The
Royal Winnipeg Ballet, based in Winnipeg
, Manitoba
, is Canada
's oldest
ballet company and the longest
continuously operating ballet company in North America.
It was founded in 1939 as the "Winnipeg Ballet Club" by Gweneth
Lloyd and Betty Farrally. The name was changed to the "Winnipeg
Ballet" in 1941 and the company began touring Canada in 1945. In
1948, with the initiative of the Winnipeg Ballet, the
Canadian Ballet Festival was
formed.
The Royal Winnipeg Ballet was granted its royal title in 1953, the
first granted under the reign of
Queen Elizabeth II. It
completed its first American tour in 1954. In June that year the
RWB's rented premises were devastated by fire; the company's entire
stock of costumes, original music, choreographic scores and sets
was destroyed.
Today, the company spends 20 or more weeks a year on the road,
presenting more than 100 performances every year in centres large
and small. The company also mounts four productions a year in
Winnipeg's premier performing arts venue, the Centennial Concert
Hall. The company solidified its reputation under the artistic
directorship of Arnold Spohr from 1958 to 1988. André Lewis is the
current artistic director; he was appointed in 1996.
The dancer most associated with the RWB has been
Evelyn Hart.
Born in Toronto, Ontario
, in 1956, she made her professional debut with the
RWB in 1976. In 1980 she was awarded the bronze medal at
the World Ballet Concours in Japan,and the gold medal at the
prestigious International Competition in Varna, Bulgaria
, where she also received the Exceptional Artistic
Achievement Award. She was awarded the
Order of Canada in 1983. She left the RWB in
2005.
The Royal Winnipeg Ballet School, Professional Division is an
exclusive, full-time classical ballet training program for students
in grades 6 through 12. The school includes approximately 70 young
dancers, selected from around the world, and graduates have
international careers in top companies in Canada and abroad. The
current building opened in January, 1988.
In 2002, The Royal Winnipeg Ballet's interpretation of the story of
Dracula, choreographed by Mark Godden, was
filmed in a made for television titled
Dracula: Pages from a
Virgin's Diary directed by
Guy
Maddin. The film eventually was released theatrically.
Dancers
principal dancers
soloists
second soloists
See also
Obituaries
External links