MISTY COPELAND . . .the BLACK SOLOIST
Ok . . .this young lady is "AMAZING" . . . .not only is she talented, but she represents a "CURVY WOMAN"
. . . I have a love for "BALLET" & I am fasinated by the grace and precise movemetns of this beautiful ART FORM. . . .I think it is one of the most beautiful expressions of ART & DANCE . . .I have been following her for about six years. (haven't seen her perform as of yet, but I'm working on it!)
Read about her amazing journey and hear her interveiw about her "DANCE" with
the ONE & ONLY "PRINCE" with Madame Noire


Born in Kansas City, Missouri and raised in San Pedro, California, Misty Copeland began her ballet studies at the age of 13 at the San Pedro Dance Center. At the age of fifteen she won first place in the Music Center Spotlight Awards. She then began her studies at the Lauridsen Ballet Center. Copeland has studied at the San Francisco Ballet School and American Ballet Theatre’s Summer Intensive on full scholarship and was declared ABT’s National Coca-Cola Scholar in 2000. She has danced Kitri in
Don Quixote and the Sugar Plum Fairy and Clara in
The Nutcracker.
Copeland joined ABT’s Studio Company in September 2000 and then joined American Ballet Theatre as a member of the corps de ballet in April 2001 and was appointed a Soloist in August 2007. Her roles with the Company include a Shade and the Lead D’Jampe in
La Bayadère, Milkmaid in
The Bright Stream, the Mazurka Lady in
Coppélia, Gulnare and and Odalisque in
Le Corsaire, the lead gypsy and a flower girl in
Don Quixote,
Duo Concertant, the Masks in Christopher Wheeldon's
VIII, the peasant pas de deux in
Giselle, one of The Nutcracker's Sisters in Alexei Ratmanksy's
The Nutcracker, a Gypsy in
Petrouchka, the Lead Polovtsian Girl in
Polovtsian Dances from Prince Igor, the Saracen Dancer in
Raymonda, a Harlot in
Romeo and Juliet, the Fairy of Valor in
The Sleeping Beauty, the pas de trois, a cygnet and the Hungarian Princess in
Swan Lake, the
Tchaikovsky Pas de Deux and roles in
Airs,
Amazed in Burning Dreams,
Baker’s Dozen,
Ballo della Regina,
Birthday Offering,
The Brahms-Haydn Variations,
Brief Fling,
Company B,
Désir,
Gong,
Hereafter,
In the Upper Room,
Overgrown Path,
Pretty Good Year,
Sechs Tänze,
Sinatra Suite,
Sinfonietta,
Within You Without You: A Tribute to George Harrison and
workwithinwork.
Copeland created the Spanish Dance in Alexei RAtmansky's
The Nutcracker and leading roles in
C. to C. (Close to Chuck),
Glow-Stop and
One of Three.
Copeland was a receipient of a 2008 Leonore Annenberg Fellowship in the Arts.
Ms. Copeland's performance's with American Ballet Theatre are sponsored by Susan Fales-Hill.
Her legs are AMAZING . . . .
The History of Ballet
Ballet is a formalized kind of performance dance, which originated in the Italian Renaissance courts of the 15th century, and which was further developed in France, Russia, and Britain as a concert dance form. The early portions preceded the invention of the proscenium stage and were presented in large chambers with most of the audience seated on tiers or galleries on three sides of the dancing floor. It has since become
a highly techinical form of dance with its own vocabulary. It is primarily performed with the
accompaniment of classical music and has been influential as a form of dance globally.
Ballet has been taught in ballet schools around the world, which use their own cultures and societies to inform the art. Ballet dance works (ballets) are choreographed and performed by trained artists, include mime and acting, and are set to music (usually orchestral but occasionally vocal). It is a poised
style of dance that incorporates the foundational techniques for many other dance forms.
This genre of dance is very hard to master and requires much practice. It is best known in the form
of Late Romantic Ballet or Ballet Blanc, which preoccupies itself with the female dancer to the exclusion
of almost all else, focusing on pointe work, flowing, precise acrobatic movements, and often presenting
the dancers in the conventional short WHITE FRENCH TUTU. Later developments include expressionist ballet, Neoclassical ballet, and elements of Modern dance.
