Eliot Feld
Eliot Feld | |
---|---|
Born | |
Alma mater | High School of Performing Arts School of American Ballet |
Occupation(s) | ballet choreographer, performer, teacher, and director |
Known for | American Ballet Company Feld Ballet New Ballet School New York Public School for Dance Ballet Tech |
Parent(s) | Benjamin Noah Feld and Alice (née Posner) |
Awards | Guggenheim Fellowship, 1969 |
Eliot Feld (born July 5, 1942) is an American modern ballet choreographer, performer, teacher, and director. Feld works in contemporary ballet.[citation needed] His company and schools, including the Feld Ballet and Ballet Tech, are involved in dance and dance education in New York City.
Feld has choreographed 149 ballets since 1967, with his work being performed by such companies as American Ballet Theatre, the Joffrey Ballet, the Juilliard School, New York City Ballet, the New York City Opera, and Mikhail Baryshnikov, among many others.
Life and career
[edit]Feld was born in Brooklyn, New York,[1] the son of Alice (née Posner), a travel agent, and Benjamin Noah Feld, an attorney.[2][3] Feld attended the High School of Performing Arts in New York, and studied at the School of American Ballet and the New Dance Group, as well as with Richard Thomas and Donald McKayle.
He performed as a child in George Balanchine's original production of The Nutcracker as the Nutcracker Prince; and later with the companies of Mary Anthony, Pearl Lang, and Sophie Maslow. At sixteen he appeared on Broadway in West Side Story and was cast as Baby John in the movie version of the musical;[1] during the filming of "Cool" (one of the hardest dances in the film), Feld was sick with pneumonia.[4] His other Broadway credits from this period include I Can Get It for You Wholesale and Fiddler on the Roof.
He appeared on television on The Garry Moore Show and The Ed Sullivan Show.
Later, Feld joined American Ballet Theatre, leaving at age 25 to form his own company.
In the early 1980s, with Cora Cahan, Feld founded the Joyce Theater as a home for the Feld Ballet.[5][6] Feld was also instrumental in the creation of the Lawrence A. Wien Center for Dance & Theater at 890 Broadway in New York City.
Feld's companies and schools
[edit]In 1967, at the age of twenty-five, Feld broke away from the American Ballet Theatre to form his own company, the American Ballet Company. Feld used his new company, later known simply as Feld Ballet, to explore a variety of dance genres.
In 1978, Feld began a ballet school, the New Ballet School. Feld believed that all children should have the opportunity to learn dance, regardless of their family income. In keeping with that philosophy, and in partnership with the New York City Board of Education, he auditioned more than 1,500 children at eight New York City public schools; almost 150 students were then enrolled, tuition-free, to a 17-week course at the New Ballet School. Additional dancers at the school were drawn from other troupes and academies. Since its 1978 founding, Feld's school has auditioned more than 900,000 New York City public school students, and invited more than 26,000 children to take free Introduction to Ballet classes.[citation needed] In 1996 the school changed its name to the New York City Public School for Dance.
In 1997, Feld merged the New York City Public School for Dance and Feld Ballet into Ballet Tech, providing a unified organization, and establishing a professional performing outlet for the school's graduates. In 2003, Feld disbanded Feld Ballet to focus on his schools.[1] Today, Ballet Tech's activities include the tuition-free New York City Public School for Dance, and Kids Dance, a pre-professional children's group.[1]
Choreography
[edit]Feld has choreographed 149 ballets since 1967. His work has been performed by the American Ballet Company, American Ballet Theatre, the Atlanta Ballet, Mikhail Baryshnikov, Feld Ballets/NY & Ballet Tech & Kids Dance, the Boston Ballet, the Joffrey Ballet, the John Curry Skating Company, the Juilliard School, the London Festival Ballet, the National Ballet of Canada, the New York City Ballet, the New York City Opera, the Pacific Northwest Ballet, the Richmond Ballet, the Royal Danish Ballet, the Royal Swedish Ballet, the Royal Winnipeg Ballet, and the San Francisco Ballet, among others. Feld planned a ballet for Patrick Swayze and Mikhail Baryshnikov, prevented by Swayze's knee reconstruction.[7]
Feld's choreography also appeared in the revival of the Broadway musical On the Town (2001), performed in Central Park. In place of the company's usual summer engagement at the Joyce Theater, Feld included several of his own dancers of the Ballet Tech company.
