreographed by Willam Christensen.[2] In 1940 Swan Lake was produced in its entirety for the first time by Americans with principal ballerina Celina Cummings. The company also began showing The Nutcracker during the holiday season, beginning Christmas Eve, 1944. This too was choreographed by Willam Christensen and was the first complete production of Tchaikovsky's most popular piece in the United States.

In 1942 San Francisco Opera Ballet split in two, forming independent ballet and opera companies. The ballet half was sold to Willam and Harold Christensen, who became artistic director and appointed director of the San Francisco Ballet School, respectively.[2] The San Francisco Ballet Guild was also formed during this time as a support organization for San Francisco Ballet.[3]

1951–1985

1951 saw the next significant shift in administration of San Francisco Ballet. In this year, Lew Christensen—the premier danseur at the time—partnered with Willam Christensen as co-directors. One year later, Lew took over entirely. With this new administration SFB began to broaden its horizons, travel, and establish itself as a significant American ballet company. Until 1956, San Francisco Ballet had remained on the West Coast, but Lew pushed the company into the Jacob's Pillow Dance Festival in Massachusetts. In 1957 SFB was the first American ballet company to tour the Far East, performing in eleven Asian nations.[2] On New Year's Day in 1965, ABC-TV televised a one-hour abridgement of the Lew Christensen-choreographed production of "The Nutcracker", featuring San Francisco Ballet.

In 1972 Lew brought the company closer to its original home, the War Memorial Opera House, by officially naming the theatre as its official residence.

Timeline of productions

Premiere Ballet Choreographer Original Leads Notes Source
1938 Coppélia Christensen Unknown First complete production ever in the U.S. [2]
1940 Swan Lake First complete production ever in the U.S. [2][3]
December 24, 1944 The Nutcracker First complete U.S. production. Started tradition of Christmas Eve showing; for ten years this was the only complete Nutcracker performed in the U.S. [2][3]
1947 Giselle [3]
1976 Romeo and Juliet Smuin [3]
1978 La Fille Mal Gardée Ashton [3]
1981 The Tempest Smuin [3]
April 30, 2004 Sylvia Morris Yuan Yuan Tan, Yuri Possokhov First complete U.S. production [2][4]

Present company

The company of the San Francisco Ballet, as of July 2010:[5]

Artistic Director

Ballet Master / Assistant to the Artistic Director

  • Ricardo Bustamante
  • Bruce Sansom

Ballet Masters

  • Betsy Erickson
  • Anita Paciotti
  • Katita Waldo

Choreographer in Residence

  • Yuri Possokhov

Principal Dancers

  • Joan Boada
  • Frances Chung
  • Taras Domitro
  • Lorena Feijóo
  • Kristin Long
  • Vitor Luiz
  • Rubén Martín Cintas
  • Vito Mazzeo

Principal Character Dancers

  • Ricardo Bustamante
  • Val Caniparoli
  • Jorge Esquivel
  • Anita Paciotti

Soloists

  • Elana Altman
  • Victoria Ananyan
  • Daniel Deivison Oliviera
  • Courtney Elizabeth
  • Dana Genshaft
  • Isaac Hernandez
  • Pauli Magierek
  • Elizabeth Miner
  • Nutnaree Pipit-Suksun
  • Garen Scribner
  • James Sofranko
  • Anthony Spaulding
  • Hansuke Yamamoto

Corps de Ballet

  • Gaetano Amico III
  • Dores Andre
  • Daniel Baker
  • Clara Blanco
  • Kimberly Braylock
  • Nicole Ciapponi
  • Charlene Cohen
  • Diego Cruz
  • Sasha DeSola
  • Jordan Hammond
  • Koto Ishihara
  • Madison Keesler
  • Kristina Lind
  • Alexandra McCullagh
  • Alexandra Meyer-Lorey
  • Steven Morse
  • Francisco Mungamba
  • Mariellen Olson
  • Sean Orza
  • Rebecca Rhodes
  • Shannon Marie Roberts
  • Lilly Rogers
  • Jeremy Rucker
  • Danielle Santos
  • Dustin Shane
  • Jennifer Stahl
  • Benjamin Stewart
  • Matthew Stewart
  • Myles Thatcher
  • Raymond Tilton
  • Sebastian Vinet
  • Lonnie Weeks
  • Quinn Wharton
  • Luke Willis
  • Caroline Wilson
  • WanTing Zhao

