Summer audition season underway at The Nutmeg Ballet

Jan 16, 2014
This is the time of year when serious students of classical ballet undertake the annual ritual of auditioning for summer intensive programs.

With barely enough time to ring in the New Year, The Nutmeg Ballet artistic staff is already hard at work scouring some of the nation’s top studios for new talent. This past weekend was one of the busiest of the season with Ballet Master, Tim Melady in Virginia, Maryland, and Washington, D.C., while Audition Tour Director, Joan Kunsch traveled to New York, Illinois, and Indiana.
In fact, Nutmeg Ballet hopefuls are finding their way to auditions in more than 30 U.S. cities this year. Across the nation, headshot and first arabesque photos in hand, disciplined students of classical ballet step into unfamiliar dance studios to catch the eye of the audition staff and if all goes well, open new doors.

Impeccably dressed in dance attire, hair neatly coiffed in a ballet style, with pointe shoes properly broken in, wide-eyed dreamers line up at registration desks to receive an audition number and quietly enter the studio to warm up. It is a time of high anticipation and the moment all the hard work of the previous year has led up to. It is a time of anxiety and elation. The moment dreams are inspired and the fires of ambition fueled. It must be summer intensive audition season!

Audition season can be a hectic time for dancers who are often balancing a number of responsibilities including school work and a demanding training schedule. It often involves travel to distant audition locations, paperwork, photographs, and lots and lots of research. After all, finding the right fit is what it’s all about.

Artistic Director, Victoria Mazzarelli, enjoys sharing advice with her own students and encourages them to meet with her to discuss their summer intensive audition plans. She gives her trainees careful guidance, reminds them to focus on doing their personal best, and many times provides a warm hug or a reassuring smile to quell their frazzled nerves.

“The rigorous training our students receive six days a week throughout the year at The Nutmeg Ballet beautifully prepares them for audition season and beyond. Of course, summer intensive auditions are a very important step in their training. In the end, we want our students to be prepared to go out into the world of ballet and be successful,” said Mazzarelli. “At the same time, it’s exciting to welcome new students into our studios and focus on the details of their training– those details make all the difference!”

In the bright and air-conditioned studios on Torrington’s Main Street, summer training includes classical ballet technique, pointe/men’s work, modern choreographic workshops, and classical repertoire. Partnering sessions are a mainstay of the Nutmeg Ballet summer curriculum and provide the opportunity to practice and improve partnering, both in a class setting and in repertoire.

The Nutmeg Summer International Program offers three different options over the summer months with each session geared to a particular age group, stages of training and experience. The Pre-Professional Training Program (Session I) takes place from June 15th through June 28th and is geared towards dancers ages 10-14. The 4-week Professional Training Program (Session II) which takes place from June 29th through July 26th, focuses on dancers ages 13-19, culminates in performances at The Nutmeg Summer Dance Festival held at Torrington’s Warner Theatre. The final program of the summer, the Apprentice Program (Session III) for dancers ages 16-19, takes place from July 27th through August 9th and of the three is considered the most rigorous program.

Younger students will have the opportunity to focus on ballet technique over the summer months as well. The Torrington School of Ballet will be offering special programs designed for the needs of the developing dancer throughout five weeks of the summer months. And if your little one cannot wait until then to get to work on ballet training, the good news is that a new semester is beginning on January 20th. Registration for new TSOB students is now underway at The Nutmeg Ballet on 58 Main Street.

For information about The Nutmeg’s Summer International Program, TSOB Summer Program, or to register for Torrington School of Ballet, contact JoAnne Lavine, School Registrar either by email: jlavine@nutmegballet.org or by phone: 860-483-4413 and online at www.nutmegballet.org.
 Impeccably dressed in dance attire, hair neatly coiffed in a ballet style, with pointe shoes properly broken in, wide-eyed dreamers line up at registration desks to receive an audition number and quietly enter the studio to warm up. It is a time of high anticipation and the moment all the hard work of the previous year has led up to. It is a time of anxiety and elation. The moment dreams are inspired and the fires of ambition fueled. It must be summer intensive audition season! 

