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San Francisco Ballet

San Francisco Ballet is the oldest ballet company in the United States, founded in 1933 as the San Francisco Opera Ballet under the leadership of ballet master Adolph Bolm. The company is currently based in the War Memorial Opera House, San Francisco, and effective December 2022 under the direction of Tamara Rojo. It is among the world's leading dance companies, presenting more than 100 performances annually, with a repertoire that spans both classical and contemporary ballet. Along with American Ballet Theatre and the New York City Ballet, San Francisco Ballet has been described as part of the "triumvirate of great classical companies defining the American style on the world stage today."[1]

San Francisco Ballet
General information
NameSan Francisco Ballet
Previous namesSan Francisco Opera Ballet
Year founded1933; 91 years ago (1933)
FoundersWillam Christensen, Harold Christensen, Lew Christensen
Principal venueWar Memorial Opera House
San Francisco
Websitewww.sfballet.org
Artistic staff
Artistic DirectorTamara Rojo
Principal ConductorMartin West
Other
Official schoolSan Francisco Ballet School
http://school.sfballet.org

History edit

Founding: Christensen brothers edit

 
Jocelyn Vollmar dancing with the San Francisco Ballet in 1947

Willam Christensen, Harold Christensen, and Lew Christensen made up the famed trio of brothers considered by many to have done more than anyone else to establish ballet in the United States. Born into an artistic and musical family, the three brothers studied folk dance and ballet from early ages and went on to tour the famous vaudeville Orpheum Circuit during the 1920s and 1930s, exposing many Americans to ballet for the first time with their act "The Christ Brothers".[2]

As vaudeville faded from American popular culture, Harold and Lew joined George Balanchine's new company, American Ballet, in 1935. In 1932, Willam formed a ballet school in Portland, Oregon; in 1937, he was engaged as principal male soloist by San Francisco Opera Ballet.[3] He became the company's ballet master and choreographer in 1938. With his brother Harold, he purchased the company from the Opera in 1942, renaming it San Francisco Ballet.[4] In 1951, Willam retired as director of SF Ballet and moved to Utah, where he started teaching ballet in the country's first university ballet department at the University of Utah. With a group of his students, he founded the Utah Civic Ballet (now known as Ballet West) in 1963; the company remained under Christensen's directorship until 1978.[5]

Under Balanchine's tutelage at American Ballet, Lew Christensen became the first American-born danseur noble.[4] The United States Army drafted Christensen to fight in World War II. After the war ended, he joined Balanchine's and Lincoln Kirstein's Ballet Society (soon to become New York City Ballet), eventually becoming ballet master; he served in the role from 1946 until 1950.[6] In 1951, he joined his brother Willam as co-director of San Francisco Ballet. When Willam moved to Salt Lake City later that year, Lew took over as full director of SF Ballet; he held the position until 1976, when Michael Smuin joined him as co-director. Lew Christensen remained SF Ballet co-director until 1984, the year of his death.[3]

After leaving the vaudeville circuit in 1935, Harold Christensen danced with American Ballet, San Francisco Opera Ballet, Kirstein's Ballet Caravan, and San Francisco Ballet until his retirement from the stage in 1946.[7] In 1940, his brother Willam invited him to become director of the San Francisco Ballet School, and in 1942 he and Willam purchased the SF Ballet. Harold continued to serve as the school's director until his retirement in 1975.

Emmy Award winning choreographer and dancer James Starbuck was a principal dancer with the San Francisco Opera Ballet from 1935-1938; and left the company to become the first American man to dance with the Ballet Russe de Monte-Carlo.[8]

1938–1950 edit

In 1938, the company's first major production was Coppélia, choreographed by Willam Christensen.[9] In 1940, it staged Swan Lake, the first time that the ballet was produced in its entirety by an American company. On Christmas Eve 1944, the company staged Nutcracker—the first complete production of Tchaikovsky's most popular piece ever danced in the United States.

In 1942, San Francisco Opera Ballet split into two independent companies, ballet and opera. The ballet half was sold to Willam and Harold Christensen. Willam became artistic director, while Harold took on the job of director of the San Francisco Ballet School.[9] The San Francisco Ballet Guild was also formed as a support organization for San Francisco Ballet.[10]

1951–1972 edit

The year 1951 marked a significant shift in administration of San Francisco Ballet. Lew Christensen—premier danseur at the time—partnered with his brother Willam Christensen as co-directors. Then in 1952, Lew Christensen took over as sole director. Under his guidance, San Francisco Ballet began to travel and establish itself as a significant American ballet company. Until 1956, San Francisco Ballet had remained on the West Coast, but Christensen took the company to the Jacob's Pillow Dance Festival in Massachusetts. In 1957, it was the first American ballet company to tour the Far East, performing in 11 Asian nations.[9] On New Year's Day 1965, ABC-TV televised a one-hour abridgement of the Lew Christensen-choreographed production of Nutcracker featuring San Francisco Ballet.

In 1972, San Francisco's War Memorial Opera House was named the official residence of San Francisco Ballet.

1973–1985 edit

In 1973, Michael Smuin became co-artistic director of San Francisco Ballet with Lew Christensen; Smuin had danced with the Company from 1953 to 1961.[11] Under his direction, the national and international profile of SF Ballet was raised significantly by the broad success of productions such as 1977's Romeo and Juliet, which aired on the PBS series Great Performances: Dance in America in 1978.[12] This televised performance marked the first time that a West Coast ballet company, and a full-length ballet, was shown on the PBS TV series.[13] PBS televised three more of Smuin's SF Ballet productions, and his productions of The Tempest and A Song for Dead Warriors went on to win Emmy Awards. Smuin led the company until 1985.

1985–present edit

 
San Francisco Ballet Building, 2013

Helgi Tomasson's 1985 arrival as artistic director marked the beginning of a new era for San Francisco Ballet. Under Tomasson's direction,[14] San Francisco Ballet has been recognized as one of the most innovative ballet companies in the world due to its early and frequent commissioning of new works by aspiring choreographers around the globe,[15] the breadth of its repertory—spanning classical ballet, neoclassical ballet, and contemporary ballet—and the diversity of its company members.[16] The Financial Times noted in 2012, "Tomasson ... helped shatter the distinction between the US top companies and so-called 'regional companies'".[17]

Over a span of more than 25 years, Tomasson has staged acclaimed full-length productions of classics including Swan Lake (1988, 2009); The Sleeping Beauty (1990); Romeo and Juliet (1994); Giselle (1999); Don Quixote, co-staged with former principal dancer and current choreographer in residence Yuri Possokhov (2003); and Nutcracker (2004). Tomasson's Nutcracker, set in San Francisco during the 1915 Panama Pacific International Exposition, is notable for being the only uniquely San Francisco Nutcracker. It features sets (including "a backdrop of San Francisco's Victorian houses known as 'painted ladies'")[18] and costumes created by, respectively, Michael Yeargan and Martin Pakledinaz, both repeat Tony Award-winning designers.[19] Upon its premiere, The New York Times called Tomasson's Nutcracker "striking, elegant and beautiful".[18]

Today, San Francisco Ballet presents approximately 100 performances each year. The company's diverse repertory includes works by Sir Frederick Ashton, George Balanchine, David Bintley, August Bournonville, Val Caniparoli, Lew Christensen, Nacho Duato, Jorma Elo, William Forsythe, James Kudelka, Jirí Kylián, Serge Lifar, Lar Lubovitch, Wayne McGregor, Agnes de Mille, Sir Kenneth MacMillan, Hans van Manen, Peter Martins, Mark Morris, Rudolf Nureyev, Marius Petipa, Roland Petit, Yuri Possokhov, Alexei Ratmansky, Jerome Robbins, Liam Scarlett, Paul Taylor, Helgi Tomasson, Antony Tudor, and Christopher Wheeldon.

In 2010, the Ballet's opening-night gala, Silver Celebration, honored Tomasson's 25 years as artistic director.[20]

The Gala Opening of San Francisco Ballet's 80th Season included Tarantella pas de deux, L'Arlesienne solo, Flower Festival at Genzano pas de deux, In the Passerine's Clutch, Raymonda’s Act II solo, Trio second movement, Don Quixote grand pas de deux, Onegin Act 1 pas de deux, Stars and Stripes pas de deux, After the Rain pas de deux, and excerpts from Suite en Blanc.[21]

San Francisco Ballet's 2013 season included Trio, Ghost and Borderlands[22] as well as Suite en blanc, In the night, Nijinsky, The Rite of Spring, Onegin, Raymonda Act III and Cinderella.[23]

The 2014 season included Giselle, A Midsummer Night's Dream, Tears, Borderlands, From Foreign Lands, Firebird, Ghosts, The Kingdom of the Shades from La Bayadère, Cinderella, Shostakovich Trilogy, Caprice, Maelstrom, The Rite of Spring, Hummingbird, The Fifth Season, Suite en Blanc, Agon, Brahms-Schoenberg Quartet, and Glass Pieces.[24]

The 2015 season included Serenade, RAkU, Lambarena, Giselle, The Vertiginous Thrill of Exactitude, Variations for Two Couples, Manifesto, The Kingdom of the Shades from La Bayadère, Act II, Dances at a Gathering, Hummingbird, Don Quixote, Shostakovich Trilogy, Caprice, Swimmer, and Romeo & Juliet.[25][26]

The 2017 season included "Haffner Symphony," "Fragile Vessels," "In the Countenance of Kings," "Seven Sonatas," "Optimistic Tragedy," "Pas/Parts 2016," "Frankenstein," "Stravinsky Violin Concerto," "Prodigal Son," "Diamonds," "Fusion," "Salome," "Fearful Symmetries," "Swan Lake," "Trio," "Ghost in the Machine," "Within the Golden Hour," and "Cinderella."

