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Onegin - The National Ballet of Canada

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<strong>Ballet</strong> Notes<br />

<strong>Onegin</strong><br />

June 19 – 25, 2010<br />

Jiˇrí Jelinek as Eugene <strong>Onegin</strong>.<br />

Photo by Sian Richards.


<strong>The</strong> University <strong>of</strong> Toronto’s School <strong>of</strong> Continuing Studies <strong>of</strong>fers a course<br />

led by Katherine Barber, “<strong>Canada</strong>’s Word Lady”, on <strong>The</strong> <strong>National</strong> <strong>Ballet</strong><br />

<strong>of</strong> <strong>Canada</strong>’s upcoming season.<br />

Begins September 13, 2010<br />

For more information, visit learn.utoronto.ca or call 416 978 2400 x2.<br />

Stephanie Hutchison in Serenade.<br />

Photo by Cylla von Tiedemann.<br />

Explore With Us<br />

<strong>The</strong> 2010/11 Season<br />

is Your Season!


Celia Franca, C.C., Founder<br />

George Crum, Music Director Emeritus<br />

Karen Kain, C.C. Kevin Garland<br />

Artistic Director Executive Director<br />

David Briskin Rex Harrington, O.C.<br />

Music Director and Artist-in-Residence<br />

Principal Conductor<br />

Magdalena Popa Lindsay Fischer<br />

Principal Artistic Coach Artistic Director,<br />

YOU dance / <strong>Ballet</strong> Master<br />

Peter Ottmann Mandy-Jayne<br />

Senior <strong>Ballet</strong> Master Richardson<br />

Senior <strong>Ballet</strong> Mistress<br />

Aleksandar Antonijevic, Guillaume Côté,<br />

Greta Hodgkinson, Jiˇrí Jelinek,<br />

Zdenek Konvalina, Heather Ogden,<br />

Sonia Rodriguez, Piotr Stanczyk, Xiao Nan Yu,<br />

Bridgett Zehr<br />

Victoria Bertram, Kevin D. Bowles,<br />

Lorna Geddes, Tomas Schramek,<br />

Hazaros Surmeyan*<br />

Keiichi Hirano, Tanya Howard, Stephanie Hutchison,<br />

Richard Landry, Etienne Lavigne, Patrick Lavoie,<br />

Stacey Shiori Minagawa, Tina Pereira,<br />

Jonathan Renna, Rebekah Rimsay, Jillian Vanstone<br />

Alexandra Golden, Elena Lobsanova, Noah Long,<br />

Alejandra Perez-Gomez, Lisa Robinson, Jenna Savella,<br />

Robert Stephen, Brett van Sickle<br />

Ryan Booth, Wei Chen, Jordana Daumec, Krista Dowson,<br />

Nadine Drouin, Naoya Ebe, Selene Guerrero-Trujillo,<br />

Grace Hanley, Juri Hiraoka, Kathryn Hosier, Tamara Jones,<br />

Lise-Marie Jourdain, James Leja, Alexandra MacDonald,<br />

McGee Maddox, Catherine Maitland, Elizabeth Marrable,<br />

Antonella Martinelli, Chelsy Meiss, Shino Mori, Tiffany Mosher,<br />

Amber Munro, Andreea Olteanu, Marissa Parzei, Brendan Saye,<br />

James Shee, Christopher Stalzer, Nan Wang, Aarik Wells,<br />

Sarah Elena Wolff<br />

RBC Apprentice Programme / YOU dance: Jessica Burrows,<br />

Skylar Campbell, Jackson Carroll, Esabelle Chen, Shaila D’On<strong>of</strong>rio,<br />

