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Arts Culture

Charlottesville Ballet presents ‘Snow White’

Magically merging the elements of orchestral arrangement, incredible costuming and stagecraft, and an ensemble of unforgettable characters, Charlottesville Ballet presents Snow White. This Family Series ballet, based on the beloved Grimms’ fairy tale, brings youth and adult dancers together to tell the classic story of jealousy, love, and friendship. Witness a beautiful princess strike up unlikely alliances with woodland creatures and seven diminutive miners, while an evil queen uses a magical mirror to follow her every move, waiting for the moment to strike. Also, a prince shows up at some point.

Saturday 5/4. $20–75, 11am and 3:30pm. The Paramount Theater, 215 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. theparamount.net

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Arts Culture

Pick: A Fairy Tale Gathering

Tiny dancer: Introduce your tots to the art of ballet at A Fairy Tale Gathering, an original production from Charlottesville Ballet that’s specially designed for children and their families. Join Fairy Godmother and her whimsical friends, played by local students, for an afternoon tea party with famous fairy tale characters, including Cinderella, the Sugar Plum Fairy, and Little Red Riding Hood, all performed by professional company artists. The 45-minute production is followed by a special VIP Ever After Party, where kids can take pictures and dance with the cast.

Sunday 3/20. $15-49.75, 4pm. The Paramount Theater, 215 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. theparamount.net

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Arts Culture

PICK: And the VIII Journeyed

Journey by foot: Keith Lee now calls central Virginia home, but his teaching and choreography work began at New York’s storied High School of Performing Arts, and was followed by decades of dance artistry everywhere from the American Ballet Theatre to Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater. As artist laureate, resident choreographer, and director of diversity and inclusion at the Charlottesville Ballet, he offers local access to the world premiere of his newest piece, And the VIII Journeyed. The virtual program includes a screening of a mini documentary that celebrates Lee and his career, as well as a panel discussion with others in the film.

Beginning 5/1, Free, 2pm. charlottesvilleballet.org.

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Arts Culture

PICK: The Nutcracker

Sippin’ in slippers: Don’t let the coronavirus knock you off your feet this holiday season. But do feel free to stay home in your slippers to enjoy the beloved story of Clara’s Christmas journey in Charlottesville Ballet’s The Nutcracker: A Virtual Gala. The evening will be filled with special guests and local musicians, and the Quirk Hotel is providing curbside pickup for accompanying sweets, eats, and grownup treats (read: craft cocktails).

Sunday 12/13, $50, 4:30pm. charlottesvilleballet.org.

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Living

Picture this: Champions of dance

The unlikely pairing of beer and ballet—under an outdoor tent, no less—drew a standing-room-only crowd last Saturday at Champion Brewing Company, beside the railroad tracks downtown. Attendees, including plenty of kids, were treated to a pas de deux from The Nutcracker by member of the Charlottesville Ballet. The event, which kicked off the ballet’s 2019-20 season, is the brainchild of Champion’s taproom manager Sean Chandler, whose daughter Maeze is a budding ballerina. (She will appear in the troupe’s performance of The Nutcracker, December 19-22, at Piedmont Virginia Community College.) “Connecting with the arts and creating a community space have always been priorities for me,” says Champion founder and owner Hunter Smith. Let’s all raise a frothy glass to delightfully unconventional events like this one.

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Arts

ARTS Pick: Cinderella

Charlottesville Ballet’s Cinderella finds the fairy tale’s cast of characters lacing up their slippers for a production accompanied by Prokofiev’s famous score. Thirty professional artists from Charlottesville and around the world come together to dance through the classic romance filled with humor, hope, and love.

Saturday, March 9. $20-75, 2 and 7pm. The Paramount Theater, 215 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. 979-1333.

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Arts

ARTS Pick: Nutcracker

When young Clara’s beloved godfather brings her a peculiar Christmas gift, the simple act of holiday spirit inspires a midnight war on mice, and a journey to alternate realms. Charlottesville Ballet’s Nutcracker is magical and enthralling, as it follows Clara and her wooden friend—now a mysterious prince—deep into the Land of Snowflakes and Sweets to restore him to his true self. Accompanied by Tchaikovsky’s lively score, this classic ballet is a whimsical performance for all ages.