In January 2021, Tomasson announced that he will retire from the company at the end of 2022.[27] In January 2022, it was announced that Tamara Rojo will succeed Tomasson.[28]

Programming edit

San Francisco Ballet performs repertory from January through May at the War Memorial Opera House in San Francisco.[29] In addition, the company performs in July at the Stern Grove Festival in San Francisco,[30] tours nationally in the summer and fall, and presents Nutcracker in December at the War Memorial Opera House.[29]

Festivals and touring edit

In 1991, San Francisco Ballet performed in New York City for the first time in 26 years, returning in 1993, 1995, 1998, 2002, 2006, 2008, and 2013. Following the initial tour, The New York Times proclaimed, "Mr. Tomasson has accomplished the unprecedented: He has pulled a so-called regional company into the national ranks, and he has done so by honing the dancers into a classical style of astonishing verve and purity. San Francisco Ballet under Helgi Tomasson's leadership is one of the spectacular success stories of the arts in America."[16]

In May 1995, San Francisco Ballet hosted 12 ballet companies from around the world for UNited We Dance: An International Festival. The festival commemorated the 50th anniversary of the signing of the United Nations Charter, which took place at the San Francisco War Memorial and Performing Arts Center.

In fall 2008, as part of the company's 75th anniversary celebration, San Francisco Ballet embarked on a critically acclaimed four-city American tour with engagements at Chicago's Harris Theater for Music and Dance, New York City Center, Southern California's Segerstrom Center for the Arts, and the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, D.C. The year culminated in a New Works Festival of world premieres by 10 of the dance world's most acclaimed choreographers—Julia Adam, Val Caniparoli, Jorma Elo, Margaret Jenkins, James Kudelka, Mark Morris, Yuri Possokhov, Paul Taylor, Stanton Welch, and Christopher Wheeldon. Other anniversary initiatives included a commemorative book, San Francisco Ballet at Seventy-Five, and the broadcast of Tomasson's Nutcracker in December 2008 on the Great Performances: Dance in America series on PBS, produced in partnership with KQED Public Television in San Francisco.

San Francisco Ballet also performed in frequent overseas tours, including engagements at prestigious venues such as the famed Opéra de Paris-Palais Garnier in Paris (1994, 2001); London's Sadler's Wells Theatre (1999, 2004, 2012) and Royal Opera House in Covent Garden (2002); Athens' Megaron Theatre (2002) and Herod Atticus Amphitheatre (2004); Copenhagen's Tivoli Gardens (1998, 2010); and the Edinburgh International Festival at the Edinburgh Playhouse (1997, 2003). In fall 2009, San Francisco Ballet made its first trip to the People's Republic of China, with performances in Shanghai and Beijing.

In 2012, San Francisco Ballet embarked on the longest tour in the company's history, with engagements in London and Washington, DC, as well as first-time visits to Hamburg, Germany; Moscow; and Sun Valley, Idaho.

Broadcast and media projects edit

In 1978, San Francisco Ballet's Michael Smuin-directed production of Romeo and Juliet became the first production by a West Coast ballet company, and the first full-length ballet, to be aired by the PBS Great Performances: Dance in America television series.[13] Under the direction of Smuin, the ballet's 1981 production of The Tempest became the first ballet to be broadcast live (on PBS) from the War Memorial Opera House. Three years later, the 1984 PBS broadcast of the Ballet's performance of A Song for Dead Warriors earned Smuin an Emmy.[11]

The fruitful relationship between PBS and SF Ballet continues to this day, with regular broadcasts of the Ballet's 2007 production of Nutcracker, choreographed by Helgi Tomasson. I Also in 2007, the Company had its first theatrical release with Nutcracker, shown in limited theaters in Canada, Australia, and the U.S. In 2011, theatrical distributor IndieNetFilms arranged for additional screenings throughout the U.S. and Canada.

In December 2011, the U.S. premiere of John Neumeier's The Little Mermaid, performed by San Francisco Ballet, was broadcast nationally on PBS's Great Performances: Dance in America, and also internationally. DVDs of the Nutcracker and The Little Mermaid performances were released in 2008 and 2011, respectively. CD recordings of the complete score of Nutcracker and Shinji Eshima's RAkU were released in 2010 and 2012, respectively.

Accolades and awards edit

The company has garnered numerous accolades and awards. In 2005, San Francisco Ballet won its first Laurence Olivier Award, in the category of Outstanding Achievement in Dance, for its 2004 fall season at Sadler's Wells Theatre. Of the engagement, London's The Sunday Times proclaimed, "Helgi Tomasson's outstanding artistic direction ... has transformed a regional American troupe into one of the world's top ballet companies."[1] In 2006, in a readers' poll conducted by Dance Europe magazine, San Francisco Ballet was the first non-European company to be voted "Company of the Year". In 2008, San Francisco Ballet received the Jerome Robbins Award for excellence in dance.

In 2012, Helgi Tomasson was named recipient of the Dance/USA Honor, acknowledging individuals' contributions to dance in America and the role they play in the national dance community. Most recently, San Francisco Ballet was nominated in the category of Outstanding Company by the 2014 National Dance Awards, based in the U.K.

Company edit

Artistic Director edit

Ballet Masters & Assistants to the Artistic Director edit

  • Ricardo Bustamante
  • Felipe Diaz

Ballet Masters edit

Choreographer In Residence edit

  • Yuri Possokhov

Company teachers edit

Principal dancers edit

Name Nationality Training Joined SFB Promoted to Principal Other Companies
Frances Chung   Canada Goh Ballet Academy 2001 2009
Sasha De Sola   United States Kirov Academy of Ballet 2007 2017
Nikisha Fogo   Sweden Royal Swedish Ballet School
The Royal Ballet School
2020 N/A, Joined as Principal Vienna State Ballet
Angelo Greco   Italy Il Balletto
La Scala Ballet School
2016 2017 La Scala Ballet
Esteban Hernandez   Mexico The Rock School for Dance Education

The Royal Ballet School

2013 2018
Isaac Hernandez The Rock School for Dance Education 2008 2022 Dutch National Ballet
English National Ballet
Jasmine Jimison   United States Bay Area Dance School
Menlo Park Academy of Dance
San Francisco Ballet School
2018 2024
Misa Kuranaga   Japan Jinushi Kaoru Ballet School
School of American Ballet
2001 2019 Boston Ballet
Wona Park   South Korea Sunhwa Arts School
San Francisco Ballet School
2017 2020
Aaron Robison   United Kingdom Institut del Teatre

The Royal Ballet School

2016, 2018 N/A, Joined as Principal English National Ballet
Birmingham Royal Ballet
Corella Ballet
Houston Ballet
Jennifer Stahl   United States Maria Lazar's Classical Ballet Academy

San Francisco Ballet School

2006 2017
Joseph Walsh Walnut Hill School of the Arts
Houston Ballet's Ben Stevenson Academy
2014 2014 Houston Ballet
Wei Wang   China Beijing Dance Academy, San Francisco Ballet School 2013 2018
WanTing Zhao Beijing Dance Academy
The Rock School for Dance Education
San Francisco Ballet School
2011 2019

Principal character dancers edit

Soloists edit

Name Nationality Training Joined SFB Promoted to Soloist Other Companies
Katherine Barkman   United States Private Training with Nadia Pavlenko 2022 N/A, Joined as Soloist Manila Ballet
The Washington Ballet
Cavan Conley The Harid Conservatory
Nutmeg Conservatory
2018 2019 Tulsa Ballet
Tulsa Ballet II
Diego Cruz   Spain Emilia Bailo Dance School
Escuela Municipal de Danza
Estudio de Danza de Maria de Avila
San Francisco Ballet School
2006 2020
Daniel Deivison-Oliveira   Brazil Cia Brasileira de Ballet
Ballet da Cidade de Niteroi
Escola de Danças Maria Olenewa
Petite Danse School
San Francisco Ballet School
2005 2011 Cia Brasileira de Ballet
Ballet de Cidade de Niteroi
Isabella DeVivo   United States School of American Ballet
San Francisco Ballet School
2013 2017
Ellen Rose Hummel North Carolina Dance Theatre
San Francisco Ballet School
2012 2020
Norika Matsuyama   Japan Yuki Miho Ballet
Palos Verdes Ballet
Lauridsen Ballet Centre
San Francisco Ballet School
2014 2021
Steven Morse   United States Maple Conservatory of Dance
Laurisden Dance Centre
Long Beach Ballet Arts Center
San Francisco Ballet School
2009 2017
Sasha Mukhamedov   United Kingdom Elmhurst School for Dance
The Royal Ballet School
Arts Educational School
2019 N/A, Joined as Soloist Dutch National Ballet
Elizabeth Powell   United States Boston Ballet School
San Francisco Ballet School
2012 2018
Julia Rowe Central Pennsylvania Youth Ballet
San Francisco Ballet School
2013 2016 Oregon Ballet Theatre
Myles Thatcher Margo Clifford Ging
The Harid Conservatory
Edward Ellison Professional Training Program
San Francisco Ballet School
2010 2020
Lonnie Weeks Faubourg School of Ballet
Ruth Page Center for the Arts
Texas Ballet Theater School
2010 2018 Texas Ballet Theater