Giorgio Galli, Ji Min Hong, Alexandra Inculet, Jaclyn Oakley,<br />

Julia Sedwick, Thomas Snee, Dylan Tedaldi<br />

Lorna Geddes Tomas Schramek<br />

Pointe Shoe Manager / Assistant <strong>Ballet</strong> Master<br />

Assistant <strong>Ballet</strong> Mistress<br />

Joysanne Sidimus Ernest Abugov<br />

Guest Repetiteur Jeff Morris<br />

Stage Managers<br />

Gillian Lewis Kim Bujaczek<br />

Stage Manager, Assistant Stage Manager<br />

YOU dance<br />

*Guest Artist-in-Residence<br />

Orchestra<br />

Violins<br />

Benjamin Bowman<br />

Guest Concertmaster<br />

Lynn Kuo,<br />

Assistant Concertmaster<br />

Dominique Laplante,<br />

Principal Second Violin<br />

• Jennie Baccante<br />

Csaba Koczó<br />

Sheldon Grabke<br />

• Xiao Grabke<br />

Nancy Kershaw<br />

Sonia Klimasko-Leheniuk<br />

James Aylesworth<br />

Yakov Lerner<br />

Jayne Maddison<br />

Ron Mah<br />

Aya Miyagawa<br />

Wendy Rogers<br />

Filip Tomov<br />

Joanna Zabrowarna<br />

Paul Zevenhuizen<br />

Violas<br />

Angela Rudden, Principal<br />

<strong>The</strong>resa Rudolph Koczó,<br />

Assistant Principal<br />

Valerie Kuinka<br />

Johann Lotter<br />

Beverley Spotton<br />

Larry Toman<br />

Cellos<br />

• Maurizio Baccante,<br />

Principal<br />

Olga Laktionova<br />

Andrew McIntosh<br />

Marianne Pack<br />

Elaine Thompson<br />

Paul Widner<br />

Basses<br />

Hans J.F. Preuss, Principal<br />

• Paul Langley<br />

Robert Speer<br />

Cary Takagaki<br />

Flutes<br />

Leslie J. Allt, Principal<br />

Maria Pelletier<br />

Shelley Brown, Piccolo<br />

Oboes<br />

Mark Rogers, Principal<br />

Karen Rotenberg<br />

Lesley Young,<br />

English Horn<br />

Clarinets<br />

Max Christie, Principal<br />

Emily Marlow<br />

Gary Kidd, Bass Clarinet<br />

Bassoons<br />

Stephen Mosher, Principal<br />

Jerry Robinson<br />

Elizabeth Gowen,<br />

Contra Bassoon<br />

Horns<br />

Gary Pattison, Principal<br />

Vincent Barbee<br />

Derek Conrod<br />

Scott Wevers<br />

Trumpets<br />

Richard Sandals, Principal<br />

Mark Dharmaratnam<br />

Raymond Tizzard<br />

Trombones<br />

David Archer, Principal<br />

Robert Ferguson<br />

David Pell,<br />

Bass Trombone<br />

Tuba<br />

Sasha Johnson<br />

Harp<br />

Lucie Parent, Principal<br />

Timpany<br />

Michael Perry, Principal<br />

Percussion<br />

Robert Comber, Principal<br />

Mark Mazur<br />

Orchestra Personnel<br />

Manager and Music<br />

Administrator<br />

Jean Verch<br />

Assistant Orchestra<br />

Personnel Manager<br />

• Raymond Tizzard<br />

Library Assistant<br />

Lucie Parent<br />

Extra Players<br />

Anne Armstrong, Violin<br />

Louise Pauls, Violin<br />

Sonia Vizante, Violin<br />

Nicholaos Papdakis,<br />

Viola<br />

Orly Bitov, Cello<br />

Mary Stein, Cello<br />

Jill Vitols, Cello<br />

Tom Hazlitt, Bass<br />

Colleen Cook, Clarinet<br />

Diane Doig, Horn<br />

Brendan Cassin, Trumpet<br />

Richard Moore,<br />

Percussion<br />

• On Leave <strong>of</strong> Absence


<strong>The</strong> 2009/10 season is presented by:<br />

Saturday, June 19 at 2:00 pm and 7:30 pm<br />

Sunday, June 20 at 2:00 pm<br />

Tuesday, June 22 at 7:30 pm<br />

Conductor: David Briskin, Music Director and Principal Conductor<br />

<strong>Onegin</strong><br />

Choreography: John Cranko<br />

Staged by: Reid Anderson and Jane Bourne<br />

Based on the poem by Alexander Pushkin<br />

Copyright: Dieter Graefe<br />

Music: Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky<br />

Arrangement and Orchestration: Kurt-Heinz Stolze<br />

Set and Costume Design: Santo Loquasto<br />

Lighting Design: James F. Ingalls<br />

Repetiteurs: Magdalena Popa, Peter Ottmann, Rex Harrington<br />

Page 4<br />

Wednesday, June 23 at 7:30 pm<br />

Thursday, June 24 at 2:00 pm and 7:30 pm<br />

Friday, June 25 at 7:30 pm<br />

Premiere: <strong>The</strong> <strong>National</strong> <strong>Ballet</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Canada</strong>, June 14, 1984.<br />

This production entered the repertoire <strong>of</strong> <strong>The</strong> <strong>National</strong> <strong>Ballet</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Canada</strong> on June 19, 2010.<br />

<strong>Onegin</strong> is generously supported by an anonymous friend <strong>of</strong> the <strong>National</strong> <strong>Ballet</strong>.<br />

Eugene <strong>Onegin</strong> Aleksandar Antonijevic (June 19 mat, 22)<br />

Jiˇrí Jelinek (June 19 eve, 23, 25)<br />

Guillaume Côté* (June 20, 24 eve)<br />

McGee Maddox* (June 24 mat)<br />

Lensky Piotr Stanczyk* (June 19 mat, 22)<br />

(his friend) Guillaume Côté (June 19 eve, 23)<br />

Zdenek Konvalina (June 20, 24 eve)<br />

Brett van Sickle* (June 24 mat, 25)<br />

Madame Larina Victoria Bertram<br />

(a widow)<br />

Tatiana Sonia Rodriguez* (June 19 mat, 22)<br />

(her daughter) Xiao Nan Yu (June 19 eve, 23, 25)<br />

Greta Hodgkinson (June 20, 24 eve)<br />

Heather Ogden* (June 24 mat)<br />

Olga Stacey Shiori Minagawa (June 19 mat, 22)<br />

(another daughter) Heather Ogden* (June 19 eve, 23)<br />

Jillian Vanstone* (June 20, 24 eve)<br />

Bridgett Zehr* (June 24 mat, 25)<br />

national.ballet.ca


Xiao Nan Yu.<br />

Photo by Sian Richards.<br />

Nurse to Tatiana and Olga Lorna Geddes<br />

Prince Gremin Jonathan Renna* (June 19 mat, 22)<br />

(friend to the Larina family) Rex Harrington † (June 19 eve)<br />

Etienne Lavigne* (June 20, 24 eve)<br />

Patrick Lavoie (June 23, 25)<br />

Noah Long* (June 24 mat)<br />

Relatives, countryfolk, Artists <strong>of</strong> the <strong>Ballet</strong><br />

members <strong>of</strong> St. Petersburg<br />

nobility<br />

* Debut<br />

† Artist-in-Residence<br />

All casting subject to change.<br />

Approximate timing<br />

ACT I – 38 minutes<br />

Intermission – 20 minutes<br />

ACT II – 27 minutes<br />

Intermission – 20 minutes<br />

ACT III – 26 minutes<br />

<strong>The</strong> performance will run approximately 2 hours 11 minutes.<br />

