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10 Questions With…Sue Lobrano

September 22, 2010 by 4dancers

Today we have an interview with Sue Lobrano, Executive Director of the International Ballet Competition…

1. What is your background in dance? 

Growing up in a small Mississippi town in the 1950’s presented a challenge in finding dance classes.  Early years put me at the mercy of whomever came to town to teach until I found a wonderful teacher in Memphis, Tennessee.  I turned out to be a pretty good hoofer and she sent me to study jazz with Gus Giordano.  

2. How did you become associated with the USA International Ballet Competition?

Sue Lobrano

After the first IBC in 1979 I thought that I might like to be associated with it.  I was looking for a change and so I was employed as the IBC’s “girl Friday!”  I later moved to General Manager and in October of 1986 was promoted to Executive Director.   

3. Can you tell readers a bit about why this competition is unique? 

The USA IBC was the first competition to be held in the Western Hemisphere joining with competitions in Varna, Bulgaria, Moscow, and Tokyo.  In 1982 it was designated as the U.S.’s official international ballet competition through a Joint Resolution of Congress.     

4. Would you talk a little about how the competition has grown over the years? 

We have certainly grown in audience, providing more opportunities for our participants such as company contracts for dancers, jobs in the field from contacts made here,  establishing a festival of dance in ancillary events and definitely grown in the number of applications we receive.

5. What is it like behind the scenes? 

I have 3 fulltime staff members plus me.  I later add staff on two-year to 6-month contracts. We are fortunate to have so many volunteers that work on 18 committees.  Behind the scenes is, well, interesting.  During the event it can be exhausting, but the thing that keeps me going mostly is feeling the tensions of the day slowly float away when the curtain opens and the dancers begin to create their magic.  Then the next day, back to the craziness of the schedule.

6. What can people do to get involved with this event if they would like to help out in the future? 

I suggest they log on to our web site at www.usaibc.com, click on the SUPPORT tab and look at the volunteer options we have available.  Call or email if there are questions.   We do have returning volunteers from many different states who are very much an important part of what we do.  So, ya’ll sign up and come join us. 

7. The competition isn’t the only thing going on during this time  period–what are some of the other events you have had?

A Festival of Dance surrounds the two-week competition which includes dance films, dance related workshops, exhibits and much more.  The recent 2010 USA IBC presented PHILADANCO in a two day residency which included a Master Class, a Lecture/Demo and an evening performance; noted dance photographer Lois Greenfield held a one day photography workshop and an exhibit of her work was displayed throughout the month. Lunch with the IBC was popular throughout the event featuring different and diverse speakers, and TuTu.COM held a weeklong workshop for costume makers.  All dancers may request a private evaluation session of their performances with one of two dance professionals.  We also do a USA IBC Reunion Gala featuring past medal winners every other year between competitions.

8. How is the dance school tied into this? 

The IBC Dance School allows students to participate in classes during the day and attend the competition at night.  A Teachers Workshop is also available.  One thing that really does set the USA IBC apart from the rest is that each dancer who progresses to the finals, Round III, receives a $1,000 stipend.  I also think I should mention that the USA International Ballet Competition is a National Endowment for the Arts 2010 American Masterpiece as designated through the Mississippi Arts Commission.        

9. What has been the most satisfying aspect of being involved with the USA International Ballet Competition? 

Having been associated with the USA International Ballet Competition for 30 years, this is a hard one.  Overall it is seeing many incredible young dancers come to Jackson at the beginning of their careers and later seeing them go on to dance with some of the world’s great companies.    Two that come to mind instantly are Jose Carreno (ABT) and Nina Ananiashvilli (ABT).  There are many, many more.  

10. What is next for you? 

Next for me is more of the same.  Planning has begun for the 2014 USA IBC and it will be here before we know it is time.

Bio: Sue Lobrano joined the USA IBC in 1980, and she has served as executive director of the organization since 1986. Sue directs and oversees all operations of the USA IBC, develops the USA IBC budget and is the official spokesperson of the organization. She also supervises office staff, determines volunteer committee needs and represents the USA IBC Board of Directors at sanctioned competitions and international dance meetings around the world. Sue is a former dancer and dance teacher. She taught at the Jackson Ballet under the direction of Thalia Mara and operated her own dance school for 13 years.

