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Emily Coates |
Meet Emily Coates, who's danced with New York City Ballet,
Mikhail Baryshnikov and Twyla Tharp. And, now she's a full time
student at Yale!
In her most recent appearance with Tharp, The New York Times
described her as "coolly elegant . . . with a body that seems
capable of doing anything." Clement Crisp, the noted British
critic, said "Emily Coates is an elegant performer, a worthy
partner for Baryshnikov. . ."
Finis: Well, Emily, after seeing you onstage, and watching you work in
my ballet class, I agree with the reviewers. Besides a refined
technique and all that goes with it, you have a sense of self that
is quietly evident. You have your own way of moving the air about
you that is compelling. It's no wonder you've been dancing with the
greats.
Tell us about your beginnings.
Emily: I was born in Cleveland, Ohio, and then moved to Pittsburgh at
age 2. From age 4-6 my family lived in Brussels, Belgium, which is
where I started dancing (early movement classes in French at the
Brussels Women's Club.) Back to Pittsburgh after that, where I began
to study ballet at a small school in the suburbs that taught the
Royal Academy of Dance method. Every spring, an examiner arrived
from London to judge our technical abilities and performance skills.
I think doing those examinations at such a young age helped me get
over any kind of stage fright - I don't get nervous on stage, now.
Nothing compares to being 8 years old, facing a stern British woman
who is scrutinizing your turnout!
At age 12, I moved downtown to study at Pittsburgh Ballet
Theater, under Patricia Wilde (artistic director) and David
Holliday. There, I performed in the Nutcracker as a Candy Cane and
later, with the company in Western Symphony and Giselle. I attended
summer programs at the School of American Ballet (SAB) for three
years before deciding to move to New York to study at SAB full-time.
I finished my last two years of high school at the Professional
Children's School.
Finis: So, you naturally moved right on, into the New York City Ballet?
Emily: Right after the final spring workshop performance, my senior year
of high school, Peter Martins told me that I was invited to be an
apprentice with the company. And about a year after that, I received
my corps contract. I danced with NYCB for six years. The 5th year, I
was in a piece by a French choreographer named Angelin Preljocaj,
who had been invited by Peter Martins to choreograph a work for the
1997 Diamond Project. This piece pretty much changed my life.
Finis: I saw that ballet with you in it, and although I didn't know what
was going on all the time, I couldn't keep my eyes off you.
Emily: We wore ballet slippers, not pointe shoes; and the choreography
was contemporary, not at all classical. I basically fell in love
with modern dance in the process of making that piece. Angelin told
us in the beginning of the rehearsal process that he wanted to make
the piece around our personalities; he wanted to get to know each of
us as individuals. I almost cried! His interest in our humanity
really spoke to me.
In the same rehearsal period, we were rehearsing Sleeping Beauty
- I was learning one of the solo Fairy variations. I spent the first
half of the day with Angelin and his rehearsal director, Naomi,
exploring their very organic version of humanity, and then crossed
the hallway to the other studio for the second half of the day,
where much of the time was spent straightening out lines and making
sure everyone had their arms in the same position, and working to
technically perfect, almost militantly, my Fairy variation. The
contrast in atmosphere between the two studios was illuminating -- I
began to feel like pointe shoes and classical ballet were far too
restricting to my natural way of moving and to my personality, and
did not offer what I was interested in getting out of dance. And I
started to feel like I didn't fit in at NYCB anymore. It was a
strange feeling - I had really believed in myself as a part of New
York City Ballet for so many years, but suddenly I began to doubt my
own place there. It was a difficult decision to make, and it took
over a year to do it, but I ended up leaving the company to explore
modern dance and find something more me -- very idealistic goals.
Finis: But I'm sure you learned a lot, performing as much as you did at
City Ballet?
Emily: NYCB seems like a very long time ago. It was my first job, so in
many ways it was simply about learning out how to be a professional
dancer, which included figuring out who I was as a dancer and what I
wanted to get out of dancing. I went into the situation thinking
that I was every ounce a ballerina and came out six years later
thinking, "I know that I'm a dancer, but maybe the tutu and the
tiara don't interest me so much…" That was a revelation I never
anticipated. I also performed A TON there during the season, so
being on stage was sort of like walking down the street - performing
that much makes you fearless. There's no preciousness about the
night's performance, when there are thirty more where that one came
from.