Page 5


Synopsis<br />

Act I<br />

Scene 1: Madame Larina’s Garden<br />

Madame Larina, Olga and the nurse are<br />

finishing the party dresses and gossiping<br />

about Tatiana’s upcoming birthday festivities.<br />

Madame Larina speculates on the future<br />

and reminisces about her own lost beauty<br />

and youth.<br />

Lensky, a young poet engaged to Olga,<br />

arrives with a friend from St. Petersburg. He<br />

introduces <strong>Onegin</strong>, who, bored with the city,<br />

has come to see if the country can <strong>of</strong>fer him<br />

any distraction. Tatiana, full <strong>of</strong> youthful and<br />

romantic fantasies, falls in love with the<br />

elegant stranger, so different from the country<br />

people she knows. <strong>Onegin</strong>, on the other<br />

hand, sees in Tatiana only a naive country girl<br />

who reads too many romantic novels.<br />

Scene 2: Tatiana’s Bedroom<br />

Tatiana, her imagination aflame with impetuous<br />

first-love, dreams <strong>of</strong> <strong>Onegin</strong> and writes him<br />

a passionate love letter, which she gives to<br />

her nurse to deliver.<br />

Intermission<br />

Act II<br />

Scene 1: Tatiana’s Birthday<br />

<strong>The</strong> provincial gentry have come to celebrate<br />

Tatiana’s birthday. <strong>The</strong>y gossip about<br />

Lensky’s infatuation with Olga and whisper<br />

prophecies <strong>of</strong> a dawning romance between<br />

Tatiana and the newcomer. <strong>Onegin</strong> finds the<br />

company boring. Stifling his yawns, he finds it<br />

difficult to be civil to them; furthermore he is<br />

irritated by Tatiana’s letter which he regards<br />

merely as an outburst <strong>of</strong> adolescent love. In a<br />

quiet moment, he seeks out Tatiana and,<br />

telling her that he cannot love her, tears up the<br />

letter. Tatiana’s distress, instead <strong>of</strong> awakening<br />

pity, merely increases his irritation.<br />

Prince Gremin, a distant relation, appears.<br />

He is in love with Tatiana and Madame Larina<br />

hopes for a brilliant match but Tatiana,<br />

Page 6<br />

troubled with her own heart, hardly notices<br />

her kindly, older relation.<br />

<strong>Onegin</strong>, in his boredom, decides to<br />

provoke Lensky by flirting with Olga who<br />

light-heartedly joins in his teasing. But Lensky<br />

takes the matter with passionate seriousness.<br />

He challenges <strong>Onegin</strong> to a duel.<br />

Scene 2: <strong>The</strong> Duel<br />

Tatiana and Olga try to reason with Lensky<br />

but his high romantic ideals are shattered<br />

by the betrayal <strong>of</strong> his friend and the fickleness<br />

<strong>of</strong> his beloved; he insists that the duel take<br />

place. <strong>Onegin</strong> kills his friend and for the first<br />

time his cold heart is moved by the horror <strong>of</strong><br />

his deed. Tatiana realizes that her love was<br />

an illusion and that <strong>Onegin</strong> is self-centred<br />

and empty.<br />

Intermission<br />

Act III<br />

Scene 1: St. Petersburg<br />

<strong>Onegin</strong>, having travelled the world for many<br />

years in an attempt to escape his own futility,<br />

returns to St. Petersburg where he is received<br />

at a ball in the palace <strong>of</strong> Prince Gremin.<br />

Gremin has recently married and <strong>Onegin</strong><br />

is astonished to recognize in the stately<br />

and elegant young princess, Tatiana, the<br />

uninteresting little country girl whom he once<br />

turned away. <strong>The</strong> enormity <strong>of</strong> his mistake and<br />

loss engulfs him. His life now seems even<br />

more aimless and empty.<br />

Scene 2: Tatiana’s Nursery<br />

Tatiana reads a letter from <strong>Onegin</strong>, which<br />

reveals his love for her. Suddenly he stands<br />

before her, impatient to know her answer.<br />

Tatiana sorrowfully tells him that although<br />

she still feels her passionate girlhood love<br />

for him, she is now a woman and she could<br />

never find happiness with him or have respect<br />

for him. She orders him to leave her forever.


