Leaping back East
Artistic associate Karen Kain instrumental in company's return to Halifax
Source: |
Halifax Herald |
Date: |
June 2, 2002 |
Author: |
Elissa Barnard |
CONSIDERING THAT the National Ballet of Canada hasn't been to
Halifax in 12 years, Karen Kain is surprised tickets aren't selling
more briskly.
"It makes me very sad," says the company's former star ballerina
and now artistic associate. "We've gone to such effort to make this
happen. I've been working on it for a year and a half."
She has done a lot of the fundraising to make the Atlantic tour of
12 principal dancers possible and has also worked with the dancers to
rehearse two of three pieces in Monday night's program.
"It's going to be a stunning program," says Kain, "and you will
see some of the best dancers in our company."
Kain is rehearsing Balanchine's 1928 Appollo, set to Stravinsky,
and Eliot Feld's Intermezzo "and they are two ballets I absolutley
adore."
The Balanchine is "probably one of the best ballets ever
choreographed," says Kain. "It looks amazingly contemporary to my
eye. The simplicity and beauty are quite extraordinary."
Dancer Sonia Rodriguez describes American choreographer Eliot
Feld's 1969 Intermezzo, a romantic work about three couples with piano
music by Brahms, as being a like snow ball.
"It's a very intimate piece. It's like those little balls you
shake and you watch, it's like a precious little thing and you look at
it and the audiences really enjoy it."
Rodriguez, who joined the company as a 17-year-old from Spain in
1990, was keen to audition for Feld and get into the piece as part of
"Couple No. One."
"Karen had sold it quite nicely to us. She told us Eliot would be
somebody that probably would not be easy to work with but would bring
the best out of us."
Rodriguez, who was cast as Juliet this past season, has never
performed in Atlantic Canada. But she has been to Halifax with her
husband, world champion figure skater Kurt Browning.
"I think it'll be exciting for people in Halifax to have us back
and for us because it's a part of the country people love and it's
special for me. I love the East."
Her husband is ironically out West; he spends five months of the
year touring with Stars on Ice.
Rodriguez was born in Toronto, but grew up in Madrid and studied
at the Royal Conservatory in Madrid and at Princess Grace Academy in
Monaco. In 1989 she won an international competition in Capri. Betty
Oliphant, director of the National Ballet of Canada School, and head
of the contest's jury, told her the National would be interested in
her.
Rodriguez's life changed quickly. She met Kurt Browning before she
turned 18 when the National was on a Western tour and the Royal
Glenora Club in Edmonton, Browning's skating club, was holding a
reception for the dancers. Rodriguez wasn't invited but decided she
wanted to go; Browning was invited but didn't want to go. He ended up
being dragged to the podium to make a welcoming speech.
"He hadn't a clue who we were."
After talking to him, though, he drove to the company's next stop
in Calgary, the next stop, where his brother lives and "we got tickets
for him and his brother," says Rodriguez. "I must have made an
impression."
In 1995 Browning proposed to her from centre ice at Maple Leaf
Gardens. The couple has been together for 12 years, and copes with the
separation entailed by their careers.
"It's something you have to accept. It's a choice you make. Our
careers are not very long and we love and treasure them very much. The
time to do it is now. Whenever there is a little break we're
travelling back and forth."
Like Karen Kain, she wishes the company could travel more. "We'd
like to go out there more and be seen."
When Kain was dancing with the National she travelled
internationally and nationally.
"I spent my whole career, one year going East, the other year
going West, it was part of what we wanted to do as a national company
but then things were cut." (The touring office of the Canada Council
cut money for touring.)
"It's very sad. I wish it were different. I think we should be
seen everywhere; we should be on a world stage, it's important for the
dancers to have international careers, it's important for the
country."
Kain retired as a dancer five years ago and has totally adjusted
to the change. She doesn't take class. "I do a little bit of yoga by
myself and exercises."
As associate director, a lot of her job is fundraising. When she
gets a chance to coach dancers, it's a treat.
"It's my absolute most favourite thing to work with the dancers."
A staunch supporter of the National Ballet's artistic director
James Kudelka's during the Kimberly Glasco crisis, Kain feels the
company is in a good position artistically with Kudelka.
"For the first time in our history (we have) a well-respected
choreographer as artistic director creating work for the company. It
gives the company a unique voice. We have our own repertoire unique to
us."
But the struggle for finding is difficult, she says.
This tour has only been possible through the generosity of
corporations and individuals including the McCains in New Brunswick
and David and Margaret Fountain in Nova Scotia.
Kain will be coming to Halifax to see the company perform for its
first show on Monday.
"I'm really looking forward to seeing it in a more intimate
setting," she said. "I have a personal friendship with the Fountains
and I want to see them and I want to see the company back in Halifax.
"I'm delighted the tour is happening. I hope people will come out
and see us."
The third piece on the Atlantic Canadian program is Monotones II
by Frederick Ashton, with music by Erik Satie. The ballet is at the
Rebecca Cohn Auditorium, Dalhousie Arts Centre Monday and Tuesday
night, 8 p.m. Tickets are $42.
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