Ballet NYC - History and Mission
The History and Mission of the New York City Ballet
Edgar Degas's painting, entitled Dance Class at the Opera, shows four women dressed in beautiful, almost ethereal looking ballet dresses, complete with sashes at the waist and perfect buns.
Some of the women are waiting and others are preparing for what the viewer believes, will be a fantastic program. Degas was able to portray movement, passion, and the belief that the ballerinas were preparing for something in such a distinctive, yet persuasive way, that the viewer can't help but be pulled into the painting. This is often the case with ballet, a form of art, of dance, unparalleled by others, yet studied by many. The grace, discipline and pain that come with ballet are not only studied, but should be admired as well. As a short introduction to ballet, this paper will focus on the New York City Ballet (NYCB). In this capacity, it will provide both the evolution of this institution historically, and focus on the role that its mission statement has played upon the organization.
History of the NYCB
The story of the NYCB starts in 1933. Though the institution we know today was neither established nor constructed in that year, the fodder for what would become the NYCB was, in fact, concocted in 1933. The history thus begins with Lincoln Kirstein, who envisioned an American sort of ballet, not French, nor Russian, and who wanted young dancers to be trained and schooled in this capacity....
Othello Costumes Designing costumes for Othello, in whatever form -- play, ballet or opera, presents a few problems from the outset. First, of course, is the necessity for the costume to enhance the feeling of paranoia of Othello, a Moor in a Caucasian society. Second, Iago needs to be malevolent without being evil personified; he is, perhaps, simply overly worldly and overly ambitious, as is his wife, Emily. And third, Desdemona
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