Tatiana’s Letter<br />

“I<br />

write to you – no more confession<br />

is needed, nothing’s left to tell.<br />

I know it’s now in your discretion<br />

with scorn to make my world a hell.<br />

But, if you’ve kept some faint impression<br />

<strong>of</strong> pity for my wretched state,<br />

you’ll never leave me to my fate.<br />

At first I thought it out <strong>of</strong> season<br />

to speak; believe me: <strong>of</strong> my shame<br />

you’d not so much as know the name,<br />

if I’d possessed the slightest reason<br />

to hope that even once a week<br />

I might have seen you, heard you speak<br />

on visits to us, and in greeting<br />

I might have said a word, and then<br />

thought, day and night, and thought again<br />

about one thing, till our next meeting.<br />

But you’re not sociable, they say:<br />

you find the country godforsaken;<br />

though we... don’t shine in anyway,<br />

our joy in you is warmly taken.<br />

Why did you visit us, but why?<br />

Lost in our backwoods habitation<br />

I’d not have known you, therefore I<br />

would have been spared this laceration.<br />

In time, who knows, the agitation<br />

<strong>of</strong> inexperience would have passed,<br />

I would have found a friend, another,<br />

and in the role <strong>of</strong> virtuous mother<br />

and faithful wife I’d have been cast.<br />

Another!... No, another never<br />

in all the world could take my heart!<br />

Decreed in highest court forever...<br />

heaven’s will – for you I’m set apart;<br />

and my whole life has been directed<br />

and pledged to you, and firmly planned;<br />

I know, Godsent one, I’m protected<br />

until the grave by your strong hand:<br />

you’d made appearance in my dreaming;<br />

unseen, already you were dear,<br />

my soul had heard your voice ring clear,<br />

stirred at your gaze, so strange, so gleaming,<br />

long, long ago...no, that could be<br />

no dream. You’d scarce arrived, I reckoned<br />

to know you, swooned, and in a second<br />

all in a blaze, I said: it’s he!<br />

You know, it’s true, how I attended,<br />

drank in your words when all was still –<br />

helping the poor, or while I mended<br />

with balm <strong>of</strong> prayer my torn and rended<br />

spirit that anguish had made ill.<br />

At this midnight <strong>of</strong> my condition,<br />

was it not you, dear apparition,<br />

who in the dark came flashing through<br />

and, on my bed-head gently leaning,<br />

with love and comfort in your meaning,<br />

spoke words <strong>of</strong> hope? But who are you:<br />

the guardian angel <strong>of</strong> tradition,<br />

or some vile agent <strong>of</strong> perdition<br />

sent to seduce? Resolve my doubt.<br />

Oh, this could all be false and vain,<br />

a sham that trustful souls work out;<br />

fate could be something else again...<br />

So let it be! For you to keep<br />

I trust my fate to your direction,<br />

henceforth in front <strong>of</strong> you I weep,<br />

I weep, and pray for your protection...<br />

Imagine it: quite on my own<br />

I’ve no one here who comprehends me,<br />

and now a swooning mind attends me,<br />

dumb I must perish, and alone.<br />

My heart awaits you: you can turn it<br />

to life and hope with just a glance –<br />

or else disturb my mournful trance<br />

with censure – I’ve done all to earn it!<br />

I close. I dread to read this page...<br />

for shame and fear my wits are sliding...<br />

and yet your honour is my gauge,<br />

and in it boldly I’m confiding<br />

”<br />

Page 7


Historical Note<br />

J<br />

ohn Cranko was one <strong>of</strong> the 20th century’s<br />

greatest narrative choreographers.<br />

Cranko’s output was prodigious and he has<br />

left the ballet world with a rich repertoire <strong>of</strong><br />

story ballets. His Romeo and Juliet, <strong>Onegin</strong><br />

and <strong>The</strong> Taming <strong>of</strong> the Shrew are all in <strong>The</strong><br />

<strong>National</strong> <strong>Ballet</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Canada</strong>’s current repertoire<br />

and are superlative examples <strong>of</strong> his fine<br />

crafting <strong>of</strong> stage theatricality, skillful sense<br />

<strong>of</strong> drama, rich characterization and inventive<br />

dance vocabulary.<br />

<strong>Onegin</strong> was originally created by Cranko<br />

in 1965 for Stuttgart <strong>Ballet</strong>, the company <strong>of</strong><br />

which he was Artistic Director. A dazzling and<br />

powerful dance-drama, <strong>Onegin</strong> has become<br />

one <strong>of</strong> this century’s most important and<br />

sought-after full-length ballets. <strong>The</strong> ballet is<br />

based on the narrative poem Eugene <strong>Onegin</strong><br />

by Alexander Pushkin and on Tchaikovsky’s<br />

opera <strong>of</strong> the same name. It is a tale <strong>of</strong><br />

unrequited love in the tragic meeting <strong>of</strong> an<br />

innocent young girl with a cynical aristocrat.<br />

During the 1964/65 Stuttgart <strong>Ballet</strong> season,<br />

Cranko concentrated all his efforts on the<br />

T<br />

he <strong>National</strong> <strong>Ballet</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Canada</strong>’s premiere<br />

<strong>of</strong> <strong>Onegin</strong> in 1984 featured a design by<br />

Jürgen Rose and lighting by Sholem Dolgoy.<br />

On June 19, 2010, glorious new set and<br />

costume designs created by one <strong>of</strong> today’s<br />

most illustrious designers, Santo Loquasto,<br />

were unveiled along with new lighting by<br />

James F. Ingalls, renowned designer for<br />

dance, opera and theatre.<br />

Visit national.ballet.ca to watch the mini<br />

documentary series on the building <strong>of</strong> the<br />

new sets and costumes for this production<br />

<strong>of</strong> <strong>Onegin</strong>.<br />

Page 8<br />

creation <strong>of</strong> <strong>Onegin</strong>, his third full-length ballet.<br />

It was first performed by Stuttgart <strong>Ballet</strong> on<br />

April 13, 1965 at the Wurttemburgische<br />

Staatstheatre with Marcia Haydée as Tatiana,<br />

Ray Barra as <strong>Onegin</strong>, Egon Madsen as<br />

Lensky, and Ana Cardus as Olga. Cranko<br />

later produced a revised version <strong>of</strong> <strong>Onegin</strong> for<br />

