RUN FOR YOUR LIFE! It’s the Nutcracker!

Ballet Shade, ballet stuff

Welcome to my annual repost of Nutcracker hell.

I wonder if “Nutcracker season” is to a dancer what family holidays are to me:  a terrible obligation one must drag themselves through, no way out, no way out.

But for a 3 minute fabulous peacock in “the movie” and a french acid trip, The Nutcracker is TORTURE.  Especially in Boston.  Which is where I am.  

Maurice Bejart, guilty of nailing “Le Sacre du Printemps” to the cross of choreographic atrocities, in some miracle of redemption does what no one else could:  he makes The Nutcracker a funky fuck-you ballet. 

I don’t like The Nutcracker.  I don’t think Bejart did either. He may have liked BDSM…

What he did with this ballet has nothing to do with Nutcracker princes, little girls in Christmas stupors or  Chinamen. I think there may be a few drag queens and I know for certain that there is, at last, a very, very dark, hypnotic and erotic choreography to this sleepy and secretive piece of magical music. 

The Arabian Dance: the most exotic thing Tchaikovsky ever composed which he then jammed into a boring symphonic sandwich, crazy Russian, has FOR YEARS been squandered sitcom-style.

Bejart  pulled out a plum with this  jewel.  Best Arabian dance ever.  IT IS.   A dancer in a trance, in total submission, kept in a box, being circled by a dominatrix and striking what could be considered vulgar poses were it not for the fact that they are brief and angled slightly away from the viewer is so extremely ANTI-Nutcracker that for a moment you forget something as ridiculous as a Sugar Plum Fairy was ever attached to this Christmas shit show. 

And when you throw the prefix ANTI into just about anything, I am captivated. 

Come now, tell me this confusion is not a fabulous punch to the face of a  tired but trusty choreography and a few haymakers at the some others.  Bejart takes the Nutcracker derails it and just ties it all up in a big wrinkled and frayed bow! Joyeux noel wackos!

This is no “almost”.  This is spot on, absolute fun shit and it won’t come to Boston and is likely performed very little because, damn it, those Flowers gotta Waltz.

No way out.  No way out.

-Fatova

Wearingtwogowns Takes the Gauntlet. And kills it.

Ballet Shade

Some time back, I wrote a post. Recently, I asked good – really good blog writers – to chime in. Gauntlet throwing being as dramatic as you can get, my annoying trick was taken up by wearingtwogowns.com whose writing is very deep and makes me feel like Jerry Lewis at the Mariinsky. He chose the post about TMRJ’s treatment of Cecilia Kerche and won my eternal respecxt when the post had basketball references. Good Gawd does it get any better? I intend to make my last words “Larry Bird is the GOAT”.

Now read this:

RESPONSE to “When Not To Throw Ballet Shade”

I’ve learned in my years observing this world: sometimes the absence speaks a different language than we want to hear. And sometimes the people who stand alone aren’t martyrs—they’re just people who refused to bend.

When someone makes a “very big” decision—one that divides people—I’ve learned to ask: whose story are we really telling? Because I know what it means to face barriers. Real barriers. Not artistic differences or philosophical disagreements, but the kind that should have ended everything before it began.

I was picked for the New York Ballet School on Broadway. An inner-city school kid. Chosen. My sister was jealous—she hadn’t been selected for anything like that. But my grandma and parents didn’t support me. They thought ballet was effeminate, something that would make me less than what I should be. My teacher at school didn’t save work for me when I had to miss class for rehearsals. Socioeconomic reality meant choosing between survival and the studio almost daily.

You want to know what I learned from all that? I learned to adapt. I learned to compromise. I learned to work within imperfect systems because burning them down wasn’t going to feed my family or change my grandmother’s mind or make my teacher suddenly care about my dreams.

I learned that principle without pragmatism is just performance art.