Corps de ballet edit

Apprentices edit

  • Sofia Albers
  • Raphael Brunais Besse
  • Eduardo Cazarez
  • Jacey Gailliard
  • Mimi Lamar
  • Dylan Pierzina

Official school edit

San Francisco Ballet School, San Francisco Ballet's official school, is America's oldest ballet school. The program includes classes in technique, pointe work, pas de deux, men's technique, contemporary dance, floor barre/conditioning, and character dance. Male and female students are placed in divisions according to age, experience, and ability. More than 50 percent of current San Francisco Ballet dancers received some training at San Francisco Ballet School.[31]

History and directors edit

The school was founded in 1933 as part of the San Francisco Operatic and Ballet School when Gaetano Merola, the founder of the San Francisco Opera, perceived a need for an institution where dancers could be trained to perform in opera productions.[32] The school was under the direction of ballet director Adolph Bolm from 1933 to 1938. Willam Christensen became director from 1938 to 1940, followed by his brother Harold Christensen from 1942 until 1975.[19] Richard L. Cammack directed the school from 1975 to 1985; he oversaw the move to its current state-of-the-art facilities on Franklin Street in 1983. In 1985, new SF Ballet artistic director Helgi Tomasson appointed Nancy Johnson as school head. Lola de Avila joined as associate director from 1993 to 1999, followed by Gloria Govrin beginning in 1999. In 2006, de Avila returned to serve as associate director until 2012, when Patrick Armand stepped into the role.[33]

School programs edit

Admission into the school is by audition only. Students may apply for financial aid and merit-based scholarships. Advanced students may be invited to join the SFBS Trainee Program, a one- to two-year pre-professional program established in 2004.[34]

Up to 150 students are chosen by audition to dance in the yearly SF Ballet production of Nutcracker. The most advanced students may also dance with SF Ballet in the repertory season.[35]

The school also runs a pre-ballet program for children ages 4–7; after completing the program, students of age who wish to continue study must audition in order to continue at the school.[36]

Faculty edit

The faculty of the San Francisco Ballet School has long been known for its excellence and diversity of background. As of January 2017, it is led by the Artistic Director Helgi Tómasson and Director Patrick Armand. The illustrious faculty includes Patrick Armand, Cecelia Beam, Sandrine Cassini, Kristi DeCaminada, Karen Gabay, Jeffrey Lyons, Rubén Martín Cintas, Ilona McHugh, Pascal Molat (Trainee Program Assistant), Anne-Sophie Rodriguez, Jaime Diaz (Strengthening), Dexandro "D" Montalvo (Contemporary), Brian Fisher (Contemporary), Dana Genshaft (Contemporary dance and conditioning), Henry Berg (Conditioning), Leonid Shagalov (Character), Jamie Narushchen (Music), and Daniel Sullivan (Music). The guest faculty for 2017 includes Sofiane Sylve (Principal Guest).[37]

San Francisco Ballet Orchestra edit

Founded in 1975 to serve as San Francisco Ballet's official permanent orchestra, San Francisco Ballet Orchestra (SFBO) holds the rare position of being one of three major orchestras in a single city. The orchestra debuted at the end of 1975 with Nutcracker and has met with both audience and critical acclaim ever since, becoming known by the 1990s as one of the world's finest ballet orchestras.

SFBO toured with the SF Ballet's touring company from 1978 until 1984. It has accompanied many prestigious international ballet companies that have toured to the San Francisco Bay Area, including The Royal Ballet, the Royal Danish Ballet, Stuttgart Ballet, Hamburg Ballet,the Bolshoi Ballet, Paul Taylor Dance Company, American Ballet Theatre, and the Paris Opéra Ballet. In 1995, the orchestra took on the remarkable task of accompanying 13 international dance companies over the space of a single week in the UNited We Dance Festival.

The 49-member orchestra accompanies SF Ballet throughout its winter and spring repertory seasons. It also performs apart from the Company; it debuted solely as an orchestra in 1979 at the Herbst Theatre in San Francisco's War Memorial Veterans Building, playing a program that included works by Haydn, Ives, and Vivaldi.

Orchestra staff and musicians[38] edit

The SFBO is composed of 49 members and headed by Martin West, music director and conductor. Founding Concertmaster and solo violinist Roy Malan retired in December, 2014, after serving for 40 years.[39] After a rigorous search, Cordula Merks was appointed Concertmaster in 2016.[40] As of February 2024, the musicians and staff included:[41]

Violin I
Cordula Merks, Concertmaster Heeguen Song, Associate Concertmaster
Beni Shinohara, Assistant Concertmaster Mariya Borozino
Minsun Choi Robin Hansen
Heidi Wilcox Wendi Shih, (Regular Substitute)
Violin II
Ani Bukujian, Principal Craig Reiss, Associate Principal
Jeanelle Meyer, Assistant Principal Laura Keller
Jeremy Preston Karen Shinozaki Sor, (Regular Substitute)
Viola
Yi Zhou, Principal Anna Kruger, Associate Principal
Joy Fellows, Assistant Principal Caroline Lee
Elizabeth Prior, (Regular Substitute)
Cello
Eric Sung, Principal Jonah Kim, Associate Principal
Thalia Moore, Assistant Principal Saul Richmond-Rakerd
Mariko Wyrick Ruth Lane, (Regular Substitute)
Contrabass
Jonathan Lancelle, Acting Principal Shinji Eshima, Associate Principal
Mark Wallace, Assistant Principal (Regular Substitute) Michael Minor, (Regular Substitute)
Flute
Susan Kang, Principal Julie McKenzie, 2nd & Piccolo
Oboe
Laura Griffiths, Principal Marilyn Coyne, 2nd & English Horn
Clarinet
Sean Krissman, Principal Eric Chi, 2nd & Bass Clarinet
Bassoon
Rufus Olivier, Principal Dana Jackson, 2nd & Contrabassoon (Season Substitute)
Horn
Kevin Rivard, Principal Brian McCarty, Associate Principal
Keith Green Phillip Palmore
Caitlin Smith-Franklin, (Regular Substitute)
Trumpet/Cornet
Adam Luftman, Principal Joseph Brown
Trombone
Jeffrey Budin, Principal Michael Cox
Bass Trombone
Scott Thornton, Principal
Tuba
Peter Wahrhaftig, Principal
Timpani
Zubin Hathi, Principal
Percussion
David Rosenthal, Principal
Harp
Annabelle Taubl, Principal

San Francisco Ballet Orchestra music directors edit

The orchestra was led by Denis de Coteau from 1975 until 1998, when de Coteau's battle with terminal cancer forced him to step down from the position.[42] Emil de Cou, who had been serving as conductor since 1995, then assumed the role of music director, leading the Orchestra until 2001, when he left to join Washington D.C.'s National Symphony Orchestra. He was replaced by first associate conductor Jean-Louis LeRoux, who then left the interim position in 2003 and was succeeded by Andrew Mogrelia. In 2005, Mogrelia left in order to focus on his duties as music director at San Francisco Conservatory of Music. That same year, Martin West, frequent guest conductor for the Orchestra, stepped into the position of music director.[43] In 2018 frequent guest conductor Ming Luke was appointed Principal Guest Conductor.

San Francisco Ballet Orchestra recordings edit

The orchestra's repertoire includes hundreds of works spanning four centuries of musical history, many of which have been recorded and released to great critical acclaim, including works by Beethoven, Bizet, and Delibes. Four of the orchestra's recordings have been televised on PBS's Great Performances: Dance in America.