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Filed Under: 10 Questions With..., 4dancers, 4teachers, Editorial, Studios Tagged With: gus giordano, ibc, sue lobrano

10 Questions With…Jacqueline Moscicke

September 8, 2010 by 4dancers

Today we have 10 Questions with Jacqueline Moscicke from the Joffrey…

1. How did you become involved with dance?

When I was little I would jump off furniture trying to imitate Baryshnikov and ended up in the emergency room a few times. That’s when my parents decided to take me to a ballet class. 

Jacqueline Moscicke, Photo by Richard Brodzeller

2. What are you currently doing in the field?

I joined The Joffrey Ballet in July.

3. Would you share a special moment or two from your career?

One of my favorite moments was being featured in Margo Sappington’s, Common people.  The ballet turned into a film documentary called Gonzo Ballet with William Shatner. Another great ballet experience was being Clara in the Nutcracker, it will always hold a magical spot in my heart.

4. What is the best advice you have ever received regarding dance?

The best advice I received was from my Grandpa, he said “write it all down before you forget all these special moments”.

5. Do you have any advice for those who would like to dance professionally?

I would have to say there’s a company for everyone, you just have to search for where you feel comfortable and fit best.

6. What has been your biggest challenge in dance?

Injuries are the worst!  I had loads of doubts and insecurities when I had ankle surgery. I missed all the other dancers, felt left out, and wondered if I’d ever catch up again. 

Jacqueline Moscicke, Photo by Richard Brodzeller

7. What is it that you love so much about ballet?

It’s hard to explain my love for ballet, I just feel most at peace when I’m on stage.

8. Do you have a special routine that you go through before a performance, or is each one different?

I definitely am superstitious.  I can’t go up on stage too much before the show starts or I’ll get nervous, and I keep good luck charms with me in my dressing room.

9. Where you do think dance is headed?

Hopefully rock ballets continue to become more popular they’re great fun to do!

10. What is next for you?

I’ll be taking in all the wonderful new things I’m discovering in Chicago, with The Joffrey Ballet.

BIO: Originally from Sussex Wisconsin Jacqueline Moscicke received her formal training at Milwaukee Ballet School on full scholarship. In 2003, she received honorable mention in the National Foundation for Advancement in the Arts competition. In 2006 and 2008, Ms. Moscicke was featured as Clara in Milwaukee Ballet’s the Nutcracker. Other roles she has enjoyed performing are George Balachine’s Agon, variations from Marius Petipia’s Raymonda, appearing as the Songbird Fairy and Princess Florine in The Sleeping Beauty,  and Margo Sappinton’s Common People which is featured in William Schatner’s Gonzo Ballet Documentary. She spent seven years with Milwaukee ballet Company and is thrilled to be joining The Joffrey Ballet.

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10 Questions With…Heidi Dunn

August 30, 2010 by 4dancers

 
Today on 4dancers we have an interview with Heidi Dunn from Ballet Quad Cities sharing her insights on ballet and the future of dance…
Property of Ballet Quad Cities, Photo by Joe Maciejko

1. How did you become involved with dance?

My mother took me to see a performance when I was five years old and I said to her “I want to be a ballet dancer when I grow up”. I always thought it a bit funny because who really believes it when their five year old makes a statement like that, but my mother did. I could never really thank her enough for believing in me from such a young age.

2. What are you currently doing in the field?

I am currently employed by Ballet Quad Cities and have been dancing with the company professionally for seven years. I grew up in this community so it is great to be able to give back through performances and the interactive educational programs we take into the schools. Last year we touched over 10,000 students with our art form.

3. Would you share a special moment or two from your career?

The opportunity to perform in New York city with BQC as part of Ballet Builders 2010 was something I didn’t expect to do in my career and I was definitely nervous. When we finished our piece “Ash to Glass” and the audience started clapping I was overwhelmed with pride for the company and myself. What a great feeling! I also can’t forget all of the great people that I have been fortunate to work with. Deanna Carter, BQC’s resident choreographer, has pushed me to do more than I ever thought possible through her coaching and her belief in me as an artist.  

Property of Ballet Quad Cities, Photo by Joe Maciejko

4. What is the best advice you have ever received regarding dance?

There really isn’t just one. There seems to be this data bank full of all of the ideas my teachers have given to me over the years that have laid dormant until someone else has said the same thing to me years later. The one that I have had on my mind is how to work smarter not harder. I love that piece of advice because so often I would push myself so hard all I would do is end up more frustrated and tired than need be. I would just muscle through things to make things happen. Taking a step back though has helped me to step forward and grow into a more of a thinking dancer.