On that basketball court, managing my lanky body through space, I learned something ballet was teaching me in a different language: you work with what you have, where you are, with the people around you. The coordination ballet gave me—the footwork, the balance, the core engagement—it wasn’t just about my body. It was about reading the court, knowing when to pass, understanding that your teammates need you to show up, not blow up.

When someone decides their principles trump the collective effort, everyone feels it. And I learned this the hard way: when you’re the one from the wrong side of town, when you’re the one whose family doesn’t understand, when you’re the one whose teacher won’t help—you don’t have the luxury of burning bridges and calling it courage.

Because here’s the truth nobody wants to say out loud: sometimes the people who claim to be making sacrifices are really just making scenes. Sometimes what looks like standing on principle is actually standing on everyone else. And sometimes the community that steps back isn’t betraying you—they’re protecting themselves from your explosion.

I think about Rosario Ferré’s Flight of the Swan. That Russian ballerina in Puerto Rico, so committed to her heritage that she couldn’t see she was destroying everyone around her. The company members who lost work. The students who lost their teacher. The art itself, suffocating under the weight of her inflexibility.

What haunted me about that novel wasn’t just her tragedy—it was her choice. She could have adapted. She could have found a way to honor her Russian roots while building something new in Puerto Rico. Instead, she insisted on purity, on absolute fidelity to a world that no longer existed. And she ended up with nothing. Neither Russian nor Puerto Rican. Just alone.

When I couldn’t make it to ballet because I had to work, when my grandmother told me I was becoming something shameful, when my teacher refused to save my assignments—I had a choice. I could have said: “This is unfair. This system is broken. I’m going to stand on my principles and demand they change everything for me.”

But I didn’t. Because I understood something that maybe Cecilia didn’t: the world doesn’t owe you a stage just because you deserve one. And burning down the theater doesn’t make you an artist—it makes you an arsonist.

I adapted. I compromised. I found ways to work within systems that weren’t built for me. Was it fair? No. Was it right? No. But did it keep me in the game long enough to learn something? Yes.

The dance world is ruthless—hundreds of talented people competing for dozens of spots, artistic directors making impossible choices. At the New York Ballet School on Broadway, I watched dancers who had everything I didn’t: supportive families, saved homework, financial security. And I watched some of them throw it all away on “principle,” convinced their artistic vision was more important than the production itself.

Every dancer in that studio depended on the others. When someone decided their principles mattered more than showing up, more than adapting, more than working within the choreography even when they disagreed with it—we all paid the price.

It was exactly like basketball. The player who goes rogue, who freelances when the play calls for a pass, who fouls out “on principle” because they disagree with the ref—that player doesn’t just hurt themselves. The team still has to finish the game. And my lanky body learned this: you can’t win alone, no matter how high you jump. No matter how right you think you are.

I’ve seen people cast themselves as martyrs when they were actually breaking contracts. When they were violating trust. When they were putting their ego ahead of everyone else’s livelihood. And I’ve seen communities step back—not because they lack character, but because they finally understood: this person will never stop burning bridges and calling it light.

Marianela Núñez, Royal Ballet

In Flight of the Swan, Ferré shows us what happens when someone refuses to adapt. The ballerina doesn’t grow. She doesn’t transform. She just hardens, becomes more rigid, more isolated, more convinced that everyone else is wrong. Until finally, she’s alone. And she calls it purity.

That’s not sacrifice. That’s suicide by principle.

Those hours at the barre taught me the difference between healthy pain and injury. The best teachers knew: push through discomfort, yes, but recognize when you’re actually damaging yourself and your ability to serve the art. The worst teachers praised dancers who destroyed themselves and called it dedication.

But you know what else the worst teachers did? They enabled dancers who destroyed others and called it integrity.

When I couldn’t get family support, when my teacher wouldn’t help, when socioeconomic reality meant I had to make impossible choices—I learned my limits. I learned to work with my lanky frame, not against the physics of my own body. I learned when to drive the lane and when to pull back.

But most importantly, I learned this: adaptation isn’t betrayal. Compromise isn’t cowardice. And working within an imperfect system isn’t selling out—it’s surviving long enough to actually change something.