Saturday 12/22 $20-75, times vary. V. Earl Dickinson Building, 501 College Dr., PVCC. 961-5376.

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Arts

ARTS Pick: Evening of Romance will keep you on your toes

The dreamy magic of romantic ballet melds with technical prowess in Charlottesville Ballet’s Evening of Romance. Performances include a tongue-in-cheek princess battle for the eye of Prince Charming, the dramatic pas de deux from Le Corsaire and an intriguing original work titled :dôgm: by Steven Melendez.

Friday, February 9 and Saturday February, 10. $15-21, times vary. CB Studio Theatre, 1885 Seminole Tr. 227-7592.

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Arts

ARTS Pick: The Nutcracker

Charlottesville Ballet’s The Nutcracker is a skillfully choreographed, engaging take on tradition for all ages. The story begins when Clara receives a wooden nutcracker as a holiday gift, and it comes to life along with other toys that accompany her on a journey through an enchanted land filled with dancing dolls and evil mice, guided by Tchaikovsky’s euphoric, familiar score.

Saturday, December 16. $20-45, 1 and 4:30pm. The V. Earl Dickinson Building at PVCC, 501 College Dr. 961-5376.

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Arts

Charlottesville Ballet kicks it up for 10th anniversary

Ten years ago, Caitlin Lennon received a job offer from a “small startup.” Emily Hartka and Sara Clayborne, co-founders of what would become the Charlottesville Ballet, asked Lennon to join them as a company dancer. Lennon was training on full scholarship with the Richmond Ballet, had never visited Charlottesville, wasn’t sure about her salary and didn’t know how frequently she would perform.

“That sounded okay to me,” says Lennon, who is now company manager and still dances with the ballet. One of its first performances took place in the McGuffey Art Center hallway, where she and three other ballerinas danced up and down the space.

Today, 20 professional and international ballet dancers perform in the company, which is preparing for its 10th anniversary show in May 2018 that will feature more pieces, dancers and variety than the company’s previous shows.

Joining in are 200 students from the ballet’s outreach program, Chance to Dance, where artists teach free classes at all six city elementary schools, plus county schools Greer, Woodbrook and soon Agnor-Hurt.

The ballet provides free lifetime training to Chance to Dance graduates who show potential and interest. Lennon says 35 graduates have pursued this, though transportation can hinder a student from joining the academy.

“It’s sad to see kids get the scholarship, be excited about it and then, from things out of their control, they can’t take advantage of it,” Lennon says. “We’re working on it.”

The company’s vision of inclusivity and wellbeing extends to professional dancers, too. Rather than worrying about numbers on the scale, Lennon feels like an athlete and enjoys nourishing her body. Every dancer receives cross-training, physical therapy and mental wellness seminars, which Lennon says can’t be found in most mid- to large-size companies. While training, Lennon encountered her fair share of expectations that dancers should be “waif-ly thin, ethereal beings” who can dance with injuries. While the Charlottesville Ballet wants a healthy, diverse ballet, Lennon says, “the old school way of thinking” still prevails in many companies.


A quick guide to mastering ballet (or doing anything well)

Be tenacious. Being a professional dancer is an extremely hard and often tedious career, Emily Hartka and other dancers say.

Remember why you’re doing it. “Do you love movement?” asks Hartka. “Do you adore music? Whatever makes you dance, remind yourself of it daily, and bring that intention with you to every class and rehearsal.”

Improvise. “It’s live art, after all!” Hartka says, remembering a faux pas while performing in The Nutcracker. “I wiped out during a tricky turn section. So what did I do? I rolled out of the fall into a saucy pose on the floor—complete with fan wave and raised eyebrow—and finished the variation.”

Communicate and breathe. Ballet choreography can have sacré bleu-inducing moments. To avoid getting dizzy during repeated spins, she reminds dancers to breathe and practice “spotting”—looking at one spot while the body turns, then turning to find that spot again.

Have a life. Hartka encourages dancers to get out of the studio. “The more experiences you have in the world the more you bring to the plate as a dancer.” Explore every option, Hartka says, and you’ll enjoy yourself even more while dancing.

Love yourself. The company and Hartka emphasize health and wellness. “Don’t let anyone try and put you in a mold,” Hartka says. “You are you and that is special in and of itself.”