5. Do you have any advice for those who would like to dance professionally?

Be humble. I think without humility one loses the ability to grow and learn. I am definitely not saying to lack in confidence but check your ego at the door and be open to whomever may come in no matter how crazy you think their theories may be. You will never know until you try. I have seen dancers be so resistant to teachers and choreographers simply because they didn’t “agree” and they end up fading into the background. Just work hard and be ready to learn.

6. What has been your biggest challenge in dance?

I think my own self image has hindered me more than anything. Not letting you get the better of you is a daily struggle. When judging yourself so harshly on a daily basis it is hard to keep things in perspective. Injuries seem to be unavoidable but I have found that dealing with the physical side of dance is easier to manage than the mental challenges that come with the job.

7. What is it that you love so much about ballet?

Pointe shoes. But, in all seriousness, if it weren’t for them I would have been a modern or contemporary dancer. I think there is a sort of romanticism about pointe shoes that a young girl has when she sees someone floating across the stage en pointe. I don’t think I ever got over that fantasy. I also love the way ballet in general can fuse such great athleticism and pure artistry. The challenge of how to make those things work together is what really drives me to keep doing what I am doing.

Property of Ballet Quad Cities, Photo by Joe Maciejko

8. Do you have a special routine that you go through before a performance, or is each one different?

My routines always seem to change but there are a few things that I never do! First I have to stand at the same place at the barre once we get into the theater. Secondly I have to put on and take off my pointe shoes because they never seem to feel quite right the first time around. I also can’t have my hair feel loose. If it does it’s time to start over and there has to be tons of hairspray. I am not really a superstitious person I just need to feel ready. One has enough things to think about when performing without thinking about hair or shoe malfunctions.

9. Where you do think dance is headed?

Dance could go in so many directions. With dancers doing more and more physically each year choreography has the challenge to keep up while maintaining the balance of virtuosity and artistry. I also sincerely hope that ballet companies keep the classics like Giselle and Swan Lake even though it is difficult for many companies to stage such productions today.

10. What is next for you?

I am really looking forward to the upcoming season. Our first performance will be “I Vampire”. It will be based on a book written by a local author, Michael Romkey. I have just finished reading it and can’t wait to see how his book comes to life through dance.

Bio: Heidi Dunn began her ballet training at City Center School of the Arts, now Ballet Quad Cities School of Dance. She also trained with Ballet Conservatory of St. Louis with Nathalie Levine. In 1999, she was invited to become an apprentice with Cassandra Manning Ballet Theater under the direction of Johanne Jakhelln. Since becoming a full company member in 2003 she has worked with Dominic Walsh in “Die Hochzeit” and was featured as Clara in his 2008 version of the “Nutcracker”. She has worked with Deanna Carter in “Dracula” as Lucy, “Ash to Glass”, and as Carmen in “Carmen”. While working with the company she has also had the pleasure of working with Domingo Rubio, Cleo Mack, Simone Ferro, and L.D. Kidd. This will be Ms. Dunn’s 8th season with Ballet Quad Cities.

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5 Questions With…Susan Jaffe

August 26, 2010 by 4dancers

In Part II of our series, we are following up on the interview with Risa Kaplowitz and talking today with Susan Jaffe, who was recently named Ballet Mistress for American Ballet Theatre…

I also have to point out this wonderful interview Susan did with Charlie Rose in 2002. Don’t miss it.

1.  What is your teaching philosophy and who has it been influenced by?

This is a question one can write entire book on, but below is snap shot of my philosophy. Also, I have had many great teachers in my life including books, artists from other professions, and life’s circumstances (good and bad), but here is a list of people from my professional ballet life that have mostly influenced my teaching: Mikhail Baryshnikov, Irina Kolpakova, Elena Tchernichova, Christina Bernal, Nancy Bielski and Julio Horvath-who created Gyrotonics.

Susan Jaffe

I am very much focused, when teaching a ballet class, on correct placement, correct use of turn out, breadth, coordination of the arms and head and legs, using the oppositional forces within a step, i.e. every force has an equal and opposite force going in the opposite direction within the body. For example, to releve´ the dancer must push down into the floor through the legs to rise up to pointe. Secondly, it is important that the dancer takes all of these skills and transforms them into a movement quality with the understanding of the use of dynamic, musicality, amplitude, and of course, the heart, which is the source that allows a dancer freedom and genuine expression.