That lamp in the window? Sometimes it’s not lit because nobody cares. But sometimes it stays dark because you burned the house down and called it liberation. The people who quietly slip away aren’t always abandoning you—sometimes they’re just tired of getting burned.

Here’s the uncomfortable truth nobody wants to hear: institutions have responsibilities, yes. But so do individuals. When someone divides a community, when their actions create consequences for dozens of others, when they refuse every compromise and call it courage—choosing not to celebrate that isn’t throwing shade. It’s having boundaries.

I don’t know what Cecilia Kerche did. But I know this: in every story where someone stands alone, convinced of their righteousness while their community walks away, we need to ask not just “were they brave?” but “were they right?” And we need to ask: “Did they ever try to work with anyone, or were they always going to blow it all up?”

The hardest lesson I learned from that New York Ballet School on Broadway, from my grandmother’s rejection, from my teacher’s indifference, from every socioeconomic barrier that should have stopped me—the lesson wasn’t about standing firm. It was about learning to bend.

Not every hill is worth dying on. Not every conviction deserves to cost other people their careers. And the people who stay quiet aren’t always villains—sometimes they’re just the ones who’ve been burned before by someone else’s “principled stand.”

We talk about stepping on people on the way up. But what about those who blow up the stage on their way out? Who claim they’re making a sacrifice when really they’re just refusing to do the hard work of compromise? Who leave rubble for everyone else to navigate and call it courage?

I remember facing barriers that would have given me every justification to burn it all down. My family didn’t support me. My school didn’t help me. The system wasn’t built for an inner-city kid with a lanky body and a grandmother who thought ballet was shameful.

But I learned something from that struggle: principle without wisdom is just destruction with better PR.

Character isn’t just about courage. It’s about discernment. About understanding that your truth isn’t the only truth. About recognizing when your sacrifice actually sacrifices everyone around you. About knowing the difference between standing firm and just being stubborn.

In basketball, the player who fouls out “on principle”—who disagrees with the ref’s call so much they can’t finish the game—that player doesn’t become a hero. They become a liability. Because the team still needs them. The game doesn’t stop just because you’re convinced you’re right.

In Flight of the Swan, the ballerina who refuses to adapt doesn’t preserve Russian ballet—she destroys the chance for it to grow in new soil. She doesn’t honor her heritage—she mummifies it. And everyone around her pays the price for her purity.

Maybe that’s the real ballet shade worth throwing: at those of us who confuse inflexibility with integrity. At the version of ourselves that thinks every artistic disagreement is worth destroying a community over. At the narrative that says adaptation is always betrayal and compromise is always cowardice.

My teachers at the New York Ballet School—the good ones—would say: respect the choreography before you change it. Master the tradition before you rebel against it. They understood that innovation without foundation is just chaos in a tutu.

But they understood something else too: that foundation requires flexibility. That you can’t master anything if you’re too rigid to learn from the world as it actually is, not as you wish it were. That you can’t respect choreography if you refuse to dance with anyone who doesn’t see things exactly your way.

Or in basketball: freelancing without fundamentals is just a turnover waiting to happen. But fundamentals without teamwork is just talent dying alone on the court.

Jesus said “you feed them”—but he was talking to people who were willing to work together. Who understood that feeding the multitude requires more than one person’s conviction. It requires the whole community bringing what they have and sharing it.

The sin of omission isn’t just failing to help someone. It’s also failing to recognize when your principles are destroying the very people you claim to serve.

I faced every barrier that should have made me bitter, rigid, unbending. But I learned this: survival requires adaptation. Excellence requires compromise. And true sacrifice isn’t about standing alone—it’s about staying in the community long enough to lift others up when you finally get the chance.

Maybe those absences on Cecilia’s Facebook aren’t betrayals. Maybe they’re boundaries. Maybe they’re exhaustion. Maybe they’re the quiet wisdom of people who’ve learned that not every explosion is a revolution, and not every person who stands alone deserves applause.