Recordings include:

  • Othello—Suite from the Ballet by Eliot Goldenthal (Varese Records)
  • Tchaikovsky: Nutcracker (O'Brien Enterprises), 1988
  • Schoenberg, Spohr, Elgar, Handel: Works for String Quartet & Orchestra (Arabesque Records)
  • Claude Debussy: Rediscovered, Premiere Orchestral Recordings (Arabesque Records)
  • RAkU (San Francisco Ballet Records)
  • The Tempest—complete ballet by Paul Chihara: SF Ballet Orchestra recorded this under the name "Performing Arts Orchestra" in 1981 (Reference Recordings)
  • Nutcracker Op. 71 (Koch Int'l Classics)
  • Russian Masterpieces for Cello and Orchestra (Shostakovich Cello Concert, Tchaikovsky Rococo Variations, etc., Zuill Bailey, Cello) (Telarc)
  • Delibes— Coppélia/Sylvia Extended Suites from the Ballets (Reference Recordings)
  • Weber—Clarinet Concerti No. 1 & 2 (Alexander Fiterstein, Clarinet), (Bridge Records)
  • Beethoven—Triple Concerto in C Major, Opus 56, Piano Trio in E-flat Major, Op. 1 No. 1 (Claremont Piano Trio), (Bridge Records)
  • Bizet—Symphony in C major; Jeux D'Enfants; Variations chromatique (Reference Records)
  • Yeston—Tom Sawyer—A Ballet in Three Acts (PS Classics)
  • Karpman - Ask Your Mama - musical setting of Langston Hughes' Ask Your Mama: Twelve Moods for Jazz (Avie Records)
  • Winger - Conversations With Nijinsky, Ghosts, A Parting Grace (VBI Classic Recording)

Volunteer groups edit

San Francisco Ballet has a large network of volunteers who assist with the ongoing success of the Company and the San Francisco Ballet School.

More than 200 Ballet Resource and Volunteer Organization (BRAVO) volunteers donate over 10,000 volunteer hours every year, assisting with office duties, retail work, and the ballet's Center for Dance Education, as well as helping SF Ballet staff with receptions, fundraisers, the Spring Student Showcase, and other special events.[44]

The San Francisco Ballet Auxiliary is a group of 100 dedicated women who volunteer to raise over $1 million in net contributions annually. In addition to individual fundraising, the group produces three annual productions: the Opening Night Gala, Fashion Show, and Student Showcase, with proceeds benefiting the Ballet and the San Francisco Ballet School.[45]

San Francisco Ballet's Allegro Circle is a group of professional men and women who share a passion for dance and contribute their own personal, professional, and philanthropic resources toward developing a new and diverse generation of subscribers and patrons.[46]

San Francisco Ballet's ENCORE! group offers local young professionals access to a range of social and educational events with a behind-the-scenes perspective. Staffing these events presents its 200+ members with a wide range of volunteer opportunities.[47]

Repertory edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Jennings, Luke (February 18, 2007). "One Step Closer to Perfection". The Observer. UK. Retrieved August 26, 2008.
  2. ^ Roca, Octavio (October 16, 2013). "Ballet pioneer Willam F. Christensen". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved October 14, 2013.
  3. ^ a b Flatow, Sheryl, Christensen Brothers (PDF), Dance Heritage Collection, retrieved October 14, 2013
  4. ^ a b Craine, Debra; Mackrell, Judith (2010). The Oxford Dictionary of Dance. Oxford University Press, USA. ISBN 0199563446
  5. ^ Anderson, Jack (October 17, 2001). "Willam Christensen, 99, Dies; Helped Ballet Flourish in U.S." The New York Times. Retrieved October 14, 2013.
  6. ^ Dunning, Jennifer (October 10, 1984). "Lew Christensen Dies at 75; Lead Dancer for Balanchine". The New York Times. Retrieved October 14, 2013.
  7. ^ Dunning, Jennifer (February 22, 1989). "Harold Christensen, 84, a Dancer and Ballet School Director". The New York Times. Retrieved October 14, 2013.
  8. ^ Jennifer Dunning (August 19, 1997). "James Starbuck, 85, TV Dance Innovator". The New York Times.
  9. ^ a b c McCarthy, Terrence (2004). "History of San Francisco Ballet". San Francisco Ballet Magazine. Vol. 71, no. 6. p. 8.
  10. ^ Renouf, Renee (2001). . Ballet.co Magazine. Archived from the original on September 22, 2008. Retrieved August 13, 2008.
  11. ^ a b Winn, Steven (April 23, 2007). "SF dance pioneer Michael Smuin collapses, dies". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved October 14, 2013.
  12. ^ Winn, Steven (April 24, 2007). "Michael Smuin: 1938-2007/Prolific dance director had showy career". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved October 14, 2013.
  13. ^ a b Upper, Nancy (2004). Dancers in Career Transition McFarland and Co. ISBN 0786418192
  14. ^ (Press release). San Francisco Ballet. 2011. Archived from the original on January 1, 2012. Retrieved December 31, 2011.
  15. ^ Macaulay, Alastair (October 12, 2008). "Chivalry and Suspense in a Balanchine Ballet". The New York Times. Retrieved October 14, 2013.
  16. ^ a b Kisselgoff, Anna (July 31, 1991). "Review/Dance; A Fresh Approach to Classicism From the San Francisco Ballet". The New York Times. Retrieved October 14, 2013.
  17. ^ Capelle, Laura (September 8, 2012). "Steps in the right direction". Financial Times. Archived from the original on December 24, 2022. Retrieved October 13, 2013.
  18. ^ a b Kisselgoff, Anna (December 21, 2004). "San Francisco Ballet Review; Clara and her 'Nutcracker' Friends Stop By the World's Fair". The New York Times. Retrieved April 21, 2015.
  19. ^ a b Steinberg, Cobbett (1983). San Francisco Ballet: The First Fifty Years. San Francisco: Chronicle Books. ISBN 0-9611194-0-3.
  20. ^ . Archived from the original on August 7, 2018. Retrieved April 21, 2015.
  21. ^ Tsao, Aimee (February 2013). "San Francisco Ballet – 80th Season Gala Opening – San Francisco". Dance Tabs. Retrieved January 30, 2015.
  22. ^ Chau, Selina (November 16, 2013). . Selina Chau. Archived from the original on April 2, 2015. Retrieved January 28, 2015.
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  24. ^ Koh, Barbara. . about travel. Archived from the original on April 5, 2015. Retrieved January 27, 2015.
  25. ^ Ulrich, Allan. "S.F. Ballet's 2015 season will be a look back". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved January 19, 2015.
  26. ^ "San Francisco Theater: Dance". San Francisco Theater: Your Independent Guide To The Best Shows in San Francisco. Retrieved January 19, 2015.
  27. ^ Libbey, Peter (January 6, 2021). "Helgi Tomasson to Step Down at San Francisco Ballet". New York Times.
  28. ^ Sulcas, Roslyn (January 11, 2022). "San Francisco Ballet Appoints Tamara Rojo to Artistic Director". New York Times.
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  47. ^ "Encore!". Retrieved October 13, 2014.

Further reading edit

  • LeBlond, Richard E. Jr.; Madden, Meg (1988). From Chaos to Fragility: My Years at the San Francisco Ballet Association. Dubuque, IA: Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company. ISBN 0-8403-5013-9.
  • Sowell, Debra Hickenlooper (1998). The Christensen Brothers: An American Dance Epic. Amsterdam: Harwood Academic Publishers. ISBN 90-5755-028-8.
  • Speck, Scott and Evelyn Cisneros (2003). Ballet for Dummies. Hoboken, N.J.: John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-0764525681.
  • Steinberg, Cobbett (1983). San Francisco Ballet: The First Fifty Years. San Francisco, CA: Chronicle Books. ISBN 978-0877012962.
  • Ross, Janet, Brigitte Lefevre, and Allan Ulrich (2007). San Francisco Ballet at Seventy-Five. San Francisco, CA: Chronicle Books. ISBN 978-0811856980.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)

Articles edit

  • John Martin (July 6, 1947). "The Dance: Chiefly out of Town; California, Utah, and New England Points Steal the Spotlight". The New York Times. p. 8 X.
  • Hughes, Allen (May 5, 1963). "The San Francisco Ballet Grows Rapidly". The New York Times. p. 4 X.