Stuttgart <strong>Ballet</strong> in 1967 and it is this revised<br />

version that we see today.<br />

<strong>Onegin</strong> was staged for the <strong>National</strong> <strong>Ballet</strong><br />

in 1984 by Reid Anderson. Anderson was<br />

the Artistic Director <strong>of</strong> the company from<br />

1989 to 1996 and is now Artistic Director<br />

<strong>of</strong> Stuttgart <strong>Ballet</strong>. <strong>Onegin</strong> was first performed<br />

by the <strong>National</strong> <strong>Ballet</strong> at Toronto’s O’Keefe<br />

Centre (now the Sony Centre) on June 14,<br />

1984 with Sabina Allemann as Tatiana and<br />

Frank Augustyn as <strong>Onegin</strong>. <strong>The</strong> production<br />

was later filmed by CBC TV and Primedia<br />

and was directed by Norman Campbell.<br />

<strong>The</strong> film garnered international praise and<br />

received the Silver Medal in the Performance<br />

Arts category at the Houston International<br />

Film Festival.<br />

Design Note Xiao Nan Yu and Jiˇrí Jelinek.<br />

Photo by Sian Richards.


Selected Biographies<br />

Karen Kain,<br />

C.C., LL.D., D. Litt., O.Ont.<br />

Artistic Director<br />

Acknowledged as one <strong>of</strong> the<br />

leading classical ballerinas <strong>of</strong><br />

her time, Karen Kain is also<br />

one <strong>of</strong> <strong>Canada</strong>’s foremost<br />

arts advocates, bringing the<br />

same passion and dedication<br />

she exemplified as a dancer<br />

to her roles as a spokesperson<br />

for Canadian culture and as<br />

the Artistic Director <strong>of</strong> <strong>The</strong><br />

<strong>National</strong> <strong>Ballet</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Canada</strong>.<br />

A native <strong>of</strong> Hamilton, Ontario,<br />

Ms. Kain studied at <strong>Canada</strong>’s<br />

<strong>National</strong> <strong>Ballet</strong> School,<br />

graduating in 1969 when she<br />

joined <strong>The</strong> <strong>National</strong> <strong>Ballet</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />

<strong>Canada</strong>. After quickly rising<br />

to the rank <strong>of</strong> Principal Dancer,<br />

she came to the attention <strong>of</strong><br />

international audiences when<br />

she won the Silver Medal<br />

at the Moscow International<br />

<strong>Ballet</strong> Competition in 1973.<br />

This led to a highly successful<br />

career on stages throughout<br />

the world. Ms. Kain retired<br />

from dance in 1997 and<br />

shortly afterwards, assumed<br />

the position <strong>of</strong> Artist-in-<br />

Residence with the <strong>National</strong><br />

<strong>Ballet</strong>. In 1999, her role was<br />

expanded to that <strong>of</strong> Artistic<br />

Associate and in June <strong>of</strong> 2005,<br />

she was appointed Artistic<br />

Director <strong>of</strong> the company.<br />

Ms. Kain has received<br />

numerous accolades and<br />

awards throughout her<br />

career. She is a Companion<br />

<strong>of</strong> the Order <strong>of</strong> <strong>Canada</strong>, the<br />

first Canadian recipient <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Cartier Lifetime Achievement<br />

Award and was named an<br />

Officer <strong>of</strong> the Order <strong>of</strong> Arts<br />

and Letters by the government<br />

<strong>of</strong> France. In 2002, she was<br />

honoured with a Governor<br />

General’s Award for Lifetime<br />

Artistic Achievement and<br />

from 2004 to 2008 was Chair<br />

<strong>of</strong> the <strong>Canada</strong> Council for the<br />

Arts. In 2007, she received<br />

the Barbara Hamilton Memorial<br />

Award for demonstrating<br />

excellence and pr<strong>of</strong>essionalism<br />

in the performing arts. In 2008,<br />

the Karen Kain School <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Arts <strong>of</strong>ficially opened. <strong>The</strong><br />

school was named after<br />

Ms. Kain for her significant<br />

contributions to the arts over<br />

her career.<br />

John Cranko<br />

Choreographer<br />

Born in South Africa, John<br />

Cranko moved to London in<br />

1946 to join Sadler’s Wells<br />

<strong>Ballet</strong>. Within four years,<br />

he was named Resident<br />

Choreographer and during<br />

this time, he created some<br />

<strong>of</strong> his finest early ballets.<br />

Through the 1950s, Mr.<br />

Cranko created works for<br />

both the Covent Garden<br />

and Sadler’s Wells branches<br />

<strong>of</strong> <strong>The</strong> Royal <strong>Ballet</strong>, notably<br />

