Dec 062012
 

Evan McKie Albrecht Evan McKie answers the Gramilano Questionnaire… Dancers’ EditionQ&A

When did you start dan­cing?
In the womb.

Why did you start dan­cing?
I will prob­ably never know the answer to that. I just know why I keep doing it.

Which dan­cer inspired you most as a child?
Rudolph, Pina, Kazuo Ohno, Gregory Hines, Erik Bruhn , Karen Kain, Evelyn Hart, Robert Tews­ley, Lynn Sey­mour, , Shir­ley Maclaine, , , , Sylvie, Carla, Eva Evdokimova, Douglas Lee, Galina Mezent­seva, Farukh Ruz­i­matov, Wil­liam For­sythe, Dana Casper­son, John Neumeier, Mar­cia, , Tina Turner, the cast of the Chorus Line movie, Mickey Mouse on that Steamboat…

Which dan­cer do you most admire?
I admire any­one who dances in this world.

What’s your favour­ite role?
One­gin, the Fool in Lady and the Fool, Lensky, Ham­let, Albrecht, Offer­torium in MacMillan’s Requiem… I’ll give you more when I retire one day.

What role have you never played but would like to?
I like suf­fer­ing in a role and for a role. I am not proud of that but it is what it is.

What’s your favour­ite bal­let to watch?
Too many to count, but I dis­like bad storytelling… I greatly value bril­liant storytelling.

Who is your favour­ite cho­reo­grapher?
It changes. I am eas­ily biased by intel­li­gent choreographers.

Who is your favour­ite writer?
I’m hav­ing another Phil­lip Roth phase… But I really like read­ing philo­sophy books and poetry. Usu­ally on the same days.

Who is your favour­ite dir­ector?
My Grand­mother was a theatre director.

Who is your favour­ite actor?
Chris­toph Walz, Javier Bardem, Laurence Olivier. I love Tilda Swin­ton and Glenn Close and really strong women with expert tim­ing. I think it’s the dan­ger­ously sharp edges these act­ors have that prick me and make me bleed. Unfor­tu­nately, I identify with them.

Who is your favour­ite singer?
I never get tired of Bil­lie Holiday.

What is your favour­ite book?
Balder­dash is my favour­ite game so I am going to say… the dic­tion­ary!!! It’s always changing.

What is your favour­ite film?
I could never answer that.

Which is your favour­ite city?
Paris 100%.

What do you like most about your­self?
If I say hon­esty will that sound dishonest?

What do you dis­like about your­self?
The things I can’t identify.

What was your proudest moment?
When I com­mit­ted to someone I truly love.

When and where were you hap­pi­est?
Hap­pi­ness is fleeting.

What or who is the greatest love of your life?
Life itself.

What is your greatest fear?
Emptiness.

If you could change one thing about your­self, what would it be?
My greatest fear.

What do you con­sider your greatest achieve­ment?
It’s hard to say until it’s all over isn’t it?

What is your most treas­ured pos­ses­sion?
Some­thing that can con­stantly change with me.

What is your greatest extra­vag­ance?
Being a bal­let dancer.

What do you con­sider the most over­rated vir­tue?
I’ve never thought about it.

On what occa­sion do you lie?
First Act Gis­elle

If you hadn’t been a dan­cer what would you have liked to do?
Noth­ing corporate.

What is your most marked char­ac­ter­istic?
Character.

What qual­ity do you most value in a friend?
Loyalty.

What qual­ity do you most value in a col­league?
Ability.

Which liv­ing per­son do you most admire?
I’m a secret admirer.

What do you most dis­like?
Lazy art.

What gift would you most like to have?
I wish I could tell when people are flirt­ing with me.

What’s your idea of per­fect hap­pi­ness?
In life it is an oxy­moron but on-stage it can exist.

How would you like to die?
Isn’t life about try­ing to fig­ure that out?

What is your motto?
Abramovic said: ”The artist should give and receive at the same time. ”

Evan McKie Paquita Evan McKie answers the Gramilano Questionnaire… Dancers’ Edition

Evan McKie — a biography

Cana­dian Evan McKie is a prin­cipal dan­cer with the Stut­tgart Ballet.

He was born in Toronto, where he received his ini­tial bal­let train­ing. In 1997 he began study­ing with the Kirov Academy in Wash­ing­ton D.C. and remained there for two years until an invit­a­tion from the legendary Pyotr Pestov enticed him to the John Cranko Schule in Stut­tgart in 2001. On leav­ing the school he worked his way up the ranks, even­tu­ally being appoin­ted prin­cipal dan­cer after his début in the title role of Kevin O’Day’s abstract bal­let Ham­let.