Sometimes they just deserve to be alone with their principles.

wearingtwogowns.com

The Dumb Side of Performance Art: Jan Fabre’s Controversies

Ballet Shade

Run! Run! It’s Jan Fabre!  He’s staging pornography – German stuff. German stuff!

(****WARNING:  gross photos ahead****)


Periodically I like to check in on Troubleyn and see if  Fabre has been arrested or killed or married Marie Chouinard.  That would be a match  made in the bathroom. One thing is certain:  he is  contributing nothing to the collective.  I’ll show you:

This is Mount Olympus, a TWENTY FOUR HOUR interactive casserole of naked hate sex nonsense.  The zeitgeist sneaks out the back door.  You know what bothers me the most about this video ? It goes too long and I understand the concept of repetitiveness in performance work.  You get to that point where you see people are looking around and you reel it in with something else.   Jan Fabre isn’t doing that.  For all his conceptual talk on the limits of beauty he is not aware of the subtle art of fucking with your audience but not to the point of exclusion. 

So THIS was my take away from the video. Because he is getting redundant and aware only of himself this could be a dangerous  situation for these guys and their dicks. Jan Fabre still can’t create Kylian’s “Sarabande” and come on, man, you are never going to be Kylian. Seriously.  (that’s the second time I scolded him about this shit for you 4 who read this).


Remember this? Hope not.

Lisbeth Gruwez  is a pretty talented dancer and has distanced herself from Fabre but this is ….damn. This is worse than a secret sex tape on the internet because, well, shit she is complicit.  Willingly did this (it starts out with her mixing a martini and then she is the olive)

Can you imagine dating him? I would not want to see this man let loose in a bedroom. I am not saying it would be a crime scene….but I am not saying it wouldn’t. I don’t think you would come back from Jan Fabre – with a lot of booze and Xanax maybe.

But hey… dance and performance art has been this undefined thing, just needing someone to come along and take a big ole dump on it. To make it relevant doncha know. 

And our hero knew from the start that nothing says relevant like gross stuff.  For instance, you need to have a guy shoving his face into another guy’s ass  because damn it, performance art is nothing with out a ketamine rim job.

Fabre was in some trouble with a public statement by 12 dancers finally accusing him of sexual intimidation (don’t know how it ended) and I sympathize. As employees we are all exploited to some degree.  As artists in a company getting paid, you are willing to take more shit and they know it. 

You need the work, it’s your career it is what you worked for then got a really bad break and ended up with him. If those allegations were true – and almost everything Troubleyn has done would substantiate it – you know what will happen to him?

Nothing. 

So I put it to the dancers on their way out- if Mount Olympus is some sort of fucked up all night free-for-all  why not shoot the works? Blaze of glory!  If I had the misfortune of dancing for Fabre I would use this opportunity to have a nervous breakdown, on the stage, catatonic, scene stealer. Ambulance and everything.

I don’t want a lot from life.  But I want to derail a Jan Fabre production. And also world peace.  I would like that too.  And maybe a bike.


Yours apologetically,

Fatova

YOU ARE MARIA PLITZ

Chosen Ones

Here are the only photographed female dancers of the Ballet Russes’ first staging of Nijinsky’s Le Sacre du Printemps from 1913.After 4 hours of trying to tease out the real names even with Lynn Garafola and Millicent Hodson’s publications, I could not determine the actual names.  Here is the best I could do.

Julitska (nope) Zhulitska?  nope

Marie Rambert  ding!

Jadwiga Jezierska  (close enough/ semi ding!)

Boni (nope)Janina Boniecka (ding!)

Doris Faithful (ding!)


And then of course is the terrible foreshadowing of the Chosen One, Maria Plitz. 

This is the only known photograph of Maria Plitz, the first girl to dance herself to death but while people were hurling rotting vegetables at her and real Russian Pagans showed up and shot arrows at her and then the other girls laughed and didn’t include her in anything anymore.  Ok, that is a lie I think.  But they were booing and disrupting and Nijinsky was going shithouse in the wings.  Don’t believe me?