External links edit

  • Official website
  • Official San Francisco Ballet School website September 22, 2016, at the Wayback Machine
  • San Francisco Ballet YouTube Channel
  • San Francisco Ballet Facebook Page
  • San Francisco Ballet on Twitter
  • Stories about San Francisco Ballet in San Francisco's 7x7 magazine December 13, 2013, at the Wayback Machine
  • Archival footage of San Francisco Ballet performing Balanchine's Concerto Barocco in 1956 at Jacob's Pillow
  • Archival footage of San Francisco Ballet performing Balanchine's Apollon musagète (Apollo) in 1956 at Jacob's Pillow

francisco, ballet, oldest, ballet, company, united, states, founded, 1933, francisco, opera, ballet, under, leadership, ballet, master, adolph, bolm, company, currently, based, memorial, opera, house, francisco, effective, december, 2022, under, direction, tam. San Francisco Ballet is the oldest ballet company in the United States founded in 1933 as the San Francisco Opera Ballet under the leadership of ballet master Adolph Bolm The company is currently based in the War Memorial Opera House San Francisco and effective December 2022 under the direction of Tamara Rojo It is among the world s leading dance companies presenting more than 100 performances annually with a repertoire that spans both classical and contemporary ballet Along with American Ballet Theatre and the New York City Ballet San Francisco Ballet has been described as part of the triumvirate of great classical companies defining the American style on the world stage today 1 San Francisco BalletGeneral informationNameSan Francisco BalletPrevious namesSan Francisco Opera BalletYear founded1933 91 years ago 1933 FoundersWillam Christensen Harold Christensen Lew ChristensenPrincipal venueWar Memorial Opera House San FranciscoWebsitewww wbr sfballet wbr orgArtistic staffArtistic DirectorTamara RojoPrincipal ConductorMartin WestOtherOfficial schoolSan Francisco Ballet School http school sfballet org Contents 1 History 1 1 Founding Christensen brothers 1 2 1938 1950 1 3 1951 1972 1 4 1973 1985 1 5 1985 present 2 Programming 2 1 Festivals and touring 3 Broadcast and media projects 4 Accolades and awards 5 Company 5 1 Artistic Director 5 2 Ballet Masters amp Assistants to the Artistic Director 5 3 Ballet Masters 5 4 Choreographer In Residence 5 5 Company teachers 5 6 Principal dancers 5 7 Principal character dancers 5 8 Soloists 5 9 Corps de ballet 5 10 Apprentices 6 Official school 6 1 History and directors 6 2 School programs 6 3 Faculty 7 San Francisco Ballet Orchestra 7 1 Orchestra staff and musicians 38 7 2 San Francisco Ballet Orchestra music directors 7 3 San Francisco Ballet Orchestra recordings 8 Volunteer groups 9 Repertory 10 See also 11 References 12 Further reading 13 Articles 14 External linksHistory editFounding Christensen brothers edit nbsp Jocelyn Vollmar dancing with the San Francisco Ballet in 1947 Willam Christensen Harold Christensen and Lew Christensen made up the famed trio of brothers considered by many to have done more than anyone else to establish ballet in the United States Born into an artistic and musical family the three brothers studied folk dance and ballet from early ages and went on to tour the famous vaudeville Orpheum Circuit during the 1920s and 1930s exposing many Americans to ballet for the first time with their act The Christ Brothers 2 As vaudeville faded from American popular culture Harold and Lew joined George Balanchine s new company American Ballet in 1935 In 1932 Willam formed a ballet school in Portland Oregon in 1937 he was engaged as principal male soloist by San Francisco Opera Ballet 3 He became the company s ballet master and choreographer in 1938 With his brother Harold he purchased the company from the Opera in 1942 renaming it San Francisco Ballet 4 In 1951 Willam retired as director of SF Ballet and moved to Utah where he started teaching ballet in the country s first university ballet department at the University of Utah With a group of his students he founded the Utah Civic Ballet now known as Ballet West in 1963 the company remained under Christensen s directorship until 1978 5 Under Balanchine s tutelage at American Ballet Lew Christensen became the first American born danseur noble 4 The United States Army drafted Christensen to fight in World War II After the war ended he joined Balanchine s and Lincoln Kirstein s Ballet Society soon to become New York City Ballet eventually becoming ballet master he served in the role from 1946 until 1950 6 In 1951 he joined his brother Willam as co director of San Francisco Ballet When Willam moved to Salt Lake City later that year Lew took over as full director of SF Ballet he held the position until 1976 when Michael Smuin joined him as co director Lew Christensen remained SF Ballet co director until 1984 the year of his death 3 After leaving the vaudeville circuit in 1935 Harold Christensen danced with American Ballet San Francisco Opera Ballet Kirstein s Ballet Caravan and San Francisco Ballet until his retirement from the stage in 1946 7 In 1940 his brother Willam invited him to become director of the San Francisco Ballet School and in 1942 he and Willam purchased the SF Ballet Harold continued to serve as the school s director until his retirement in 1975 Emmy Award winning choreographer and dancer James Starbuck was a principal dancer with the San Francisco Opera Ballet from 1935 1938 and left the company to become the first American man to dance with the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo 8 1938 1950 edit Harold Christensen redirects here For the American attorney see Harold G Christensen In 1938 the company s first major production was Coppelia choreographed by Willam Christensen 9 In 1940 it staged Swan Lake the first time that the ballet was produced in its entirety by an American company On Christmas Eve 1944 the company staged Nutcracker the first complete production of Tchaikovsky s most popular piece ever danced in the United States In 1942 San Francisco Opera Ballet split into two independent companies ballet and opera The ballet half was sold to Willam and Harold Christensen Willam became artistic director while Harold took on the job of director of the San Francisco Ballet School 9 The San Francisco Ballet Guild was also formed as a support organization for San Francisco Ballet 10 1951 1972 edit The year 1951 marked a significant shift in administration of San Francisco Ballet Lew Christensen premier danseur at the time partnered with his brother Willam Christensen as co directors Then in 1952 Lew Christensen took over as sole director Under his guidance San Francisco Ballet began to travel and establish itself as a significant American ballet company Until 1956 San Francisco Ballet had remained on the West Coast but Christensen took the company to the Jacob s Pillow Dance Festival in Massachusetts In 1957 it was the first American ballet company to tour the Far East performing in 11 Asian nations 9 On New Year s Day 1965 ABC TV televised a one hour abridgement of the Lew Christensen choreographed production of Nutcracker featuring San Francisco Ballet In 1972 San Francisco s War Memorial Opera House was named the official residence of San Francisco Ballet 1973 1985 edit In 1973 Michael Smuin became co artistic director of San Francisco Ballet with Lew Christensen Smuin had danced with the Company from 1953 to 1961 11 Under his direction the national and international profile of SF Ballet was raised significantly by the broad success of productions such as 1977 s Romeo and Juliet which aired on the PBS series Great Performances Dance in America in 1978 12 This televised performance marked the first time that a West Coast ballet company and a full length ballet was shown on the PBS TV series 13 PBS televised three more of Smuin s SF Ballet productions and his productions of The Tempest and A Song for Dead Warriors went on to win Emmy Awards Smuin led the company until 1985 1985 present edit nbsp San Francisco Ballet Building 2013 Helgi Tomasson s 1985 arrival as artistic director marked the beginning of a new era for San Francisco Ballet Under Tomasson s direction 14 San Francisco Ballet has been recognized as one of the most innovative ballet companies in the world due to its early and frequent commissioning of new works by aspiring choreographers around the globe 15 the breadth of its repertory spanning classical ballet neoclassical ballet and contemporary ballet and the diversity of its company members 16 The Financial Times noted in 2012 Tomasson helped shatter the distinction between the US top companies and so called regional companies 17 Over a span of more than 25 years Tomasson has staged acclaimed full length productions of classics including Swan Lake 1988 2009 The Sleeping Beauty 1990 Romeo and Juliet 1994 Giselle 1999 Don Quixote co staged with former principal dancer and current choreographer in residence Yuri Possokhov 2003 and Nutcracker 2004 Tomasson s Nutcracker set in San Francisco during the 1915 Panama Pacific International Exposition is notable for being the only uniquely San Francisco Nutcracker It features sets including a backdrop of San Francisco s Victorian houses known as painted ladies 18 and costumes created by respectively Michael Yeargan and Martin Pakledinaz both repeat Tony Award winning designers 19 Upon its premiere The New York Times called Tomasson s Nutcracker striking elegant and beautiful 18 Today San Francisco Ballet presents approximately 100 performances each year The company s diverse repertory includes works by Sir Frederick Ashton George Balanchine David Bintley August Bournonville Val Caniparoli