At the beginning a dancer needs to understand how to stand up correctly. This includes not only the proper placement of the torso, arms, feet, head and legs, the correct use of turn out, and the correct coordination, but also where to direct ones energy and focus while executing a step. This is a very sophisticated understanding of the body and requires much will and focus to acquire. Then as the dancer progresses, those same ideas apply when s/he is moving through space, which requires added strength, skill and application of those same principals.

I try to teach all of this within the appropriate stages and levels of maturity of a young dancer’s training. Each level can be taken to higher levels of understanding and sophistication that equals their abilities. I also try to be as honest, but as positive and reassuring as I can. It is important for a dancer to know what they need to work on, but it is equally important how a dancer approaches their work and how they feel about themselves while they work. If they are implementing their corrections with the joy and curiosity of learning, then they will improve much faster than if they go into habits of self-flagellation. My quest is to empower the dancer with their-own confidence, curiosity, self- exploration and passion to learn and improve.

2. What is your best advice for a dancer who wants to become a professional?

To become educated about your art whether it is in or out of class. It is important to know dance history, see the greats (past and present) in the profession in videos or movies, go to museums, listen to great music, and read literature. It is also important to get to know yourself on a deep level and understand what is beautiful and horrible about humanity. Never stop trying to learn as much as you can about you, and it. Then you will have the possibility to become a professional that can transform pure movement into genuine inspiration. You should not aim to be a technical machine; a true dancer is guided by their heart and soul to speak a language that is deep, informed, and inspired. That is where the real art of ballet lies. Aim for that.     

 

Susan Jaffe rehearsing "Lilac Garden", Photo: Paul B. Goode

3.  How has your dance career informed and impacted your teaching?

Everything that I have done in my life has impacted my teaching. It takes many, many years to understand this art form and what makes it come alive. But, while I was dancing I reinvented my approach to technique several times throughout my career. That has informed me a great deal about how long it takes to change a habit or to implement a new idea. It takes tremendous patience and perseverance and I am able to support a dancer through a change because I lived it myself.

4. What was it like to leave the stage and start teaching in the classroom?

When I left the stage, I was ready to go, so teaching was a nice way to give back to the art form that I have loved all my life. That is the way dance continues on, and it seemed like the most natural thing to do for me.

5. What will you miss about teaching at Princeton Dance & Theater Studio and what are you looking forward to in your new role as ballet mistress at ABT?

The thing I will miss most from my school is my students and the lovely families that came together as a result of opening the school.

What I am looking forward to in working at ABT is being able to share what I have learned on a more sophisticated level (now we are getting into roles and dramaturgy. Yeah!) to the dancers that are going out there and performing those roles. I already started working with them last spring and it has been a real joy. I look forward to more of it.

Susan Jaffe

BIO: Declared by the New York Times as “America’s Quintessential American Ballerina” Susan Jaffe danced as a principal dancer with American Ballet Theatre for 20 years. Prominent in the international dance scene as well, her European engagements included performances with The Royal Ballet, The Kirov Ballet, The Stuttgart Ballet, The Munich State Opera Ballet, La Scala Ballet in Milan, The Vienna State Opera Ballet, The Royal Danish Ballet, The Royal Swedish Ballet, and The English National Ballet.

Ms. Jaffe’s versatility as a dancer allowed her to tackle a large range of choreographic works. This not only included her acclaimed interpretations of the classics like Swan Lake but also the dramatic works of John Cranko, Anthony Tudor, Agnes DeMille and Kenneth MacMillian. She also worked with and danced the works of many prominent choreographers such as Jiri Kylian, Twyla Tharp, George Balanchine, Jerome Robbins, Lar Lubovitch, Nacho Duato and Roland, Petit, David Parsons, Mark Morris, Merce Cunningham, Ronald Hynd, Frederick Ashton, Ulysses Dove and Lynn Taylor Corbett.

In 2003, one year after her retirement from the stage, Ms. Jaffe co-founded the Princeton Dance & Theatre Studio in Princeton, New Jersey where she enjoys passing on the wealth of her knowledge to her dance students. Along with teaching for American Ballet Theatre and giving corporate lectures for Duke Corporate Education, Ms. Jaffe has expanded into choreography. Her choreographic achievements to date include “The Nutcracker” “Pop Sonata” “Velez Pas de Deux” “Sleeping Beauty Act lll” “Raymonda Divertessments” “Novem Pas de Deux” “Ballet Studies”, “Tarantella”, “Royenne”, “UnCaged” and the “Cancan.” She also wrote a children’s book, “Becoming a Ballerina” for children ages 7-13.

