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Marga

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Everything posted by Marga

  1. Thanks, lmspear, for posting this link. I just watched the whole 50 minutes of it. Wonderful! __________________________________________________________________ edited to remove identifying elements
  2. Thank you so much for this! I was addicted to this show - "Hart to Hart", it was called - and never missed an episode. I love the long, sustained beginning as the opening credits are shown - a real ballet class, with the teacher's voice heard, not a cut-short segment of tiny sound and sight bites like we get these days.
  3. Wouldn't it be great if other companies did this? What a wonderful preview of Het's new crop of dancers!
  4. Joey Gorak is very deserving of it. Congratulations to him!
  5. Thanks, MRR - this is wonderful. Gomes is introduced with the correct pronunciation of his name (naturally!): "Marselo Gomesh", which is the Portugese pronunciation. Years ago in a magazine interview, Marcelo was asked how to pronounce his name, and he answered the same way, Marselo Gomesh, adding that he didn't mind how it was pronounced. What a guy! It's lovely to hear him speaking Portugese in his resonant voice, isn't it? (Listening as I write, I heard him mention Fernando 'Bujonesh'.) It's great he got such a long TV interview, including several videoclips of his dancing. He looks fantastic gesturing and speaking, sitting so straight, yet relaxed. He plants a nice smooch on the host's cheek at the end. Listen up, American TV! Who'll be the first talk show host to give Marcelo Gomes equal time in English?
  6. Daniil Simkin just danced his "Les Bourgeois" solo on 'So You Think You Can Dance'. He was not announced earlier, just prior to his coming onstage as a "surprise". We know he's in Japan right now, so this was obviously taped last week when he tweeted the picture of the SYTYCD set.
  7. Actually, Daniil is still quite young. He's 23, turning 24 in October. (Sarah Lane is 26 as you surmised.)
  8. Skylar Brandt is corps de ballet. And, IMO, there's nothing 'only' about any of ABT's apprentices!
  9. The NYT article is not so much an article as part of an ongoing new series which features a different celebrity each week, a human interest column for all intents and purposes. The structure is always the same: what the chosen celebrity wears on each day of the week and why. It's called "What I Wore". I think it's wonderful that a celebrity from the ballet world was chosen so early into the series.
  10. As a non-smoker, I agree with your statement 100%. As a home-birther, I agree with homebirth advocates who have cogent reasoning behind their choice. As a breastfeeding mother, I agree with (and can present) all the logical reasons why breastfeeding is the superior infant feeding method. As an Estonian whose countrymen were kidnapped, tortured, killed, and sent to Siberia in cattle cars, I agree with all who explain why Communism is evil. As a proponent of Vaganova training, I agree with those fanatical Russians who see it as the epitome of ballet training and hoist it high above the R.A.D. and Cecchetti methods. Although my examples don't all qualify as danger/no danger, they show more than personal preference. They are my deep-seated beliefs. However, my musing "why should anyone's liberty be privileged?" is a philosophical query that has nothing to do with personal preference, law, or morality. This thread has a polarizing influence (is that statement discussing the discussion? I can't tell anymore!) which will continue to separate us into factions as there is no real final answer to the topic at hand: dancers who smoke. Not that there has to be a final answer (now I'm rambling). I'm just interested to see what new thoughts will emerge from this think tank (is that sentence discussing the discussion? Oh dear, I just don't know!) Moderators, feel free to take a scalpel to my post.
  11. Did anyone see the advertisement in last Sunday's NYT Magazine for First Republic Bank? It pictures Michele Wiles with her husband and the quote, seemingly attributed to both of them, reads "When my business was growing, I received an Eagle Loan from First Republic. Their quick turnaround was critical to my success." Under the quote both names are printed, James McCullough and Michele Wiles, along with their occupations. I was perplexed by this and reread it a few times last Sunday. I began to wonder if they're in business together now. Here is a quote from the section about Michele Wiles in the Feb-March Pointe Online magazine, from an aricle about dancers married to non-dancers: For the full article: Married to Normal Folk
  12. This question of yours, kfw, is the crux of the matter. Delving further - and getting more philosophical as well as political: why should anyone's liberty be privileged? History has shown us, and world events continue to show us, that, despite written constitutions, democratic discussions, common sense and logic, liberty (in general) is not an equal-opportunity privilege for all human beings.
  13. One of my most memorable childhood activities was creating cigar box gardens, miniature architectural displays, really. Our elementary school teacher had us make them and I got hooked, creating many more after the class assignment. All I had to do was ask the corner candy store owner for an empty cigar box when I wanted to start a new one. I filled the box with dirt, dropped in grass seed, landscaped (the creative part), then waited for the grass to grow. The inside of the cigar box lid was painted and illustrated to complete the diorama. (Helene, The mere mention of Rhinebeck brings back a flood of memories, too...)