Ladies, Chosen Ones who I have championed, fought for, searched for tirelessly… Maria Plitz was your destiny.

You are all Maria Plitz.

Marjo, Susanna, Kirsi, Katja, Asta, no photos at all:
you are Maria Plitz.

Paula Passos, Renata Versiani, same:
you are Maria Plitz.

Patrizia Manieri,
you are Maria Plitz.

Heather

Heather Aagard:   you are more than that. –>

You started this whole archive project, you! And were it not for you, no one would be documented at all.

Your recollection of that one night in the circle is a poem as is Paula Passos’ and Kirsi Tiiliharju and more I am sure. 

You are the inheritance of Maria Plitz.

You should both be fucking pissed.

Yours for the price of a cocktail,

Fatova

Mary Wigman: Pioneer, Nazi, Nobody

Ballet Shade

Here is Mary Wigman a pioneer in expressionist dancing performing her “Witch Dance” which she debuted in Berlin in 1914. She was very influential in “creepy movement in film”, as the narrator explains. This is all very “silent-movie creature-of-the-night” type of stuff that she is doing, isn’t it? Yet at the same time, when I first saw it, I thought “wait…..is this Norma Desmond?”  Looks like her, yeah?

You see, I never heard of Mary Wigman. Have you? I’ll tell you why you haven’t.

As “ahead of her time” as this “artist ” may have been, when Hitler took control of Germany, this free thinking, Wiemar-era visionary handed all of her Jewish dancers/employees and friends right over to the Nazis.

In slow, dramatic, creepy motions, I’m sure.


This horror may explain why today was the first time I ever heard of this “visionary”. An act of cowardice like that sort of negates all that progressiveness. All that boldness. And what’s left is a dancing Nazi who is given little credit for her contribution.  Those who promote her have missed the point, They just consider themselves avant garde. 


Here ballet’s icon Dame Margot Fonteyne drives that point a bit by failing to make any mention whatsoever of Wigman – who is obviously in advance of her time with that witch dance (1914) and should be mentioned somewhere between Nijinksky (1913) and Kurt Jooss’ “Green Table” (1932).Check it out:

A friend of mine said “she probably didn’t know what was being done to the Jews or maybe she was scared”
to which I replied 
“If you can get up on stage and do that fucking witch dance during Nazi occupation, you aren’t scared –  you’re indifferent.”
And her indifference snuffed out what should have been her legend. 
Wigman died in 1973 at the age of 86. Just enough years to watch her name become synonymous with….nothing.

Sieg Heil, Mary.

Love, Fatova

HELLO BALLET BOYZ

Ballet Shade, Rite of Spring

remember me you dummies?

Years back I got my hands on the Ballet Boyz’ “Rite of Spring” which starts out in a unique way but man I have never seen anything crash and burn so fast. There is this old BDSM lady who makes angry faces who walks around during Spring Rounds and I wrote:

“What’s with the old dominatrix lady making faces during Spring Rounds?”

They forced a hard copyright violation on Youtube. I think that was the last public appearance of this casserole of nonsense.

So watch the opening 3 minutes if you can and then…should you actually be reading this…tell me it’s great. I’m sure this is the first time you will see it. Tell me it’s 2nd only to Nijinsky. And include your address because I WILL come bitch slap you. You may not know when….but bet on it.

If your ballet sucks and you get someone who is syndicated to write how bad it is…take it! You will likely never even get asked to do Circue du Soleil so take any mention you can get.

Lord Henry Wotton said “The only thing worse than being talked about is NOT being talked about.” Actually, Oscar Wilde said it and stuffed it into The Picture of Dorian blah blah”. Here is the “ballet” for you to judge for yourself:

Ballet Boyz: Rite of Spring from Fatova Mingus 2 on Vimeo.