Lew Christensen Nacho Duato Jorma Elo William Forsythe James Kudelka Jiri Kylian Serge Lifar Lar Lubovitch Wayne McGregor Agnes de Mille Sir Kenneth MacMillan Hans van Manen Peter Martins Mark Morris Rudolf Nureyev Marius Petipa Roland Petit Yuri Possokhov Alexei Ratmansky Jerome Robbins Liam Scarlett Paul Taylor Helgi Tomasson Antony Tudor and Christopher Wheeldon In 2010 the Ballet s opening night gala Silver Celebration honored Tomasson s 25 years as artistic director 20 The Gala Opening of San Francisco Ballet s 80th Season included Tarantella pas de deux L Arlesienne solo Flower Festival at Genzano pas de deux In the Passerine s Clutch Raymonda s Act II solo Trio second movement Don Quixote grand pas de deux Onegin Act 1 pas de deux Stars and Stripes pas de deux After the Rain pas de deux and excerpts from Suite en Blanc 21 San Francisco Ballet s 2013 season included Trio Ghost and Borderlands 22 as well as Suite en blanc In the night Nijinsky The Rite of Spring Onegin Raymonda Act III and Cinderella 23 The 2014 season included Giselle A Midsummer Night s Dream Tears Borderlands From Foreign Lands Firebird Ghosts The Kingdom of the Shades from La Bayadere Cinderella Shostakovich Trilogy Caprice Maelstrom The Rite of Spring Hummingbird The Fifth Season Suite en Blanc Agon Brahms Schoenberg Quartet and Glass Pieces 24 The 2015 season included Serenade RAkU Lambarena Giselle The Vertiginous Thrill of Exactitude Variations for Two Couples Manifesto The Kingdom of the Shades from La Bayadere Act II Dances at a Gathering Hummingbird Don Quixote Shostakovich Trilogy Caprice Swimmer and Romeo amp Juliet 25 26 The 2017 season included Haffner Symphony Fragile Vessels In the Countenance of Kings Seven Sonatas Optimistic Tragedy Pas Parts 2016 Frankenstein Stravinsky Violin Concerto Prodigal Son Diamonds Fusion Salome Fearful Symmetries Swan Lake Trio Ghost in the Machine Within the Golden Hour and Cinderella In January 2021 Tomasson announced that he will retire from the company at the end of 2022 27 In January 2022 it was announced that Tamara Rojo will succeed Tomasson 28 Programming editSan Francisco Ballet performs repertory from January through May at the War Memorial Opera House in San Francisco 29 In addition the company performs in July at the Stern Grove Festival in San Francisco 30 tours nationally in the summer and fall and presents Nutcracker in December at the War Memorial Opera House 29 Festivals and touring edit In 1991 San Francisco Ballet performed in New York City for the first time in 26 years returning in 1993 1995 1998 2002 2006 2008 and 2013 Following the initial tour The New York Times proclaimed Mr Tomasson has accomplished the unprecedented He has pulled a so called regional company into the national ranks and he has done so by honing the dancers into a classical style of astonishing verve and purity San Francisco Ballet under Helgi Tomasson s leadership is one of the spectacular success stories of the arts in America 16 In May 1995 San Francisco Ballet hosted 12 ballet companies from around the world for UNited We Dance An International Festival The festival commemorated the 50th anniversary of the signing of the United Nations Charter which took place at the San Francisco War Memorial and Performing Arts Center In fall 2008 as part of the company s 75th anniversary celebration San Francisco Ballet embarked on a critically acclaimed four city American tour with engagements at Chicago s Harris Theater for Music and Dance New York City Center Southern California s Segerstrom Center for the Arts and the John F Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington D C The year culminated in a New Works Festival of world premieres by 10 of the dance world s most acclaimed choreographers Julia Adam Val Caniparoli Jorma Elo Margaret Jenkins James Kudelka Mark Morris Yuri Possokhov Paul Taylor Stanton Welch and Christopher Wheeldon Other anniversary initiatives included a commemorative book San Francisco Ballet at Seventy Five and the broadcast of Tomasson s Nutcracker in December 2008 on the Great Performances Dance in America series on PBS produced in partnership with KQED Public Television in San Francisco San Francisco Ballet also performed in frequent overseas tours including engagements at prestigious venues such as the famed Opera de Paris Palais Garnier in Paris 1994 2001 London s Sadler s Wells Theatre 1999 2004 2012 and Royal Opera House in Covent Garden 2002 Athens Megaron Theatre 2002 and Herod Atticus Amphitheatre 2004 Copenhagen s Tivoli Gardens 1998 2010 and the Edinburgh International Festival at the Edinburgh Playhouse 1997 2003 In fall 2009 San Francisco Ballet made its first trip to the People s Republic of China with performances in Shanghai and Beijing In 2012 San Francisco Ballet embarked on the longest tour in the company s history with engagements in London and Washington DC as well as first time visits to Hamburg Germany Moscow and Sun Valley Idaho Broadcast and media projects editIn 1978 San Francisco Ballet s Michael Smuin directed production of Romeo and Juliet became the first production by a West Coast ballet company and the first full length ballet to be aired by the PBS Great Performances Dance in America television series 13 Under the direction of Smuin the ballet s 1981 production of The Tempest became the first ballet to be broadcast live on PBS from the War Memorial Opera House Three years later the 1984 PBS broadcast of the Ballet s performance of A Song for Dead Warriors earned Smuin an Emmy 11 The fruitful relationship between PBS and SF Ballet continues to this day with regular broadcasts of the Ballet s 2007 production of Nutcracker choreographed by Helgi Tomasson I Also in 2007 the Company had its first theatrical release with Nutcracker shown in limited theaters in Canada Australia and the U S In 2011 theatrical distributor IndieNetFilms arranged for additional screenings throughout the U S and Canada In December 2011 the U S premiere of John Neumeier s The Little Mermaid performed by San Francisco Ballet was broadcast nationally on PBS s Great Performances Dance in America and also internationally DVDs of the Nutcracker and The Little Mermaid performances were released in 2008 and 2011 respectively CD recordings of the complete score of Nutcracker and Shinji Eshima s RAkU were released in 2010 and 2012 respectively Accolades and awards editThe company has garnered numerous accolades and awards In 2005 San Francisco Ballet won its first Laurence Olivier Award in the category of Outstanding Achievement in Dance for its 2004 fall season at Sadler s Wells Theatre Of the engagement London s The Sunday Times proclaimed Helgi Tomasson s outstanding artistic direction has transformed a regional American troupe into one of the world s top ballet companies 1 In 2006 in a readers poll conducted by Dance Europe magazine San Francisco Ballet was the first non European company to be voted Company of the Year In 2008 San Francisco Ballet received the Jerome Robbins Award for excellence in dance In 2012 Helgi Tomasson was named recipient of the Dance USA Honor acknowledging individuals contributions to dance in America and the role they play in the national dance community Most recently San Francisco Ballet was nominated in the category of Outstanding Company by the 2014 National Dance Awards based in the U K Company editArtistic Director edit Tamara Rojo Ballet Masters amp Assistants to the Artistic Director edit Ricardo Bustamante Felipe Diaz Ballet Masters edit Tina LeBlanc Anita Paciotti Katita Waldo Choreographer In Residence edit Yuri Possokhov Company teachers edit Helgi Tomasson Patrick Armand Ricardo Bustamante Felipe Diaz Principal dancers edit Name Nationality Training Joined SFB Promoted to Principal Other Companies Frances Chung nbsp Canada Goh Ballet Academy 2001 2009 Sasha De Sola nbsp United States Kirov Academy of Ballet 2007 2017 Nikisha Fogo nbsp Sweden Royal Swedish Ballet SchoolThe Royal Ballet School 2020 N A Joined as Principal Vienna State Ballet Angelo Greco nbsp Italy Il BallettoLa Scala Ballet School 2016 2017 La Scala Ballet Esteban Hernandez nbsp Mexico The Rock School for Dance Education The Royal Ballet School 2013 2018 Isaac Hernandez The Rock School for Dance Education 2008 2022 Dutch National BalletEnglish National Ballet Jasmine Jimison nbsp United States Bay Area Dance SchoolMenlo Park Academy of DanceSan Francisco Ballet School 2018 2024 Misa Kuranaga nbsp Japan Jinushi Kaoru Ballet SchoolSchool of American Ballet 2001 2019 Boston Ballet Wona Park nbsp South Korea Sunhwa Arts SchoolSan Francisco Ballet School 2017 2020 Aaron Robison nbsp United Kingdom Institut del Teatre The Royal Ballet School 2016 2018 N A Joined as Principal English National BalletBirmingham Royal BalletCorella BalletHouston Ballet Jennifer Stahl nbsp United States Maria Lazar s Classical Ballet Academy San Francisco Ballet School 2006 2017 Joseph Walsh Walnut Hill School of the Arts Houston Ballet s Ben Stevenson Academy 2014 2014 Houston Ballet Wei Wang nbsp China Beijing Dance Academy San Francisco Ballet School 2013 2018 WanTing Zhao Beijing Dance AcademyThe Rock School for Dance EducationSan Francisco Ballet School 2011 2019 Principal character dancers edit Ricardo Bustamante Val Caniparoli Anita Paciotti Soloists edit Name Nationality Training Joined SFB Promoted to Soloist Other Companies Katherine Barkman nbsp United States Private Training with Nadia Pavlenko 2022 N A Joined as Soloist Manila BalletThe Washington Ballet Cavan Conley The Harid ConservatoryNutmeg Conservatory 2018 2019 Tulsa BalletTulsa Ballet II Diego Cruz nbsp Spain Emilia Bailo Dance