  14. I just wanted to tell you how nostalgic you have made me, Bart! I miss my father terribly, and all his siblings. All 5 brothers, 1 sister, and their spouses - everyone of them except for my mother - smoked and that smoky haze was part of every family gathering. Ironically, the children - my cousins - don't smoke and my own foray was relatively short-lived. Folks smoked in their cars, too, so anyone being transported by a smoker had to inhale the smoke encircling their heads. How many of us spent our childhood sitting captive in such cars? As smoking was considered normal, no one said anything. I'm surprised that more people haven't succumbed to smoking-related diseases now that a few generations have grown up having lived with the smoking addictions of those close to them.
  15. My blue-collar worker father always smoked throughout his dinner, cigarette in one hand, fork in the other. My (classy) mother, who has never smoked, just learned to live with it. To me, it was a normal thing to see while I was growing up in suburbia on LI in NY. Oh, and my dad's highball, which he made for himself after getting home from work, sat to the upper right of his plate. He sipped it between bites and puffs.
  16. This has not been nearly as entertaining as a night at the ballet, but, taken as a roundtable discussion or salon piece, it held one's attention right through to the end. (And now I have embarrassed myself by blatantly discussing the discussion as if I held myself in such high esteem as to be exempted from the forum rule!) I am the mother of a non-smoking ballet dancer. What has concerned me most about the dancers smoking issue is having watched young students develop into fine dancers who, despite being smart young women, began to smoke in their late teens as a way to keep thin. (I, as a dance major 46 years ago, did the same thing, and smoked until pregnant with my first child, as I was still involved in ballet, and, of course, was addicted after 8 years of daily smoking. I have not smoked at all in 38 years, however, and don't miss it one bit.) Given what I saw happen with so many young ballet dancers, I don't believe that their role-model dancers had as much to do with their starting to smoke as did the beginning of the most intense phase of their dance careers. Coffee and cigarettes go together for dancers all over the world as the most popular way to skip meals. One of my peers back in the day lost a tremendous amount of weight (she became anorexic before we knew the word for it) and survived on only black coffee and cigarette smoking, which she took up at age 21 when her dance career was on the brink of becoming something special.
  17. It's John Clifford himself who is posting his pics to the site!
  18. There is a "Contact Us" at the very bottom of the page. It opens to the following page (an email address, street address, and lots of 'important' phone numbers): Contact NYCB
  19. Marnee Morris died on May 28th, 2011. Her children have started a facebook page in tribute to her and to remember her and ask for posts from those who knew her. The page is called 'Marnee Morris Memorial'. I got the information from Linda Hamilton who posted it on her facebook page.
  20. A second way to do it is to 'copy' the part you want and hit "add reply" (next to 'start a new topic') at the bottom right of the page. When you get to the box to write your post, press the quote icon (little picture of a quote cloud, like in the comics) which is the third icon going in from the left on the menu above the writing box. You'll see brackets with the word 'quote' in them followed by brackets with the word 'quote' after a slash mark appear in the writing box. Position your cursor between the two sets of brackets (you can make them go farther apart by using the space bar, if you like) and 'paste' your copied part of the post into the space. Then, go ahead and add your response. You'll get a nice box around the quote when your post is posted. (Alternately, you can 'paste' your post part first, then highlight it, and then, press the quote icon. I just did that above. These two ways do leave out the original poster's name, date, and time of post, though. If your don't want the original poster's name, necessarily, then you can also manually type in a (bracket - the word 'quote' - end bracket) at the beginning, and (bracket - forward slash - the word 'quote' - end bracket) at the end of your quote. (If I actually put in the marks I described, it would come out and give me the empty box you see, hence the descriptive words above.In conclusion, all roads lead to Rome!
  21. I hit "reply" (next to 'edit' below the post) so that the whole quote comes up with the HTML. Then I delete the parts of the post I don't need for my response. For example, here's your entire post brought up with all the codes by pressing "reply": Here's your post with part of it removed manually by me: When you delete the extraneous parts, make sure you don't delete the part between the first set of brackets you'll see when you hit "reply" (nor the brackets!), or the word 'quote' (the endquote) in the last set of brackets (nor the brackets). If you do accidentally delete the endquote, just type it in manually. It's needed to close the quote off and make it appear in a box.
  22. The above quote was mine and I've always been positive about the Benois Prize. I even wrote a step-by-step explanation of how the nominations and selection of winners works. It's on BT somewhere in the posts from a few years ago. With the above statement I wanted to make sure that people read Isabella Boylston's name again, in case they missed it going over the list. As you champion your favourite dancers, I champion mine!
  23. I think I could also 'get into' Let the Great World Spin. NYC was my stomping ground even though I didn't quite live there. City life was in my blood and I spent so much time and many stays there with people who lived in various parts of town that I would probably relate to the book quite intensely. NY was teeming was 'characters'! (I tried to get an apartment in 1969, but $300/mo. was just too high a rent for my earnings!) Thank you for the recommendation!
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