I remain a spell check denier.
Fatova

Throwing Ballet Shade et la Mort

Ballet Shade

You know why the English National Ballet only released small clips of Ivan Vasiliev in their 2011 staging of Roland Petit’s “le jeune homme et la mort”?

Because he is terrible.  He is trying to sell it with facial expressions and it is ridiculous!  It’s like a German art film escaped from 1920 and landed in overalls on the English stage.



This dude – from what I have read – can’t handle criticism.  Kid, I know you will never read this but – what is wrong with you??  You distract from the ballet, from the dark libretto, from your own fantastic talent as a dancer  with all those Buster Keaton faces and do you know what Cocteau was driving at? 

I’ll tell you because it seems no one else has.

You are obsessed with this woman making a dumb pose in the doorway wearing a fabulous dress but when she gets to your side, you are plunged into sheer terror. SHEER! One obscenely stupid anxious face to the next.

You’re about to get a blowjob from a woman you are dying to have yet your face is..it’s like you look down and its the Commendotore from Don Giovanni come to bite it off and cast you into hell (though, she will, in fact do that at a later point).

I saw a Chosen One fall apart in the first 60 seconds once.  It was a road tour and perhaps she was tired but as her ability to dance faded she tried to compensate with facial expressions.  I was in the 2nd row and fully satisfied already with the corp de ballet of the jaw dropping first act.

I couldn’t watch but I was too visible to look away.  As soon as she was raised by the elders I ran for the door and it slammed before the applause began. What are you gonna do. She didn’t see me. 

And he is an amazing dancer, Tsk tsk. Unlike Nicholas le Riche, however, Ivan can’t dance the role because he is acting it. He simply can not do it and I would rather watch that Chosen One for 3 hours straight than to watch him confusing the entire point with his face.

I hear he maintains the expression through the curtain call. Idiot.

And why can’t anyone get to the oral copulation scene without sloppily running into it?   Can’t anyone do it like Delphine!

Oh great ballet where are you?

Because I know everyrhing,

Fatova

Let’s Talk About How Stupid Marie Chouinard Is

Ballet Shade

Three are consequences to coming out too strong.

You know Marie Chouinard pissed herself on stage in her first performance, right? Well, she did. So where do you go from there? Considering I called her stupid in the title, you know this is not going to be a puff piece.

I tried. I did. Especially with Body Remix because it was evident that Marie Chouinard is a sound artist. I found one minute that was ok. That’s it up there.

And that’s where it ends. Why didn’t anyone stop her? I mean she is just terrible and, as I had feared, she went full nipple when she had her dancers stop wearing those shiny things in that aforementioned thing of which there is 20 seconds.

I’m not sure what this is, don’t care. I MUST acknowledge she is brilliant with audio. Maybe even up there with Janet Cardiff. She should have stopped there.

You can’t imagine how hard I tried to like this chick.

I just….I….just look at her Le Sacre du Printemps:

Someone should have stopped her. I live in fear that she will team up with Jan Fabre and kill that zeitgeist in some horrible way and sell it as art. Gawd.

My taxes better not be paying for this sh*t

Ballet Shade

On January 19, 2021, someone put that comment on Marie Chouinard’s”body remix” video which I posted in 2010. 
I want to date this guy.


I was a syndicated Dance Blogger for a while.  I was in the top ten and I knew this dance site never read my blog.   As Kritina Knief put it , I was a wisenheimer with more f-bombs in my mouth than teeth. 
Of course, I was (and am) very focused on Nijinsky’s Le Sacre du Printemps choreography.  It was my only field of solid amateur-not-really-knowing-what-I-am-talking -about expertise..  And with all that going for me I went after the Rite of Spring choreographers full force.  Didn’t matter how much juice they had.  I just kicked the door in because a caustic asshole with little knowledge but a lot of Adderall will do those things.  Most of the time it turned out I was just kicking in bathrooom doors, but still.

