Politics

Corella Ballet: high-energy, eclectic and international

The Spanish ballet company, which has made a mark on the dance world in just a few years, stops in Seattle this week on its first major U.S. tour, opening Thursday (May 19) at Meany Hall.

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Ashli Blow

The Spanish ballet company, which has made a mark on the dance world in just a few years, stops in Seattle this week on its first major U.S. tour, opening Thursday (May 19) at Meany Hall.

Angel Corella warns me at the beginning  of our phone interview that he likes to talk, and that’s what he does  almost nonstop for the next hour. But his enthusiasm is understandable.  The American Ballet Theatre superstar is leading Corella Ballet Castilla  y León on its first major U.S. tour, with a stop in Seattle this week  (starting May 19) at Meany Hall.

Corella founded his company in 2007  as the first classical ballet company in Spain in 22 years. Nacho Duato,  now departed for Russia, had converted the last ballet company (Compania  Nacional de Danza) into a modern troupe, forcing Corella and other classically  trained Spanish dancers to leave their native land to build ballet careers.  “Spain has always created ballet dancers but they haven’t had Spanish  companies to perform with,” explains Corella. “I want Spanish dancers  to have a place to call home and allow Spaniards to see their friends  and families dancing in their own country.”

Although Corella performs with the  company, he makes it clear he’s doing so because he knows his name  will draw audiences, not because he wants to create a showcase for himself.   Currently, 70 percent of Corella Ballet’s dancers are Spanish, including  Corella’s sister Carmen, with many of the others drawn from major  international troupes. They include ABT principal Herman Cornejo, and  former members of English National Ballet, National Ballet of Cuba, and  Munich Ballet. Corella plans to open a school next year that will offer  a curriculum reflecting the best of the different styles he’s been  exposed to, from Russia’s classical Vaganova style to the rapid-fire  Balanchine technique.

In just a few years, Corella Ballet  has made a significant mark on the dance world, becoming known  for the high-energy, eclectic style that characterizes Corella’s own  dancing. “I’ve been lucky to dance with the Kirov, La Scala, New  York City Ballet, and others and I can see that each has something wonderful  to offer,” says Corella, “so I don’t want to have a particular  type of dancer. It’s the diversity of bodies and minds that makes  us so special.

"We’re creating art and communication with the audience,  and every dancer has to see a role from their point of view. When you  throw your energy out to the audience, when you break that wall  with the audience, the magic starts to happen.”

In addition to choosing dancers with  distinctive bodies and styles, Corella is building a wide-ranging repertoire  from full-length classics like “Swan Lake” and “La Bayadere”  to pieces from superstar choreographers like Jerome Robbins, Twyla Tharp  and Christopher Wheeldon. Two Wheeldon pieces will be on the Meany program: “For 4,” originally created for Corella and three other male dancers,  and “DGV,” which is performed only by Corella Ballet and England’s  Royal Ballet.

Corella hasn’t forgotten his Spanish roots, and the Meany  program also features a flamenco-influenced pas de deux for Corella  and his sister Carmen by the flamenco choreographer María Pagés, along  with a Balanchine-inspired work by Clark Tippet originally created for  ABT.

Not surprisingly, Corella is finding  the transition to ballet director challenging, especially since Spain  doesn’t provide the same level of support for the arts as many other  European countries. But with his international reputation, the government  is taking notice and Corella Ballet is the only arts organization that  hasn’t suffered recent cuts from the federal government. He’s also  attracted significant support, about 70 percent of Corella’s Ballet total  budget, from the province where his company is located.

The next step  is a permanent home. The troupe does a season in Madrid and another  in Barcelona in addition to performing in 25 other cities throughout  Spain but doesn’t yet have a theater of its own. Corella is in negotiations  but can’t reveal details yet.

As for his personal performing career,  Corella says he is not sure how much longer that will last. He had hoped  to wait until retirement to start his company but things came together  more quickly and success has been greater than he expected. “We’re  always sold out and lines go for hours. The royal family is involved,  the quality of the dancers and the repertoire is very high and there  is always something new and exciting to do. We’re creating history  and that’s a wonderful thing.”

If you go: Corella Ballet Castilla  y León, May 19-21 at Meany Hall, University of Washington. Tickets cost  $46 ($43 for subscribers, $20 for students) and are available at the  UW Arts box office, 3901 University Way N.E., by phone (206-543-4880 or 800-859-5342), or online.

Ashli Blow

By Ashli Blow

Ashli Blow is a Seattle-based freelance writer who talks with people — in places from urban watersheds to remote wildernesses — about the environment around them. She’s been working in journal