Antigone, Bonne Bouche<br />

and <strong>The</strong> Lady and the Fool.<br />

In 1957, Mr. Cranko<br />

choreographed his first fulllength<br />

ballet, <strong>The</strong> Prince <strong>of</strong><br />

the Pagodas. Shortly thereafter,<br />

he created La Belle<br />

Hélène for the Paris Opera<br />

<strong>Ballet</strong> and Romeo and Juliet<br />

for La Scala. In 1960, he<br />

went to Stuttgart to restage<br />

Prince <strong>of</strong> the Pagodas and<br />

was asked to assume the<br />

directorship <strong>of</strong> Stuttgart<br />

<strong>Ballet</strong> in 1961. <strong>The</strong>re he<br />

created the full-length ballets<br />

<strong>Onegin</strong>, Carmen and <strong>The</strong><br />

Taming <strong>of</strong> the Shrew, while<br />

continuing to create short<br />

works and restage classics.<br />

Mr. Cranko died tragically on<br />

an airplane bringing his<br />

company home from New<br />

York in 1973.<br />

Reid Anderson<br />

Staging<br />

Artistic Director <strong>of</strong> Stuttgart<br />

<strong>Ballet</strong> since September 1996,<br />

Reid Anderson has had a long<br />

and distinguished career in<br />

the world <strong>of</strong> dance as a dancer,<br />

teacher, coach, producer<br />

and Artistic Director. Born<br />

in New Westminster, British<br />

Columbia, Mr. Anderson<br />

received his dance training<br />

in <strong>Canada</strong> and at <strong>The</strong> Royal<br />

<strong>Ballet</strong> School in London,<br />

England. At the invitation<br />

<strong>of</strong> the Choreographer and<br />

Director John Cranko, he<br />

joined Germany’s Stuttgart<br />

<strong>Ballet</strong> in 1969. Throughout<br />

his 17-year career with<br />

Stuttgart <strong>Ballet</strong>, Mr. Anderson<br />

danced leading roles in a<br />

wide range <strong>of</strong> classical and<br />

contemporary productions<br />

and worked with some <strong>of</strong><br />

the leading choreographers<br />

<strong>of</strong> the 20th century including,<br />

among others, John Cranko,<br />

Sir Kenneth MacMillan, Glen<br />

Tetley, John Neumeier, Jiˇrí<br />

Kylián and William Forsythe.<br />

Mr. Anderson retired from the<br />

stage in 1986 and became<br />

the Artistic Director <strong>of</strong> <strong>Ballet</strong><br />

British Columbia in 1987,<br />

a position he held until 1989.<br />

From 1989 to 1996, he<br />

was Artistic Director <strong>of</strong> <strong>The</strong><br />

<strong>National</strong> <strong>Ballet</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Canada</strong><br />

before returning to Stuttgart<br />

<strong>Ballet</strong> as Artistic Director in<br />

September 1996. Since then,<br />

he has reshaped the company<br />

and its repertoire considerably,<br />

resulting in sold-out houses<br />

and increased international<br />

touring. In addition to his<br />

duties as Artistic Director at<br />

Stuttgart <strong>Ballet</strong>, Mr.<br />

Anderson has staged the<br />

works <strong>of</strong> John Cranko<br />

around the world since 1984.<br />

Jane Bourne<br />

Staging<br />

Born in Lincoln, Jane Bourne<br />

trained at the Institute <strong>of</strong><br />

Choreology in London and<br />

worked with Massine on<br />

Le Tricorne at London<br />

Festival <strong>Ballet</strong>. She joined<br />

Stuttgart <strong>Ballet</strong> in 1974,<br />

Page 9


working on the Cranko<br />

repertory. She also worked<br />

with such choreographers as<br />

Sir Kenneth MacMillan, John<br />

Neumeier, William Forsythe,<br />

Uwe Scholz and Glen Tetley.<br />

Ms. Bourne has staged<br />

Cranko's ballets (<strong>Onegin</strong>, <strong>The</strong><br />

Taming <strong>of</strong> the Shrew, Romeo<br />

and Juliet, <strong>The</strong> Lady and the<br />

Fool, Jeu de Cartes,<br />

Brouillards) for companies<br />

around the world, including<br />

the Royal Swedish <strong>Ballet</strong>,<br />

Royal Danish <strong>Ballet</strong>, <strong>The</strong><br />

<strong>National</strong> <strong>Ballet</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Canada</strong>,<br />

Australian <strong>Ballet</strong>, Teatro<br />

Colon Buenos Aires, Bolshoi<br />

<strong>Ballet</strong>, Deutsche Oper Berlin,<br />

Teatro dell'Opera Rome,<br />

Teatro Municipale Chile,<br />

Teatro alla Scala in Milan,<br />

American <strong>Ballet</strong> <strong>The</strong>atre,<br />

Paris Opéra <strong>Ballet</strong>, <strong>National</strong><br />

<strong>Ballet</strong> <strong>of</strong> China and <strong>The</strong> Royal<br />

<strong>Ballet</strong>. In 1991, she was<br />

awarded a Fellowship <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Benesh Institute.<br />

Kurt-Heinz Stolze<br />

Arrangement and<br />

Orchestration<br />

Kurt-Heinz Stolze was born in<br />

Germany in 1926. He received<br />

his musical training at the<br />

Conservatory in Hamburg<br />

where he studied piano, organ,<br />

conducting and composition.<br />

Upon graduating, he became<br />

Rehearsal Coach at the opera<br />

in Hamburg and later at the<br />

Royal Swedish Opera in<br />

Stockholm. From 1959,<br />

he was Kapellmeister at the<br />

Wurttemberg State <strong>The</strong>atre<br />

in Stuttgart. Mr. Stolze both<br />

composed and arranged<br />

music for ballet. Working in<br />

close collaboration with John<br />

Cranko, he arranged the<br />

Tchaikovsky music for<br />

<strong>Onegin</strong> and the Scarlatti for<br />

<strong>The</strong> Taming <strong>of</strong> the Shrew.<br />

Mr. Stolze also orchestrated<br />

Stuttgart <strong>Ballet</strong>’s productions<br />

<strong>of</strong> Les Sylphides and Kyrie<br />

Eleisas and conducted the<br />

orchestra for Stuttgart <strong>Ballet</strong><br />

Page 10 national.ballet.ca<br />

on numerous occasions. In<br />

l963, he composed original<br />

music for Mr. Cranko’s Wir<br />

Reisen Nach Jerusalem.<br />

Mr. Stolze died in Stuttgart<br />

in 1970 at the age <strong>of</strong> 39.<br />

Santo Loquasto<br />

Set and Costume<br />

Designer<br />

Santo Loquasto, designer<br />

for theatre, film, dance and<br />

opera has won three Tony<br />

Awards and has been<br />

nominated 14 times. For<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>National</strong> <strong>Ballet</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />

