On her toes
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Young Chang
Emily Yamashita will celebrate her first year of dancing en pointe
next week.
In the last 12 months, she has worn out 14 pairs of pointe shoes
because they break in too well and become more detrimental than helpful.
For her performance in American Ballet Theatre’s “Le Corsaire” at the
Dorothy Chandler Pavilion next week, Emily will need a new pair.
But the shoes are a small price to pay for the prestige the Newport
Coast girl is about to know.
As a child performer in “Corsaire,” the 12-year-old will get to dance
with some of the stars of ballet, including Julie Kent, Paloma Herrera,
Marcelo Gomes, Julio Bocca, Nina Ananiashvili and others. And she will
dance en pointe -- on the tips of her toes.
“Hardly any ballet requires young students on pointe,” said Salwa
Rizkalla, Emily’s instructor at the Southland Ballet Academy in Fountain
Valley.
About 10 other child dancers from Rizkalla’s dance company made it
into the production in Los Angeles. Shows will run Thursday through July
14, and different principal dancers will take the lead on varying nights.
Based on a Lord Byron poem, the action-packed “Le Corsaire” involves
everything from cliffhanging to sleeping potions, as well as a shipwreck
to tell the story of a pirate and a maiden slave and how their love
prevails.
Emily plays a “jardin girl,” literally a “garden girl,” which she
compares to a courtier.
The young performer was nervous during auditions in April because it
was said that all dancers had to have danced en pointe for at least a
year. At the time, she had only reached her eight-month mark. But through
a series of five cuts, Emily’s number kept getting called.
“Each time, she was so nervous,” mother Lisa Yamashita said. “And I
think it’s more nerve-racking for the parent sometimes.”
Emily made it into the final cast and has been practicing with
Rizkalla and ABT ballet mistresses since. Her grandparents will fly over
from Japan next week to watch the show.
“It’s very hard. It’s a lot of hard work, and it takes a lot of time
to learn and you have to have a lot of energy,” said the young dancer, of
being a ballerina at her age.
Lisa Yamashita drives Emily from Newport Coast every day to rehearse
at Rizkalla’s academy, which is a half-hour away. With her rigorous dance
schedule, it’s hard for Emily to hang out with peers and do non-dance
stuff like watch movies.
“But I like it because it’s an art and it’s very graceful and nice to
watch,” said Emily, who started dancing seven years ago in her late
grandfather’s room to the “Lion King” soundtrack.
Her dancing perks include having Kent autograph her pointe shoes,
which happened in April when the ABT principal guest-performed for
Rizkalla’s production of “Swan Lake” at Orange Coast College. New York
City Ballet’s Damian Woetzel joined Kent, as did Emily.
“She wants the girls to experience with the top people,” said Emily’s
mother.
Susan Jones, a ballet mistress who auditions and teaches children in
ABT productions, said the show will be a chance for Emily and other
children to be in “real contact” with their field’s finest.
“To see the best and to be right there,” said Jones, also a former
dancer with ABT. “For some of them who may be dancing now but won’t dance
in the future, it’s something they’re going to remember for the rest of
their lives.”
FYI
WHAT: “Le Corsaire”
WHEN: Thursday through July 14. Show times are 8 p.m. Thursday and
Friday, 2 and 8 p.m. Saturday, and 2 p.m. Sunday
WHERE: Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, 135 N. Grand Ave., Los Angeles
COST: $20-$90
CALL: (213) 972-0711
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