Ms. Jaffe has recently been named Ballet Mistress at American Ballet Theatre; a position she will fulfill in October of 2010.

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Filed Under: 10 Questions With..., 4dancers, 4teachers, Editorial, Studios Tagged With: american ballet theatre, ballet mistress, Christina Bernal, Elena Tchernichova, gyrotonics, Irina Kolpakova, mikhail baryshnikov, Nancy Bielski and Julio Horvath, susan jaffe

5 Questions With…Risa Kaplowitz

August 25, 2010 by 4dancers

Over the next two days we will feature two people on 4dancers–with 5 questions each. Risa Kaplowitz and Susan Jaffe worked together to found Princeton Dance & Theater Studio, so we thought we’d reach out to them both and talk about their experiences with teaching and dance. Part I features Risa Kaplowitz…tune in tomorrow for Part II with Susan Jaffe…

Risa Kaplowitz
Risa Gary Kaplowitz

1. Can you tell readers a bit about how Princeton Dance & Theater
Studio came about and why you and Ms. Jaffe decided to collaborate together?

Susan and I were very good friends while studying at Maryland Youth Ballet (MYB). We fell out of touch during our individual careers, but at our ballet teacher, Tensia Fonseca’s 80th birthday party, we reconnected. Susan told some of us in confidence that she was going to be announcing her retirement soon. I had been working on a business plan for a studio in Princeton, and I probably had the first little idea at that party that maybe, just maybe, Susan would want to open it with me. My daughter was 4 at the time and I couldn’t find a local studio that offered what I wanted for her. I realized I wanted to open a place that had the essence—the great training plus the nurture—of MYB (which was the first training ground for many renowned ballet dancers including Julie Kent.)

During the reception of Susan’s final performance as Giselle at the Met, she put her arm around me and said, “Who knows, maybe one day you and I will open a school together.” That was all I needed to hear to be tenacious in getting everything in order so that she would finally say, “Okay, I’ll open it with you”. 

2. Would you describe your philosophy when it comes to teaching ballet and how it was formed over time?

My teaching is probably most reflective of Maggie Black and Marjorie Mussman. While I definitely have certain elements of Mrs. Fonseca’s and Lupe Serrano’s (whom I had while at the School of PA Ballet) “fire-in-the-belly” type of passion in the classroom, Maggie and Marjorie were instrumental in helping me to understand the physicality of ballet. Everything in my career changed after I began studying with them in NYC, and I want my students to have that type of knowledge sooner rather than later.

Although I teach their philosophy, I’ve developed my own language and imagery to communicate the concepts I first received from them.  I stress proper placement as the starting point of all work, which for me includes engaging the inner-thigh on the supporting leg and having an “inner” energy on the sides of the pelvis and an “outer” energy in the upper back. I call it the “Superman” look or suggest they think of it like a hydraulic—a force in on the sides of the hips, which comes out through the sides of the back like a fountain. This translates into a very strong and secure base while having a broad and expressive upper back without jutting the ribs out.

Maggie and Marjorie worked with many modern dancers as well as ballet dancers (in class with me at Maggie’s were such diverse dancers as ballet stars Martine Van Hamel, Kevin McKenzie, Robert Hill, Gary Christ, and Gelsey Kirkland to modern inventors such as Elisa Monte and Twyla Tharp’s company dancers). Maggie and Marjorie (who was ballet mistress/teacher for Mark Morris until her death last year) taught a very unaffected and grounded technique. It provided the necessary foundation for all styles of dance. I have modified this approach in my ballet classes to use more épaulement and port de bras focus than they did.

I have also been exposed to the ABT National Dance Curriculum, in which Susan became certified last year. I particularly like the port de bras co-ordination, and I will be going to their training sessions myself this summer. I’m certain that my ballet training philosophy will continue to evolve for the rest of my life, which is what makes teaching so interesting for me. 