<strong>Canada</strong>, Mr. Loquasto has<br />

designed James Kudelka’s<br />

Pastorale, <strong>The</strong> Actress,<br />

Spring Awakening, <strong>The</strong><br />

Nutcracker, Swan Lake,<br />

<strong>The</strong> Firebird and An Italian<br />

Straw Hat.<br />

Mr. Loquasto’s film work<br />

includes Big, Desperately<br />

Seeking Susan and a<br />

collaboration with Woody<br />

Allen on over 20 productions.<br />

His costume design for Zelig<br />

and production designs for<br />

Radio Days and Bullets over<br />

Broadway received Academy<br />

Award nominations. Recent<br />

New York designs include<br />

Inherit the Wind, Waiting for<br />

Godot and Race.<br />

Mr. Loquasto received the<br />

Merritt Award for Excellence<br />

in Design and Collaboration<br />

in 2002, was inducted into<br />

the <strong>The</strong>atre Hall <strong>of</strong> Fame in<br />

2004 and received the<br />

Pennsylvania Governor’s<br />

Award for the Arts in 2006<br />

and the Robert L.B. Tobin<br />

Award for Lifetime<br />

Achievement in 2007.<br />

James F. Ingalls<br />

Lighting Designer<br />

James F. Ingalls was the<br />

Resident Lighting Designer<br />

for the American Repertory<br />

<strong>The</strong>ater from 1981 to 1984.<br />

He has created the lighting<br />

design for Ghosts (directed<br />

by Robert Brustein), Orlando<br />

(directed by Peter Sellars),<br />

Marsha Norman’s ’night,<br />

Mother and Traveler in the<br />

Dark, Jules Fieffer’s Grown<br />

Ups, Sganarelle (directed<br />

by Andrei Serban), the first<br />

Hasty Pudding season (True<br />

West and Robert Auletta’s<br />

Rundown), Waiting for Godot<br />

(directed by Andrei Belgrader),<br />

<strong>The</strong> Boys from Syracuse,<br />

<strong>The</strong> Marriage <strong>of</strong> Figaro and<br />

<strong>The</strong> Seven Deadly Sins (all<br />

directed by Alvin Epstein).<br />

In recent seasons, his credits<br />

include A Midsummer Night’s<br />

Dream (directed by Martha<br />

Clarke), <strong>The</strong> Children <strong>of</strong><br />

Herakles (directed by Peter<br />

Sellars), <strong>The</strong> Seagull (directed<br />

by Ron Daniels), Once in a<br />

Lifetime (directed by Anne<br />

Bogart), Major Barbara and<br />

Larry Gelbart’s Mastergate.<br />

Recently, Mr. Ingalls designed<br />

lighting for the New Works<br />

Festival (ten new pieces for<br />

San Francisco <strong>Ballet</strong>), Sarah<br />

Ruhl’s Dead Man’s Cellphone<br />

(Steppenwolf <strong>The</strong>atre<br />

Company/Chicago), King<br />

Arthur (directed and<br />

choreographed by Mark<br />

Morris at New York City<br />

Opera), Kaija Saariaho’s<br />

Adriana Mater (directed<br />

by Peter Sellars at Finnish<br />

<strong>National</strong> Opera), Coppélia<br />

(Dutch <strong>National</strong> <strong>Ballet</strong>). Mr.<br />

Ingalls <strong>of</strong>ten collaborates with<br />

Melanie Rios and the Saint<br />

Joseph <strong>Ballet</strong>.


David Briskin<br />

Music Director and<br />

Principal Conductor<br />

A conductor renowned for<br />

the versatility <strong>of</strong> his repertoire<br />

and the depth <strong>of</strong> his musical<br />

interpretations, David Briskin<br />

joined <strong>The</strong> <strong>National</strong> <strong>Ballet</strong><br />

<strong>of</strong> <strong>Canada</strong> as Music Director<br />

and Principal Conductor<br />

in 2006. One <strong>of</strong> the leading<br />

ballet conductors <strong>of</strong> his<br />

generation, Mr. Briskin<br />

served as Conductor with<br />

American <strong>Ballet</strong> <strong>The</strong>atre for<br />

seven years, leading<br />

performances at the<br />

Metropolitan Opera House,<br />

New York’s City Center<br />

and in major opera houses<br />

throughout the world. As a<br />

Guest Conductor, he appears<br />

regularly with New York City<br />

<strong>Ballet</strong> and San Francisco<br />

<strong>Ballet</strong> and has conducted for<br />

Houston <strong>Ballet</strong>, <strong>The</strong> J<strong>of</strong>frey<br />