Feld uses aspects from ballet and modern dance and fuses them together in his work. "The down of one, the up of the other — both beauties attracted me, I think I've spent my choreographic life trying in some way to reconcile, cope, deal with these two elements.[8] He claims to have always "loved the pointe shoe."
Feld's works are varied and contain anything from off-beat music to aerobic exercises, including somersaults, push-ups, sprints, leaps, and calisthenics.[9] Some of his choreography was inspired by Jewish material; other works were influenced by Martha Graham. Feld has choreographed 15 ballets to the music of Steve Reich.
Pointing 3, Feld's most recent ballet, premiered in New York in June 2018; it was choreographed for 4 students from the Ballet Tech school, to the second movement of Music for Airports, by Brian Eno, arranged by David Lang.
In May 2024, Feld and Ballet Tech announced that most of Feld's ballets were being placed in the public domain.[10]
Selected choreographic works
[edit]- 1967: Harbinger (May 1967; American Ballet Theatre, New York State Theater)[11] - set to music by Sergei Prokofiev
- 1967: At Midnight (ABT) — set to music by Gustav Mahler
- 1969: Intermezzo #1 — set to waltzes by Johannes Brahms[12]
- 1974: Tzaddik[13] - set to music by Aaron Copland
- 1974: Sephardic Song[13]
- 1977: A Footstep of Air (Eliot Feld Ballet, Wolf Trap National Park for the Performing Arts)[14] — set to music by Beethoven[12]
- 1978: La Vida (April 1978, Eliot Feld Ballet, Plymouth Theatre) — set to music by Aaron Copland[15]
- 1978: Santa Fe Saga (April 1978; Feld Ballet, Plymouth Theatre) — set to music by Morton Gould, featuring Mikhail Baryshnikov[15]
- 1978: Half Time - set to music by Morton Gould
- 1979: Danzon Cuban — set to music by Aaron Copland[13]
- 1979: Papillon[16]
- 1982: Anatomic Balm (Feld Ballet, Joyce Theater)[6] — set to ragtime[12]
- 1982: Play Bach (Feld Ballet, Joyce Theater)[6] — set to Bach[12]
- 1982: Straw Hearts (October 1982, Feld Ballet, Joyce Theater)[17]
- 1984: Adieu (Feld Ballet, Joyce Theater)[18] — dedicated to Feld's late teacher Richard Thomas[12]
- 1984: The Jig Is Up[19]
- 1984: The Grand Canon (Feld Ballet, Joyce Theater)[20] — set to music by Steve Reich[12]
- 1985: Against the Sky- music by Bela Bartok[21]
- 1985: Intermezzo No. 2 - music by Johannes Brahms
- 1985: Medium: Rare — Music by Steve Reich
- 1985: Aurora I — Music by Steve Reich
- 1985: Aurora II — Music by Steve Reich
- 1986: Echo — Music by Steve Reich
- 1986: Bent Planes — Music by Steve Reich
- 1988: The Unanswered Question: Some Intimations of the American Composer Charles Ives (April 1988, New York City Ballet, New York State Theatre) — set to Charles Ives' The Unanswered Question
- 1988: Kore — Music by Steve Reich
- 1990: Ion — Music by Steve Reich
- 1991: Clave — Music by Steve Reich
- 1992: Hello Fancy[22]
- 1993: The Relative Disposition of the Parts (March 1993, Feld Ballets/NY, Joyce Theater) — set to Bach's orchestral suites[22]
- 1995: Chi — Music by Steve Reich
- 1995: Tongue and Groove — Music by Steve Reich
- 2004: Proverb — Music by Steve Reich
- 2004: A Stair Dance — Music by Steve Reich
- 2004: Backchat (April 2004; Ballet Tech, Joyce Theater) — set to "Idle Chatter Junior" by Paul Lansky
- 2005: Sir Isaac's Apples — Music by Steve Reich - commissioned by The Juilliard School
- 2008: Isis In Transit — Music by Steve Reich
- 2008: Dotty Polkas — set to music by Johann Strauss II and Josef Strauss
- 2008: Quickstep — set to music by Steve Martland
- 2013: Upside Dance — set to Scandinavian folk music
- 2014: KYDZNY — set to music performed by the Raya Brass Band
- 2015: A Yankee Doodle (June 2015, Kids Dance/Ballet Tech, Joyce Theater)
- 2017: Pointing 1 — set to music by Julia Wolfe
- 2018: Pointing 2 — set to music by Paul Lansky
- 2018: Pointing 3 — set to music by Brian Eno, arranged by David Lang
Accolades
[edit]Feld has picked up numerous awards, including the John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship (1969), the Dance Magazine Award (1990), and an honorary doctorate degree from Juilliard (1991).[citation needed]
Further reading
[edit]- Percival, John. Modern Ballet. New York: Harmony Books, 1980.