Risa Kaplowitz, Teaching Students

3. What has been the most satisfying aspect of this portion of your dance career?

Seeing all of our students become empowered through authentic ballet training is priceless to me. We have several students who did not have the facility to be ballet dancers who have gone on to get into the finest summer intensives, and several others who are in premier training companies, such as HBII. We are always told that our dancers stand out in auditions because of their clean, strong technique. While we’ll certainly rejoice loudly when one of our students gets a contract to a major company, we rejoice daily at the incremental advances any student makes.

4. What is your best advice for those who want to improve their teaching ability in the classroom?

My advice is to bring in master teachers, watch great dancers, and teach, teach, teach. One of the great perks of having Susan as a business partner has not only been having Susan in the studios but also the many guest teachers whom she has brought in over the years such as Cynthia Gregory, Desmond Richardson, Robert Hill, Martine Van Hamel, Irina Dvorovenko, Maxim Beloserkovsky, Sascha Radetsky, Ethan Stiefel, and Stephanie Saland. This week we had Julie Kent at our SI. The experience of watching these talents so closely has informed my teaching and so has going to see great ballet performances as much as possible. Susan and I were fortunate enough to have watched several Paris Opera Ballet school classes in their studios in France.

Ironically, I learn the most from my students. I feel their work viscerally, which is important for my understanding of each individual dancer. After so many years of teaching, just recently am I able to say, “Oh I remember feeling this way with a student or seeing this with so and so, and this is what worked for them.” There are so many individual issues, which either can be exasperated or minimized with the right training, that it is important to provide as many individual corrections as possible as opposed to blanket general correction. As with anything, the more a teacher experiences and teaches, the more she has to offer.

5. What is it like to work with Ms. Jaffe, and how would you describe her?

This is a hard question because it is like asking me to describe a member of my family. The lines between our work relationship and long-term friendship are too blurred to comment simply. What I can say is that Susan has bridged beautifully her life on the stage to her life in the studio as a teacher, choreographer and coach. She is extremely detailed in her teaching and coaching and has been an extraordinary role model to our students.

As you may have heard, she was recently named a ballet mistress at ABT—a position for which her experiences over the past seven years at PDT has helped prepare her. While she will not be at PDT as regularly as before, she will come to teach whenever possible. Our students are like our children, and she wants to keep working with PDT as much as possible. I’ll miss seeing her every week, but her presence will always be felt in the school we built.

BIO: 

Risa Kaplowitz, a former principal ballerina with Dayton Ballet, drew critical acclaim for her portrayals of Giselle, Titania in Midsummer Night’s Dream, and Aurora in The Sleeping Beauty. Additionally, she was a member of Houston Ballet, Pennsylvania Ballet, Metropolitan Opera Ballet, and Manhattan Ballet.

Ms. Kaplowitz originally trained at Maryland Youth Ballet and went on to study with Maggie Black, Marjorie Mussman, Stuart Sebastian, Ben Stevenson, and Lupe Serrano. She has performed the repertoire of many choreographers including Fredrick Ashton, George Balanchine, Ben Stevenson, Stuart Sebastian, Dermot Burke, and Marjorie Mussman.

Ms. Kaplowitz first experienced the thrill of teaching ballet at the request of Josephine Schwartz, founder of Dayton Ballet. After her performing career, she became a regular teacher at Theater Dance Studio in NYC, assisted choreographers at The Julliard School and taught master classes for major dance conventions and competitions. After leaving the dance world for several years to grow a family and experience a “real world” business career as the New Jersey sales representative for Mikasa, Ms. Kaplowitz found her true calling when, in 2003, she co-founded Princeton Dance and Theater Studio (PDT) with former ABT ballerina, Susan Jaffe.

In addition to her duties at PDT, Ms. Kaplowitz is the Artistic director of DanceVision Inc. and founded D.A.N.C.E. (Dance As a Necessary Component of Education), an outreach program that brings dance to New Jersey schools. She has choreographed more than twenty works, and her choreography has been seen at New Jersey Symphony Orchestra’s Family Concerts at NJPAC. Ms. Kaplowitz’s original full-length ballet, The Secret Garden, based on the classic book by Francis Hodgson Burnett, premiered with DanceVision Youth Ensemble in 2008.

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Filed Under: 10 Questions With..., 4dancers, 4teachers, Editorial, Studios Tagged With: gelsey kirkland, kevin mckenzie, lupe serrano, maggie black, marjorie mussman, martine van hamel, maryland youth ballet, mrs. fonseca, risa kaplowitz, susan jaffe

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