Finis: Yes, that's one distinct advantage of being in City Ballet; you
probably get more actual stage time than dancers in any other
company in the world.
Emily: One more important thing about NYCB – working with Jerome Robbins
made a big impression on me. His coaching, the characters that he
sought to pull out of us, the individuality that he cultivated in
his work; all of those things really pushed me, and kept me
interested. He was extremely demanding, but that's really the only
way that you grow, by being pushed beyond what you thought you could
do. I loved working with him. I learned a great deal about being a
real person while dancing from him. I left the company one month
after he died.
Finis: Did you have a favorite ballet?
Emily: Oh, all of the classics. Serenade, The Four Temperaments,
Concerto Barocco, Square Dance, Jewels, to name a few. I love the
kind of abstracted emotion these conjure up. And I love the
characters and humanity in the Robbins' repertory - 2 & 3 Part
Inventions and Dances at a Gathering are special favorites. Do you
notice a theme?! An emphasis on humanity, individuality, a strong
sense of person - these ideas are really important to me, both in
the work that I prefer to dance and in the work (and dancers) that I
like to watch. Human beings are such beautiful creatures, with all
of their idiosyncrasies. Put them on stage moving, and what more do
you need?! Technical virtuosity only goes so far with me -- I get
bored quickly. But give me real people out there, with texture and
depth and maturity, and I'm in tears.
Finis: Me, too! So, how did you make the switch from City Ballet to
modern dance?
Emily: Exploring modern dance meant first taking class -- I had a little
modern dance training from my Pittsburgh Ballet Theater School days,
but nothing since moving to NYC. So I started out taking all around
town, at Trisha Brown's studios, a Limon class, and some of those
somewhat formless but helpful classes at Dancespace. I ended up on
scholarship at Cunningham; I felt the most comfortable within his
technique, because in many ways it was the most similar to ballet.
In that time, Misha (Baryshnikov) offered me a job with White Oak
Dance Project. So I started working with White Oak in November of
1998 and stayed for four years, until the company folded in November
2002.
Finis: That was a job to kill for. What was it like?
Emily: Heaven, in many ways! White Oak was an incredible lesson in dance
and performance. I think I developed a much stronger stage presence,
given the opportunity to perform without the extreme technical
demands of ballet. I was also exposed to a wide range of modern
dance choreography, new and old -- Trisha Brown, John Jasperse,
Erick Hawkins, Yvonne Rainer, Lucinda Childs, Mark Morris, to name a
few. You learn a kind of flexibility of interpretation; you become
adept at translating ideas, when you are exposed to so many
different visions, movement vocabularies and styles. White Oak was
kind of a tasting menu of modern dance, which suited my original
plan, to "explore modern dance," perfectly. And a lot of the pieces
were very theatrical, which I loved.
The atmosphere was really comfortable, too. The group when I
first joined was made up of four other women who had been dancing
much longer than I had -- all gorgeous modern dancers that I learned
a lot from watching and working with -- and Misha. It felt like it
was really about enjoying the dancing, as well as enjoying
everything else in life, like the great meal right after the
performance and the museum you visited that day in, say, Prague. And
of course, dancing with Misha was a completely unique dance
education.
Finis: How so?
Emily: If you've ever played tennis - it was like playing tennis with a
stronger partner who forces you to "up" your game. It's hard to
explain. I thought a lot about my stage presence, dancing with Misha.
On stage, he occupies a great deal of space by doing very little -
he's a very internal performer (maybe different than his younger
days). Faced with his experience and greatness, my main resource was
to muster up as much of myself as I could - stand my own ground
beside him, so to speak, as firmly as possible. I very consciously
had to grow up as a performer.
Finis: Well, it's obvious you did. Lucky you!
Emily: I had also done a little work with Twyla's group in 2001 and
loved it, so after White Oak ended I took a job with her touring
company last year (2002) and worked with that group until this fall.
Finis: And what was that like?
Continued on Page Two