America's First Negro Classic Ballet
Joseph Rickard (1918-1994) founded America's First Negro Classic Ballet
in 1947, gathering students from the African-American community.
To finance the school, he worked two jobs, in the mail room at Paramount Studios and driving an ice cream truck..
During its ten-year life, the First Negro Classic Ballet played a crucial part in advancing the place of African-Americans in American ballet. Although Joseph Rickard's troupe was not the first black ballet corps, it built on the accomplishments of its predecessor, the American Negro Ballet, founded in New York in 1937.
Joseph Rickard
The First American Negro Classic Ballet
The First American Negro Ballet, directed by von Grona, opened in 1937 at the Lafayette Theater in
Harlem with a live orchestra. The repertory included his Firebird. The opening season of Ballet Theatre
in 1940 included a Negro Unit, which presented one work, Black Ritual, choreographed by
Agnes de Mille. The First Negro Classic Ballet, directed by Rickard, premiered in Los Angeles in 1947,
and was the first to present a complete repertoire on pointe. Hitchins formed the Negro Dance Theatre,
an all-male company that performed in 1954. The New York Negro Ballet was at its peak in 1957,
when it toured Great Britain with Ward Flemyng as director. The group had begun performing in 1954
with six dancers from Maria Nevelska's studio and was variously called Ballet Negre or later
Ballet Americana, continuing until 1959 under the direction of Antony Bassae. In Washington, D.C.,
Capitol Ballet, created in 1961 as the performing unit of the Jones-Haywood School, invited many distinguished African-American dancers and choreographers to be guest artists.
A few African American performers managed to find employment with large ballet companies.
Betty Nichols was featured in Zodiac, choreographed by Todd Bolender, and she and Talley Beatty
danced in Blackface, choreographed by Lew Christensen, during Ballet Society's 1947 season in
New York City. Beatty also danced with Ruth Page Ballets, based in Chicago, in the early fifties.
At New York City Ballet, Arthur Bell danced in Frederick Ashton's Illuminations in 1950, and
Louis Johnson danced in Jerome Robbins's Ballade in 1952. Raven Wilkinson joined
Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo in 1956, perhaps the only black dancer to enter its ranks,
and later performed with Netherlands National Ballet. In 1956, Arthur Mitchell
became the first black dancer invited to become a full member of New York City Ballet,
where he rose to principal dancer before leaving to form Dance Theatre of Harlem.
Other dancers who worked under full-time contracts with ballet companies include Janet Collins
in the Metropolitan Opera's ballet; Sylvester Campbell in Netherlands National Ballet and
Royal Winnipeg Ballet; John Jones in Jerome Robbins's Ballets: U.S.A., the Joffrey Ballet,
and the Harkness Ballet; Christian Holder and Gary Chryst in the Joffrey; and Keith Lee in the
Harkness Youth Ensemble and American Ballet Theatre. Betsy Dickerson and
Elizabeth Thompson joined the Radio City Music Hall corps de ballet.
After World War II, Roland Petit's Ballets de Paris and the companies of several German opera houses,
notably Munich, Stuttgart, and Cologne, employed African American dancers. Gene Hill Sagan
danced with the Israel Opera and the Israel Classical Ballet. Ballet-trained black dancers also
found roles in Broadway shows, memorably in House of Flowers and Carmen Jones.
Janet Collins Janet Collins
As you can see African-American Ballet Dancers and the performance of Ballet has come a long way . . . .the struggle, the passion and the perseverance to become recognized as a Professional Ballet Dancer . . . has paid off . . . .just as America has our First African-American President . . .America has the First African-American Bellaet Soloist . . .as we honor and pay respect to the Legends of the First American Negro Classic Ballet Dancers that paved the way and endured the plight for young African-American dancers of today . . . .
For Nothing Is Impossible . . .With GOD . . . (Luke 1:37)