SchoolEscuela Municipal de DanzaEstudio de Danza de Maria de AvilaSan Francisco Ballet School 2006 2020 Daniel Deivison Oliveira nbsp Brazil Cia Brasileira de BalletBallet da Cidade de NiteroiEscola de Dancas Maria OlenewaPetite Danse SchoolSan Francisco Ballet School 2005 2011 Cia Brasileira de BalletBallet de Cidade de Niteroi Isabella DeVivo nbsp United States School of American BalletSan Francisco Ballet School 2013 2017 Ellen Rose Hummel North Carolina Dance TheatreSan Francisco Ballet School 2012 2020 Norika Matsuyama nbsp Japan Yuki Miho BalletPalos Verdes BalletLauridsen Ballet CentreSan Francisco Ballet School 2014 2021 Steven Morse nbsp United States Maple Conservatory of DanceLaurisden Dance CentreLong Beach Ballet Arts CenterSan Francisco Ballet School 2009 2017 Sasha Mukhamedov nbsp United Kingdom Elmhurst School for DanceThe Royal Ballet SchoolArts Educational School 2019 N A Joined as Soloist Dutch National Ballet Elizabeth Powell nbsp United States Boston Ballet SchoolSan Francisco Ballet School 2012 2018 Julia Rowe Central Pennsylvania Youth BalletSan Francisco Ballet School 2013 2016 Oregon Ballet Theatre Myles Thatcher Margo Clifford GingThe Harid ConservatoryEdward Ellison Professional Training ProgramSan Francisco Ballet School 2010 2020 Lonnie Weeks Faubourg School of BalletRuth Page Center for the ArtsTexas Ballet Theater School 2010 2018 Texas Ballet Theater Corps de ballet edit Kamryn Baldwin Juliana Bellissimo Sean Bennett Samantha Bristow Olivia Brothers Jihyun Choi Thamires Chuvas Anatalia St Clair Benjamin Davidoff Luca Ferro Parker Garrison Gabriela Gonzalez Lleyton Ho Blake Johnston Andris Kundzins Katharine Lee Sunmin Lee Elizabeth Mateer Carmela Mayo Swane Messaoudi Nicole Moyer Rimi Nakano Ruben Citrus Nieto Davide Occhipinti Pemberley Ann Olson Hui Wen Peng Joao Percale Da Silva Simone Pompignoli Joshua Jack Price Leili Rackow Nathaniel Remez Alexander Reneff Olson Jacob Seltzer Jasper True Stanford Tyla Steinbach Jamie Adele Stephens Alexis Francisco Valdes Mingxuan Wang Angela Watson Maggie Weirich Seojeong Yun Adrian Zeisel Apprentices edit Sofia Albers Raphael Brunais Besse Eduardo Cazarez Jacey Gailliard Mimi Lamar Dylan PierzinaOfficial school editSan Francisco Ballet School San Francisco Ballet s official school is America s oldest ballet school The program includes classes in technique pointe work pas de deux men s technique contemporary dance floor barre conditioning and character dance Male and female students are placed in divisions according to age experience and ability More than 50 percent of current San Francisco Ballet dancers received some training at San Francisco Ballet School 31 History and directors edit The school was founded in 1933 as part of the San Francisco Operatic and Ballet School when Gaetano Merola the founder of the San Francisco Opera perceived a need for an institution where dancers could be trained to perform in opera productions 32 The school was under the direction of ballet director Adolph Bolm from 1933 to 1938 Willam Christensen became director from 1938 to 1940 followed by his brother Harold Christensen from 1942 until 1975 19 Richard L Cammack directed the school from 1975 to 1985 he oversaw the move to its current state of the art facilities on Franklin Street in 1983 In 1985 new SF Ballet artistic director Helgi Tomasson appointed Nancy Johnson as school head Lola de Avila joined as associate director from 1993 to 1999 followed by Gloria Govrin beginning in 1999 In 2006 de Avila returned to serve as associate director until 2012 when Patrick Armand stepped into the role 33 School programs edit Admission into the school is by audition only Students may apply for financial aid and merit based scholarships Advanced students may be invited to join the SFBS Trainee Program a one to two year pre professional program established in 2004 34 Up to 150 students are chosen by audition to dance in the yearly SF Ballet production of Nutcracker The most advanced students may also dance with SF Ballet in the repertory season 35 The school also runs a pre ballet program for children ages 4 7 after completing the program students of age who wish to continue study must audition in order to continue at the school 36 Faculty edit The faculty of the San Francisco Ballet School has long been known for its excellence and diversity of background As of January 2017 it is led by the Artistic Director Helgi Tomasson and Director Patrick Armand The illustrious faculty includes Patrick Armand Cecelia Beam Sandrine Cassini Kristi DeCaminada Karen Gabay Jeffrey Lyons Ruben Martin Cintas Ilona McHugh Pascal Molat Trainee Program Assistant Anne Sophie Rodriguez Jaime Diaz Strengthening Dexandro D Montalvo Contemporary Brian Fisher Contemporary Dana Genshaft Contemporary dance and conditioning Henry Berg Conditioning Leonid Shagalov Character Jamie Narushchen Music and Daniel Sullivan Music The guest faculty for 2017 includes Sofiane Sylve Principal Guest 37 San Francisco Ballet Orchestra editFounded in 1975 to serve as San Francisco Ballet s official permanent orchestra San Francisco Ballet Orchestra SFBO holds the rare position of being one of three major orchestras in a single city The orchestra debuted at the end of 1975 with Nutcracker and has met with both audience and critical acclaim ever since becoming known by the 1990s as one of the world s finest ballet orchestras SFBO toured with the SF Ballet s touring company from 1978 until 1984 It has accompanied many prestigious international ballet companies that have toured to the San Francisco Bay Area including The Royal Ballet the Royal Danish Ballet Stuttgart Ballet Hamburg Ballet the Bolshoi Ballet Paul Taylor Dance Company American Ballet Theatre and the Paris Opera Ballet In 1995 the orchestra took on the remarkable task of accompanying 13 international dance companies over the space of a single week in the UNited We Dance Festival The 49 member orchestra accompanies SF Ballet throughout its winter and spring repertory seasons It also performs apart from the Company it debuted solely as an orchestra in 1979 at the Herbst Theatre in San Francisco s War Memorial Veterans Building playing a program that included works by Haydn Ives and Vivaldi Orchestra staff and musicians 38 edit The SFBO is composed of 49 members and headed by Martin West music director and conductor Founding Concertmaster and solo violinist Roy Malan retired in December 2014 after serving for 40 years 39 After a rigorous search Cordula Merks was appointed Concertmaster in 2016 40 As of February 2024 the musicians and staff included 41 Violin I Cordula Merks Concertmaster Heeguen Song Associate Concertmaster Beni Shinohara Assistant Concertmaster Mariya Borozino Minsun Choi Robin Hansen Heidi Wilcox Wendi Shih Regular Substitute Violin II Ani Bukujian Principal Craig Reiss Associate Principal Jeanelle Meyer Assistant Principal Laura Keller Jeremy Preston Karen Shinozaki Sor Regular Substitute Viola Yi Zhou Principal Anna Kruger Associate Principal Joy Fellows Assistant Principal Caroline Lee Elizabeth Prior Regular Substitute Cello Eric Sung Principal Jonah Kim Associate Principal Thalia Moore Assistant Principal Saul Richmond Rakerd Mariko Wyrick Ruth Lane Regular Substitute Contrabass Jonathan Lancelle Acting Principal Shinji Eshima Associate Principal Mark Wallace Assistant Principal Regular Substitute Michael Minor Regular Substitute Flute Susan Kang Principal Julie McKenzie 2nd amp Piccolo Oboe Laura Griffiths Principal Marilyn Coyne 2nd amp English Horn Clarinet Sean Krissman Principal Eric Chi 2nd amp Bass Clarinet Bassoon Rufus Olivier Principal Dana Jackson 2nd amp Contrabassoon Season Substitute Horn Kevin Rivard Principal Brian McCarty Associate Principal Keith Green Phillip Palmore Caitlin Smith Franklin Regular Substitute Trumpet Cornet Adam Luftman Principal Joseph Brown Trombone Jeffrey Budin Principal Michael Cox Bass Trombone Scott Thornton Principal Tuba Peter Wahrhaftig Principal Timpani Zubin Hathi Principal Percussion David Rosenthal Principal Harp Annabelle Taubl Principal San Francisco Ballet Orchestra music directors edit The orchestra was led by Denis de Coteau from 1975 until 1998 when de Coteau s battle with terminal cancer forced him to step down from the position 42 Emil de Cou who had been serving as conductor since 1995 then assumed the role of music director leading the Orchestra until 2001 when he left to join Washington D C s National Symphony Orchestra He was replaced by first associate conductor Jean Louis LeRoux who then left the interim position in 2003 and was succeeded by Andrew Mogrelia In 2005 Mogrelia left in order to focus on his duties as music director at San Francisco Conservatory of Music That same year Martin West frequent guest conductor for the Orchestra stepped into the position of music director 43 In 2018 frequent guest conductor Ming Luke was appointed Principal Guest Conductor San Francisco Ballet Orchestra recordings edit The orchestra s repertoire includes hundreds of works spanning four centuries of musical history many of which have been recorded and released to great critical acclaim including works by Beethoven Bizet and Delibes Four of the orchestra s recordings have been televised on PBS s Great Performances Dance in America Recordings include Othello Suite from the Ballet by Eliot Goldenthal Varese Records Tchaikovsky Nutcracker O Brien Enterprises 1988 Schoenberg Spohr Elgar Handel Works for String Quartet amp Orchestra Arabesque Records Claude Debussy Rediscovered Premiere Orchestral Recordings Arabesque Records RAkU San Francisco Ballet Records The Tempest complete ballet by