vipa Posted September 15, 2015 Share Posted September 15, 2015 Daniel Levins, former principal dancer at ABT and teacher at the Feld School passed away on Sept. 15. He was also a member of NYCB for a time. What a fine dancer he was. Many remember him in Billy the Kid, Fancy Free, Rodeo among other roles. Link to comment
Helene Posted September 15, 2015 Share Posted September 15, 2015 Here's the announcement on Facebook by his husband: https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10207487384365839&set=a.1098429064022.17308.1325511622&type=1&theater People who were not in the NY area or visiting during his stage career will remember him as the choreographer Arnold in "The Turning Point," and according to IMDB, he also played a dance instructor in "The Goodbye Girl" and was a dancer in "Grease." His screen name was Daniel Levans. My condolences to his husband, family, and friends, on stage and off. Rest in peace, Mr. Levins. Link to comment
mimsyb Posted September 16, 2015 Share Posted September 16, 2015 What a wonderful presence on stage. And a wonderful teacher. His classes were both challenging and inspiring. Such sad news. Link to comment
Drew Posted September 16, 2015 Share Posted September 16, 2015 Croce reviewed one of his early ballets very strongly; i always hoped to see some his choreography one day...RIP Link to comment
rg Posted September 22, 2015 Share Posted September 22, 2015 f.y.i. from Audrey Ross, who does press for Feld's Ballet Tech: DANIEL LEVANS (1953-2015) It is with great sadness that I report the passing of Daniel Levans of a lung infection on September 15, 2015 in New York City. Raised in the Adirondack Mountain area of New York State, Daniel began Irish and tap dancing lessons at age five, and initiated his performing career with a touring carnival at age nine. His dance studies continued in the Vaganova and Graham traditions at the High School of Performing Arts, and in the Cecchetti and Imperial Russian Ballet School traditions with Vincenzo Celli, Barbara Fallis, Vera Nemchinova, and Richard Thomas in NYC. In 1969, at age fifteen, Levans became a charter member of Eliot Feld's American Ballet Company for its debut at the Spoleto Festival in Italy. He joined American Ballet Theatre in 1971, where his versatility actuated leading roles in works by Tudor, Balanchine, de Mille, Robbins, Fokine, Ailey, Neumier and others, as well as the classics. Noted for his performances within the dramatic repertory, Mr. Levans rose to the rank of Principal Dancer at age eighteen. Joining New York City Ballet in 1975, Levans danced under Balanchine and Robbins until a chronic knee condition forced his retirement from the ballet stage one year later. Mr. Levans also appeared in films, TV and stage productions, including Turning Point, Grease, Red Badge of Courage, Goodbye Girl, The Waltons, and Street Scene with New York City Opera. He choreographed musical theater productions of Miss Liberty and Bloomer Girl for Goodspeed Opera House, Brimstone for Stockbridge Theater and the workshops of Hal Prince and Musical Theater Works, and directed and choreographed productions for the Smithsonian Institute, the King Cole Loves Broadway series at the St. Regis hotel as well as Off-Broadway productions of Oh Boy!, The Gorey Details and Amphigorey, which received an Obie nomination for best musical. His ballets have appeared in the repertories of American Ballet Theater, Cincinnati Ballet, Ballet Oklahoma, Pittsburgh Ballet Theatre Universal Ballet, Seoul Ballet Theatre, Miami City Ballet, and Ballet's Galaxy of Stars. Mr. Levans began his teaching career in 1974 at Barbara Fallis and Richard Thomas' New York School of Ballet, and has taught and coached for ballet companies and schools, universities and colleges, as well as Broadway music theatre productions. He was a longtime master teacher at Eliot Feld's Ballet Tech, which remarked that "he imbued generations of students with his passion for the rigor, technique, epaulement, elegance and continuity of classical ballet. Yes, part of him goes on in those he trained." Audrey Ross Link to comment
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