- Chase's Calendar of Events 2007. New York: McGraw-Hill, 2007.
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d Kourlas, Gia (June 12, 2013). "A School for Young Dancers Grows Up: Eliot Feld's Ballet Tech Program Is Expanding". The New York Times.
- ^ Block, Maxine; Anna Herthe Rothe; Charles Moritz (1971). Current Biography Yearbook. H.W. Wilson Company. p. 126.
- ^ Polner, Murray (1982). American Jewish Biographies. Facts on File. p. 105. ISBN 978-0-8719-6462-5.
- ^ Barrios, Richard (2020). West Side Story: The Jets, The Sharks, and The Making of a Classic. New York: Running Press. p. 97. ISBN 978-0-7624-6948-2.
- ^ Kisselgoff, Anna (July 26, 1981). "Creating A Theater Just for Dance". The New York Times. Retrieved May 4, 2008.
- ^ a b c Anderson, Jack (May 30, 1982). "DANCE VIEW; The Feld Christens Its New Home". The New York Times.
- ^ Rickey, Carrie (September 15, 2009). "Screen star Patrick Swayze, 57". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Archived from the original on November 26, 2023. Retrieved November 26, 2023.
- ^ Dunning, Jennifer (April 30, 1988). "Feld at the City Ballet: A Man of Both Worlds". The New York Times.
- ^ Reynolds, Nancy; Malcolm McCormick (2003). No Fixed Points Dance in the Twentieth Century. Yale University Press. p. 472. ISBN 978-0-3000-9366-7.
- ^ https://www.broadwayworld.com/article/Eliot-Feld-Places-His-Ballets-In-The-Public-Domain-Feld-And-Ballet-Tech-Donate-Archive-To-NYPL-20240528 [bare URL]
- ^ Dunning, Jennifer (August 8, 1995). "A Romp Relived, 86 Ballets Later". The New York Times.
- ^ a b c d e f Smith, Sid (January 6, 1985). "Eliot Feld Storms Back-- Ballet's Bad Boy Has Grown Up". Chicago Tribune.
- ^ a b c Kriegsman, Alan M. (August 12, 1978). "Feld's 'Danzon'". The Washington Post.
- ^ Kriegsman, Alan M. (July 25, 1977). "Eliot Feld Ballet's Impeccable Program At Wolf Trap: 'A Footstep of Air,' 'A Soldier's Tale' And 'The Real McCoy'". The Washington Post.
- ^ a b "Eliot Feld Ballet Set For a Broadway Season". The New York Times (March 27, 1978).
- ^ Kriegsman, Alan M. (December 23, 1979). "Eliot Feld: Wised-Up Wunderkind". The Washington Post.
- ^ Kiseelgoff, Anna (October 12, 1982). "Feld Ballet 'Straw Hearts,' A New Suite". The New York Times.
- ^ Anderson, Jack (April 16, 1984). "DANCE: Premiere Of Eliot Feld's 'Adieu'". The New York Times.
- ^ Kisselgoff, Anna (April 11, 1984). "DANCE: Eliot Feld Ballet". The New York Times.
- ^ Kisselgoff, Anna (April 13, 1985). "DANCE: The Feld Ballet Performs 'Grand Canon'". The New York Times.
- ^ Dunning, Jennifer (April 4, 1985). "THE DANCE: Feld Ballet With 'Against The Sky'". The New York Times.
- ^ a b Kisselgoff, Anna (March 6, 1993). "Review/Dance; The Feld Shows Off Its Young Pupils With a Gala". The New York Times.
External links
[edit]- Eliot Feld at IMDb
- Eliot Feld at the Internet Broadway Database
- 1942 births
- American ballet teachers
- American ballet choreographers
- Jewish American male actors
- American male ballet dancers
- Fiorello H. LaGuardia High School alumni
- Living people
- Jewish dancers
- People from Brooklyn
- New York City Ballet Diamond Project choreographers
- Choreographers of New York City Ballet
- Ballets by Eliot Feld