Paul Chihara SF Ballet Orchestra recorded this under the name Performing Arts Orchestra in 1981 Reference Recordings Nutcracker Op 71 Koch Int l Classics Russian Masterpieces for Cello and Orchestra Shostakovich Cello Concert Tchaikovsky Rococo Variations etc Zuill Bailey Cello Telarc Delibes Coppelia Sylvia Extended Suites from the Ballets Reference Recordings Weber Clarinet Concerti No 1 amp 2 Alexander Fiterstein Clarinet Bridge Records Beethoven Triple Concerto in C Major Opus 56 Piano Trio in E flat Major Op 1 No 1 Claremont Piano Trio Bridge Records Bizet Symphony in C major Jeux D Enfants Variations chromatique Reference Records Yeston Tom Sawyer A Ballet in Three Acts PS Classics Karpman Ask Your Mama musical setting of Langston Hughes Ask Your Mama Twelve Moods for Jazz Avie Records Winger Conversations With Nijinsky Ghosts A Parting Grace VBI Classic Recording Volunteer groups editSan Francisco Ballet has a large network of volunteers who assist with the ongoing success of the Company and the San Francisco Ballet School More than 200 Ballet Resource and Volunteer Organization BRAVO volunteers donate over 10 000 volunteer hours every year assisting with office duties retail work and the ballet s Center for Dance Education as well as helping SF Ballet staff with receptions fundraisers the Spring Student Showcase and other special events 44 The San Francisco Ballet Auxiliary is a group of 100 dedicated women who volunteer to raise over 1 million in net contributions annually In addition to individual fundraising the group produces three annual productions the Opening Night Gala Fashion Show and Student Showcase with proceeds benefiting the Ballet and the San Francisco Ballet School 45 San Francisco Ballet s Allegro Circle is a group of professional men and women who share a passion for dance and contribute their own personal professional and philanthropic resources toward developing a new and diverse generation of subscribers and patrons 46 San Francisco Ballet s ENCORE group offers local young professionals access to a range of social and educational events with a behind the scenes perspective Staffing these events presents its 200 members with a wide range of volunteer opportunities 47 Repertory editSee also editList of productions of Swan Lake derived from its 1895 revivalReferences edit a b Jennings Luke February 18 2007 One Step Closer to Perfection The Observer UK Retrieved August 26 2008 Roca Octavio October 16 2013 Ballet pioneer Willam F Christensen San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved October 14 2013 a b Flatow Sheryl Christensen Brothers PDF Dance Heritage Collection retrieved October 14 2013 a b Craine Debra Mackrell Judith 2010 The Oxford Dictionary of Dance Oxford University Press USA ISBN 0199563446 Anderson Jack October 17 2001 Willam Christensen 99 Dies Helped Ballet Flourish in U S The New York Times Retrieved October 14 2013 Dunning Jennifer October 10 1984 Lew Christensen Dies at 75 Lead Dancer for Balanchine The New York Times Retrieved October 14 2013 Dunning Jennifer February 22 1989 Harold Christensen 84 a Dancer and Ballet School Director The New York Times Retrieved October 14 2013 Jennifer Dunning August 19 1997 James Starbuck 85 TV Dance Innovator The New York Times a b c McCarthy Terrence 2004 History of San Francisco Ballet San Francisco Ballet Magazine Vol 71 no 6 p 8 Renouf Renee 2001 San Francisco Ballet history Ballet co Magazine Archived from the original on September 22 2008 Retrieved August 13 2008 a b Winn Steven April 23 2007 SF dance pioneer Michael Smuin collapses dies San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved October 14 2013 Winn Steven April 24 2007 Michael Smuin 1938 2007 Prolific dance director had showy career San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved October 14 2013 a b Upper Nancy 2004 Dancers in Career Transition McFarland and Co ISBN 0786418192 Artistic Director amp Principal Choreographer Press release San Francisco Ballet 2011 Archived from the original on January 1 2012 Retrieved December 31 2011 Macaulay Alastair October 12 2008 Chivalry and Suspense in a Balanchine Ballet The New York Times Retrieved October 14 2013 a b Kisselgoff Anna July 31 1991 Review Dance A Fresh Approach to Classicism From the San Francisco Ballet The New York Times Retrieved October 14 2013 Capelle Laura September 8 2012 Steps in the right direction Financial Times Archived from the original on December 24 2022 Retrieved October 13 2013 a b Kisselgoff Anna December 21 2004 San Francisco Ballet Review Clara and her Nutcracker Friends Stop By the World s Fair The New York Times Retrieved April 21 2015 a b Steinberg Cobbett 1983 San Francisco Ballet The First Fifty Years San Francisco Chronicle Books ISBN 0 9611194 0 3 America s Oldest Professional Ballet Company Honors Artistic Director Helgi Tomasson s 25th Anniversary with a Special Gala Archived from the original on August 7 2018 Retrieved April 21 2015 Tsao Aimee February 2013 San Francisco Ballet 80th Season Gala Opening San Francisco Dance Tabs Retrieved January 30 2015 Chau Selina November 16 2013 San Francisco Ballet 2013 Fall Season Selina Chau Archived from the original on April 2 2015 Retrieved January 28 2015 SF Ballet 2013 Season Lost In SF Archived from the original on April 2 2015 Retrieved March 25 2015 Koh Barbara San Francisco Ballet s 2014 Season Giselle Cinderella World Premieres about travel Archived from the original on April 5 2015 Retrieved January 27 2015 Ulrich Allan S F Ballet s 2015 season will be a look back San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved January 19 2015 San Francisco Theater Dance San Francisco Theater Your Independent Guide To The Best Shows in San Francisco Retrieved January 19 2015 Libbey Peter January 6 2021 Helgi Tomasson to Step Down at San Francisco Ballet New York Times Sulcas Roslyn January 11 2022 San Francisco Ballet Appoints Tamara Rojo to Artistic Director New York Times a b Season Archived from the original on July 15 2014 Retrieved October 13 2014 Edwards Dana July 31 2013 S F Ballet brings magic to Stern Grove San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved October 14 2013 Ballet School Archived from the original on February 14 2015 Retrieved October 13 2014 Gereben Janos From Merola to S F Ballet School Showcase San Francisco Classical Voice Retrieved October 14 2013 Patrick Armand Archived from the original on February 14 2015 Retrieved October 13 2014 Trainee Program Archived from the original on February 14 2015 Retrieved October 13 2014 Stage Experience Archived from the original on February 14 2015 Retrieved October 13 2014 Pre ballet Archived from the original on February 15 2015 Retrieved October 13 2014 School Staff Archived from the original on April 26 2015 Retrieved April 21 2015 Musicians of the San Francisco Ballet Orchestra San Francisco Ballet Orchestra October 2014 Retrieved August 15 2015 San Francisco Ballet Orchestra Milestones San Francisco Ballet Orchestra October 2 2014 Retrieved January 7 2019 Violinist Cordula Merks Wins Audition for Concertmaster San Francisco Ballet Orchestra May 31 2015 Musicians of the San Francisco Ballet Orchestra San Francisco Ballet Orchestra February 2024 Retrieved February 20 2024 Kosman Joshua February 1 2008 Denis de Coteau s legacy at Ballet lives on San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved October 14 2013 Music Director Archived from the original on March 15 2015 Retrieved October 13 2014 BRAVO Archived from the original on November 7 2014 Retrieved October 13 2014 Auxiliary Archived from the original on February 15 2014 Retrieved October 13 2014 Allegro Archived from the original on March 20 2015 Retrieved October 13 2014 Encore Retrieved October 13 2014 Further reading editLeBlond Richard E Jr Madden Meg 1988 From Chaos to Fragility My Years at the San Francisco Ballet Association Dubuque IA Kendall Hunt Publishing Company ISBN 0 8403 5013 9 Sowell Debra Hickenlooper 1998 The Christensen Brothers An American Dance Epic Amsterdam Harwood Academic Publishers ISBN 90 5755 028 8 Speck Scott and Evelyn Cisneros 2003 Ballet for Dummies Hoboken N J John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 0764525681 Steinberg Cobbett 1983 San Francisco Ballet The First Fifty Years San Francisco CA Chronicle Books ISBN 978 0877012962 Ross Janet Brigitte Lefevre and Allan Ulrich 2007 San Francisco Ballet at Seventy Five San Francisco CA Chronicle Books ISBN 978 0811856980 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Articles editJohn Martin July 6 1947 The Dance Chiefly out of Town California Utah and New England Points Steal the Spotlight The New York Times p 8 X Hughes Allen May 5 1963 The San Francisco Ballet Grows Rapidly The New York Times p 4 X External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to San Francisco Ballet Official website Official San Francisco Ballet School website Archived September 22 2016 at the Wayback Machine San Francisco Ballet YouTube Channel San Francisco Ballet Facebook Page San Francisco Ballet on Twitter Stories about San Francisco Ballet in San Francisco s 7x7 magazine Archived December 13 2013 at the Wayback Machine Archival footage of San Francisco Ballet performing Balanchine s Concerto Barocco in 1956 at Jacob s Pillow Archival footage of San Francisco Ballet performing Balanchine s Apollon musagete Apollo in 1956 at Jacob s Pillow Portal nbsp San Francisco Bay Area Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title San Francisco Ballet amp oldid 1215259256, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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