Apprentices

  • Sean Bennett
  • Megan Amanda Ehrlich
  • Ellen Rose Hummel
  • Elizabeth Powell
  • Henry Sidford
  • Shion Yuasa

San Francisco Ballet at 75: The American Tour, 2008

The San Francisco Ballet, as part of its 75th anniversary season in 2008, made a national tour through four major cities: Chicago, the Harris Theater for Music and Dance, Millennium Park, September 16–21; New York City Center, October 10–18; Costa Mesa, California, the Orange County Performing Arts Center, November 11–16; and Washington, D.C., the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, November 25–30. The tour featured ballets from SFB's New Works Festival, the finalé of their Spring 2008 season, which featured over the course of three consecutive nights premières of ten new ballets by ten major choreographers.

Program A

New York City Center, October 2008

Divertimento No. 15

George Balanchine's choreography to WA Mozart's music, staged by Elyse Borne with costumes after Karinska and Mark Stanley's lighting.
Friday, October 10
dancers
  • Tina LeBlanc
  • Elizabeth Miner
  • Rachel Viselli
  • Vanessa Zahorian
  • Taras Domitro
  • Ruben Martin
  • Gennadi Nedvigin
Wednesday, October 15
dancers
  • Davit Karapetyan
  • Mateo Klemmayer
  • Hansuke Yamamoto
Saturday, October 18, evening
dancers
  • Taras Domitro
  • Ruben Martin
  • Gennadi Nedvigin

Program B

New York City Center, October 2008
  • Thursday, October 16
  • Sunday, October 12>
  • Saturday, October 11, evening

The Fifth Season

Helgi Tomasson's choreography to Karl Jenkins' music with Sandra Woodall's scenery and costumes and Michael Mazzola's lighting

Concerto Grosso

Helgi Tomasson's choreography to Francesco Geminiani's music with Sandra Woodall's costumes and David Finn's lighting

Joyride

Mark Morris' choreography to John Adams' music with Isaac Mizrahi's costumes and James F. Ingalls' lighting

The Four Temperaments

George Balanchine's choreography to Paul Hindemith's music, staged by Elyse Borne

Program C

New York City Center, October 2008
  • Friday, October 17

Repertory

References

  1. ^ Jennings, Luke (February 18, 2007). "One Step Closer to Perfection". The Observer (UK: Guardian News and Media Limited). http://www.guardian.co.uk/stage/2007/feb/18/dance. Retrieved August 26, 2008. 
  2. ^ a b c d e f g McCarthy, Terrence (Repertory Season 2004). "History of San Francisco Ballet". San Francisco Ballet Magazine 71 (6): 8. 
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Renee Renouf (2001). "San Francisco Ballet history". Ballet.co Magazine. http://www.ballet.co.uk/magazines/yr_99/oct99/rr_san_francisco_ballet_history.htm. Retrieved August 13, 2008. 
  4. ^ Simpson, Michael Wade (2004). "Morris' 'Sylvia' forgoes showy dancing for an old-fashioned, irony-free romance". The San Francisco Chronicle. http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2004/05/03/DDGGF6E12K1.DTL&type=performance. Retrieved August 13, 2008. 
  5. ^ "Dancers" (Press release). San Francisco Ballet. 2011. http://www.sfballet.org/company/dancers/. Retrieved 31 December 2011. 
  6. ^ "Artistic Director & Principal Choreographer" (Press release). San Francisco Ballet. 2011. http://www.sfballet.org/company/artistic_director. Retrieved 31 December 2011. 
  7. ^ "Cupcakes & Conversation with Maria Kochetkova". Ballet News. April 1, 2010. http://balletnews.co.uk/cupcakes-conversation-with-maria-kochetkova-principal-san-francisco-ballet/. 
  8. ^ "Cupcakes & Conversation with Vanessa Zahorian". Ballet News. August 11, 2011. http://balletnews.co.uk/cupcakes-conversation-with-vanessa-zahorian-principal-san-francisco-ballet/. 

Further reading

Articles

External links