(Uwe Sholz’  Rite of Spring)Uwe Scholz’ company wrote to me and asked that I take down a review of his garbage version of “Le Sacre du Printemps”. I said no. I would not.  Suddenly there was a blogger calling me a hack and a philistine and then BOOM.  My readers tripled.  And I learned what philistine meant and I agreed with them. So thanks German jerks.

(I can not believe this Kenneth Macmillan nightmare is still performed)
“Selling ballet one f-bomb at a time” is the truth and was my tagline forever.  It is who I am and what I have done. 
I think I am going to have to go back to my roots.

You see, I wanted people who were curious about dance but felt intimidated by  “real” dance websites to have a place to go.  A place to see some dance videos on a YouTube channel read the hilarious explanations that went along with them and talk about it and ask questions and inevitably  get to a blog post called “Fucking Russians”, 
I wanted to see what would happen if I wrote about dance in the tone of a belligerent bar whore being shut off .
I used some unorthodox methods here.
I posted Marie Chouinard’s “body remix -goldberg variations”  (which now has over 1 million views ffs) and this perverted shibari performance video right along side the 1987 Joffrey Le Sacre to see if the visiting perverts would be intrigued,  watch it and make a comment.  It didn’t matter what they said.

When a guy posts  “that lady at 4:22 is fucking gay” it means he watched at least 4 minutes of Nijinsky.  Probably NEEDED only 4 minutes of the other stuff. 
I reference that guy all the time.  And I get the same excitement today when someone comments and engages.  It happened this morning. The day before too., 
I ended up with over 8,000 YouTube subscribers and nearly 2 million views of the 1987 Joffrey and over 1,000 comments with at least three per week .  I got lucky with this blog, then I abandoned and my style as I began meeting/ engaging with the “real people” of  Nijinsky’s masterpiece.  
YES, I began the Sacre collections and no, ballerinas in Finland and Portugal don’t get the jokes here but they don’t read it anyway.  

I was in syndication as a dance writer because I swore a lot and lured people in with sex. Sex of the “chicks with polio and taped nipples “variety . 
And so it’s the kids who comment and end up here that fueled this ridiculous train. 
I hope they will take me back. Who is doing the most perverted choreography at the moment?  I need to post it next the Le Sacre du Printemps. Try and sell a bridge. 

I am like the PT Barnum of ballet:

“There is no such thing as bad publicity!”

I love you (don’t tell your husband),

Fatova

The firsts will be first

Chosen Ones, le sacre du printemps

Who is Heather Aagard?  She was the catalyst for the Chosen One Collections, for this ongoing search to find every dancer who stepped into that Circle and danced herself to death.

She was given the opportunity only once by the Joffrey Ballet and it changed her life. But there would be no photo no program no listing.   I have found  these things for almost everyone because of her  but not for her .

Dancer #5 in your companies, nothing but a blurry photo for posterity, unknown in history but you, dear “Firsts”, are eternal.  You are the dancers who actually created The Chosen One.  

The emotional breakdown of being made to dance yourself to your own death did not yet exist.

 The steps, yes.  The concept, yes. But that was all.

And so when you performed you were flying blind.  Each night, with that first jump, you were fleshing out the Sacrificed Virgin.  It is you, the dancers not worth filming, the girls in the chorus who are responsible for creating that crucial element that has solidified Le Sacre du Printemps for all time: the Chosen One’s  desperate struggle.   The theoretical character existed through and was nurtured by Hodson and Archer and generously of course.

But ultimately you, all alone in Roerich’s dark libretto against Stravinsky’s frenetic Rite and Nijinsky’s choreographic “fuck you” to ballet would have to present the torture of the Chosen One and it would have to come from within your own selves. 

Her struggle to survive would have to come from your own struggles. Her fear, anxiety, confusion, resistance and abandon – all within the difficulty of that performance –  would have to be yours.  In the moment, swimming in your own painful experiences on stage before an audience looking for Le Sacre du Printemps,YOU, the under-valued, seldom thought of dancer, were breathing life and death into the Chosen One. 

In the Spanish Inquisition of solos.  