McKie has been for­tu­nate to have worked with numer­ous cho­reo­graph­ers on new pieces for the Stut­tgart troupe, includ­ing sev­eral col­lab­or­a­tions with Wayne McGregor, Marco Goecke and Chris­tian Spuck. He has also worked with John Neumeier, Mar­cia Hay­dée and Glen Tet­ley. He is a guest dan­cer with sev­eral pres­ti­gi­ous com­pan­ies, includ­ing the Paris Opera Bal­let, Uni­ver­sal Bal­let, The Tokyo Bal­let and The National Bal­let of Canada.

In July 2012 Evan McKie received the Pre­mio Apuli­Arte “Prix Grand Merit”, a prize awar­ded yearly by a panel of dance journ­al­ists for the season’s out­stand­ing per­form­ances. The journ­al­ists cited McKie’s per­form­ances in Cranko’s One­gin with the Paris Opera, in Rudolph Nureyev’s The Sleep­ing Beauty with the National Bal­let of Canada and in Cranko’s Swan Lake with the Stut­tgart Bal­let. He has also twice been lis­ted in Dance Europe’s Crit­ics’ Choice List for per­form­ances in Paquita and as Albrecht in Gis­elle.

Evan McKie has cho­reo­graphed two suc­cess­ful works for the Noverre Soci­ety “Young Cho­reo­grapher” even­ings in Stuttgart.

Off­stage, McKie works as a pho­to­grapher spe­cial­iz­ing in abstract por­traits and is also a guest writer and an hon­or­ary advis­ory board mem­ber for Dance Magazine, New York.

 

Pho­tos: from the top, Albrecht, The Stut­tgart Bal­let; Paquita (photo by Patri­cio Melo)

www.evanmckie.com
www.twitter.com/EVANMcKIE

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  • wp socializer sprite mask 16px Evan McKie answers the Gramilano Questionnaire… Dancers’ Edition
  • wp socializer sprite mask 16px Evan McKie answers the Gramilano Questionnaire… Dancers’ Edition
  • wp socializer sprite mask 16px Evan McKie answers the Gramilano Questionnaire… Dancers’ Edition
  • wp socializer sprite mask 16px Evan McKie answers the Gramilano Questionnaire… Dancers’ Edition
  • wp socializer sprite mask 16px Evan McKie answers the Gramilano Questionnaire… Dancers’ Edition
  • wp socializer sprite mask 16px Evan McKie answers the Gramilano Questionnaire… Dancers’ Edition
  • wp socializer sprite mask 16px Evan McKie answers the Gramilano Questionnaire… Dancers’ Edition
  • wp socializer sprite mask 16px Evan McKie answers the Gramilano Questionnaire… Dancers’ Edition
Jul 102012
 

Itali­ans are great dan­cers, but they don’t get much oppor­tun­ity to demon­strate that in their homeland.

The his­tory of bal­let is adorned with Italian tal­ent: Giusep­pina Bozza­c­chi was the first Swan­hilda in Cop­pélia;  three dazzling stars, Car­lotta Grisi, Fanny Cer­rito, and Marie Tagli­oni (also the first Sylphide) were cel­eb­rated by Per­rot in his Pas de Quattre; Pier­ina Leg­nani was named Prima Baller­ina Assol­uta by Petipa at the Mari­in­sky and was the first baller­ina to per­form 32 fou­ettés; Petipa cre­ated La Esmer­alda pas de six for Vir­ginia Zuc­chi,  and so on.

Italian ballerinas The dance drain: who will save ballet in Italy?

Although they didn’t come as thick and fast in the 20th cen­tury, Italia’s liv­ing legend cer­tainly made her mark inter­na­tion­ally, as did Elisa­betta Ter­ra­bust and Lili­ana Cosi, and London’s Royal Bal­let is surely grate­ful for the pres­ence of Aless­andra Ferri, Vivi­ana Dur­ante and Mara Galeazzi.… [con­tinue reading]

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Feb 272011
 

picone 336x600 Homage to Stravinsky with an addio to a transgender ballerina in VeronaThe Arena Bal­let com­mis­sioned a Strav­in­sky even­ing from local-boy Ren­ato Zan­ella, best known for his work in and . He chose Apol­lon Mus­agète and The Fire­bird — brave con­sid­er­ing that the stage pic­tures and cho­reo­graphic shapes are burned into every ballet-lovers’ memory.

In fact it was impossible to remove George Balanchine’s cho­reo­graphic genius from the mind when it was replaced by Zanella’s rather bland steps dur­ing Apol­lon Mus­agète was a tech­nic­ally pre­cise Apollo and gave the audi­ence some thrills with his high leaps and soft land­ings — a believ­able Greek god.

The Fire­bird (L’Oiseau de feu) was rather bet­ter. Greek baller­ina Maria Kou­souni was strong as the Fire­bird and Zan­ella seemed to be more a home with a more pre­cise story to con­vey.… [con­tinue reading]

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