<strong>Ballet</strong> and Les Grands <strong>Ballet</strong>s<br />

Canadiens de Montréal,<br />

as well as the companies<br />

<strong>of</strong> Martha Graham and Paul<br />

Taylor, among others. He<br />

served as Conductor <strong>of</strong><br />

<strong>The</strong> Juilliard School’s Dance<br />

Division for 12 years. Equally<br />

at home on the concert stage<br />

and in the opera house,<br />

Mr. Briskin has conducted<br />

symphony orchestras and<br />

opera productions throughout<br />

Europe, Asia and North<br />

America. He has appeared<br />

with the Pittsburgh, Detroit,<br />

Baltimore and Indianapolis<br />

symphony orchestras,<br />

among others, as well as<br />

such opera companies as<br />

Calgary, Manitoba, Opera<br />

Carolina and Lake George.<br />

In 2008, Mr. Briskin was<br />

appointed Director <strong>of</strong><br />

Orchestral Studies at the<br />

University <strong>of</strong> Toronto Faculty<br />

<strong>of</strong> Music and Conductor<br />

<strong>of</strong> the University <strong>of</strong> Toronto<br />

Symphony Orchestra. Raised<br />

outside <strong>of</strong> Boston, Mr. Briskin<br />

attended the Indiana<br />

University School <strong>of</strong> Music<br />

and received a Bachelor <strong>of</strong><br />

Music Degree in orchestral<br />

conducting from the<br />

University <strong>of</strong> Cincinnati<br />

College-Conservatory <strong>of</strong><br />

Music and a Master’s Degree<br />

from Queens College, City<br />

University <strong>of</strong> New York.<br />

Ernest Abugov<br />

Stage Manager<br />

Ernest (Ernie) Abugov has<br />

served as Stage Manager <strong>of</strong><br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>National</strong> <strong>Ballet</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Canada</strong><br />

since 1973, working with<br />

every Artistic Director in the<br />

company’s history from Celia<br />

Franca to Karen Kain. He has<br />

travelled with the company<br />

all over the world touring to<br />

Israel, Asia, Europe, Mexico<br />

and throughout North<br />

America. Mr. Abugov has<br />

worked with many <strong>of</strong> the<br />

world’s most renowned<br />

choreographers who have<br />

created original works for the<br />

<strong>National</strong> <strong>Ballet</strong> including John<br />

Neumeier, William Forsythe<br />

and Glen Tetley. Mr. Abugov<br />

was born in Montréal,<br />

Québec. Before beginning<br />

his long association with the<br />

<strong>National</strong> <strong>Ballet</strong>, he worked<br />

with Les Feux Follets, <strong>The</strong><br />

Charlottetown Festival,<br />

La Poudriere <strong>The</strong>atre and<br />

<strong>The</strong> Studio Lab <strong>The</strong>atre.<br />

He worked at Expo ’67 in<br />

Montréal, stage managing<br />

over 4,000 puppet shows.<br />

Mr. Abugov also toured with<br />

Harry Belafonte. In what little<br />

spare time that he has,<br />

Mr. Abugov guest-lectures<br />

to theatre students.<br />

Jeff Morris<br />

Stage Manager<br />

Jeff Morris studied technical<br />

theatre production and<br />

administration at Ryerson<br />

<strong>The</strong>atre School. He has worked<br />

as Production Stage Manager<br />

for Toronto Dance <strong>The</strong>atre<br />

and with the Fringe Festival<br />

<strong>of</strong> Independent Dance Artists,<br />

in addition to a broad range<br />

<strong>of</strong> Toronto’s independent<br />

dance artists. In 1995, Mr.<br />

Morris joined <strong>The</strong> <strong>National</strong><br />

<strong>Ballet</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Canada</strong> and has<br />

since stage-managed a wide<br />

range <strong>of</strong> the company’s<br />

classical and contemporary<br />

repertoire, including world<br />

premieres <strong>of</strong> James Kudelka’s<br />

<strong>The</strong> Four Seasons, Cinderella<br />

and An Italian Straw Hat. He is<br />

also an adjunct faculty<br />

member at the School <strong>of</strong><br />

Toronto Dance <strong>The</strong>atre,<br />

where he teaches Production<br />

Elements for Dancers.<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>National</strong> <strong>Ballet</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />

<strong>Canada</strong> Orchestra<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>National</strong> <strong>Ballet</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />

<strong>Canada</strong> is privileged to have<br />

its own full orchestra with<br />

over 60 members. <strong>The</strong><br />

orchestra has performed in<br />

each <strong>of</strong> the <strong>National</strong> <strong>Ballet</strong>’s<br />

seasons and is led by<br />

Music Director and Principal<br />

Conductor David Briskin.<br />

<strong>The</strong> company’s first Music<br />

Director was George Crum<br />

who, along with Founder<br />

Celia Franca, was a pioneer<br />

<strong>of</strong> the company. Mr. Crum<br />

held the position from the<br />

company’s inception in<br />

1951 to 1984, when he was<br />

appointed Music Director<br />

Emeritus. <strong>The</strong> orchestra was<br />

led by Ermanno Florio from<br />

1985 to 1990 and Ormsby<br />

Wilkins who was Music<br />

Director from 1990 to 2006.<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>National</strong> <strong>Ballet</strong> Orchestra<br />

has toured extensively<br />

with the company through<br />

<strong>Canada</strong>, the USA and<br />

Europe. Over the years, the<br />

orchestra has received much<br />

acclaim from audiences and<br />

critics alike and has recorded<br />

two CDs <strong>of</strong> Michael Torke’s<br />

compositions for <strong>The</strong><br />

Contract (<strong>The</strong> Pied Piper)<br />

and An Italian Straw Hat.<br />

For more information,<br />

visit national.ballet.ca<br />

Page 11

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