You are the “all-in Ballerinas” – the ones who pushed through the slow shock and growing momentum of that solo,  creating something that would set the pace for the dancers to come and the expectation of audiences forever.  You were creating the most important aspect of the Chosen One through the sacrifice of your own pain.  You were the groundbreakers. And groundbreakers are not likely to be recognized in their own time.  


Just ask Nijinsky.  

You were bearing a mighty responsibility in the silence while those around you carried nothing in the celebrations.   One internal experience, one performance at a time, you  created the great role that the great dancers would not perform.


Those few early clips and photos I have found are a fury of intensity.  And as I have poured over your photos and performances, each time there is something new and something new then something else.  I don’t think anything like this will ever happen again. I don’t.  Do you?


Cristian Maciel wears a haughty expression in the Mystic Circle.  “I will not be intimidated”.  She dies anyway. 

This shot of Anabel Segura…CNB put no names to their company photos –  had to get it from other dancers…is raw with agony and this deep torture that looks like it is tearing through her.



As it tore through Susanna.  Alba. Nina. Katja. 
Renata. One by one, you poured yourself into this great and painful process until at last The Chosen One truly existed.

no+one.jpg

I get pissed off when I see a company or soloist going through the motions, walking to their marks without any idea of what’s happening and probably not interested in learning (see any Mariinsky Act One performance).

It’s been 30 years and for them it is not a new thing, its impact is lost, it is just another ballet, what time is the party? Soloists stroll through the steps fraught with your emotional experiences with blank faces or feigned suffering.  It’s a ballet. An obligation. There are steps  which exhaust you and then it’s over and let’s take some selfies or whatever. 

But for you…for you,  Le Sacre du Printemps was not an obligation but a deep invitation that only you could hear and would you take that chance?.  It’s your own journey through your own dark night.  With your toes turned in. 


One “forgotten” told me she cried while dancing, overwhelmed by her own past.  Another told me it was an out-of-body experience.  And another said it was so cathartic that she didn’t need a photo, she will always have that moment of her single performance. 

These women have no photos. 

And some of the “firsts and forgottens” don’t care at all which leaves me to conclude they didn’t contribute a thing to the creation of this tragic ballet heroine anyway.  


I look at Elizabeth Lopez at the end of the solo, coming out of those few turns  throwing  her head back, her arms into a sharp punctuating position with an exactness I don’t see anywhere.  And at the point of physical exhaustion in the performance!   It is her signature. Some dancer somewhere has used it but has no idea who Elizabeth is.


Beatriz Rodriguez is still getting 2 feet from the stage in the last leaps as if she’s spring loaded. It is amazing!  And through out her performance – I don’t know what was behind it – but her mouth would be open as if she were crying out in madness which would make sense for the character but in that very first performance?  That was from her own world, her own small space.  And has been mimmicked but seldom felt.

As the center, as the pinnacle, as the point of the thing you were each presenting this EVENT to the world. You suffered Le Sacre du Printemps and it is everlasting even if it is by way of Pavlenko doing Straccamore .

Today they perform the intense role of your emotional sacrifice.  They get the luck of performing something with a blueprint, but not the privilege of creating it.  

Feeling it.

And owning it. 

Today it is not likely that this photo above of would be identified as Ana Lacerda despite her success.

Today, I will have at least one comment on my Youtube channel on the 1987 Joffrey video; people seeing it for the first time, freaking out, asking questions and I can draw a direct line from that comment on Beatriz’ first contribution to Alba Tapia’s last but I can’t show it because of shitty companies who did not understand the historical significance of debuting Le Sacre and the privilege of having dancers who would dare to perform it. 


The students and viewers on YouTube will never see your Firsts, those who should be remembered as the owners of The Chosen One. 

For that dreadful act, YOU should be remembered.

Heather Aagard

I might poke a stick at this for a bit.  You might get what you want out of me then disappear.  You might share something of yourself with us which is Nijinsky.  After all – that’s who we are,


I love you bitches.