IN THE MEDIA

By Jack Sheedy 31 Jan, 2020
After 50 years of building a reputation for professionalism in dance instruction, Nutmeg Ballet was forced to put that reputation to the test this year. Audition tour director Joan Kunsch injured her arm and was unable to go on her annual 18-city nationwide recruiting tour. But, “Nothing will be canceled,” she promised in early December. “It was up to me to solve it,” said Kunsch. “I thought, ‘Who better to represent Nutmeg than the former students who are making professional company careers around the country?’” She compiled a list of about a dozen Nutmeg alumni around the country and called them. They eagerly accepted the challenge. For example, Kunsch said, “We have a Nutmeg graduate, Amy Potter, who is a principal dancer in the Oklahoma City Ballet, and I called her and she’s ecstatic to do it. She said, ‘Proudly, I would do it. Proudly.’” Another former student, Thel Moore, trained at Nutmeg from 2012 to 2015. He agreed to cover three of Kunsch’s scheduled cities, including Richmond, Va., where he is a danseur at the Richmond Ballet Company. Moore said in an email, “What I typically look for in an audition is a base in classical ballet but also a love for ballet as well. I’m looking for a spark that you usually can’t teach but mold into something beautiful.” He said students are nervous at first, but “when they see the brochure [and] how beautiful the building is and how incredibly professional the staff is, they usually lighten up and get really excited for the audition.” The far-flung team of Nutmeg-trained dancers are directing auditions in January and February in nearly 40 cities in the United States and Canada. Some of these cities are on Tim Melady’s usual itinerary as audition tour co-director. Melady, Nutmeg’s principal ballet master, is also standing in for Kunsch in several cities. Speaking by phone from an airport near St. Louis, Mo., Melady said, “I have been to the West Coast. Seattle had a good turnout. Portland had a good turnout. San Francisco had a good turnout, and they are all so interested in Nutmeg and Torrington!” He said, “We’re so lucky that we have such a respected reputation.” When an auditioning dancer asks about Nutmeg, he refers them to former Nutmeg students in the area, who are happy to talk about their experiences. Melady said the constant influx of students from thousands of miles away is enriching for them, for Nutmeg and for Torrington. “People come to Nutmeg and say, ‘Oh my God, we’re meeting people from Wyoming! From California! This is crazy.’ Everybody knows about Nutmeg Ballet. It’s wonderful!” Kunsch said that when she has gone on the audition tour – which she has done every year since 1993 – she tells dancers, “Not only are you auditioning for Nutmeg; Nutmeg’s auditioning for you.” She tells them, “We’re not looking for perfection. If you were perfect, would you need us? We’re looking for trainability.” Moore said, “Bringing talent from all over is very important because it keeps Nutmeg as one of the best schools to train at in the United States.” Melady said, “[The auditioners] have heard of us, and they’ve heard of our reputation. And that’s a real advantage. Our reputation is golden. There are more and more schools just vying for this slice of talent. And there is always talent.” Victoria Mazzarelli, artistic director, said Torrington auditions at the Nutmeg Conservatory attract not only local aspirants but dancers from New York, Massachusetts, New Jersey and Pennsylvania for both the summer and year-round programs. Remaining auditions at the Conservatory at 58 Main Street are Feb. 1, 15, 29 and March 7, from 9 a.m. to noon. And by the way, said Mazzarelli, locals are most welcome! “During these next few months, our year-round students and faculty are rehearsing and preparing for our Spring Studio Series that will be held on March 18, 19, 20 and 21,” she said.
06 Dec, 2019
TORRINGTON – The first time Shelley Gallo and her mother, Rosemarie Meyer, attended Nutmeg Ballet’s “The Nutcracker” in 1975, they thought it was a musical play. Shelley was four years old. “When are they going to start talking?” she asked her mother. They had never been to a ballet before! But, since that night 44 years ago at Torrington High School’s Little Theatre, they have attended Nutmeg’s “Nutcracker” almost every year, missing it only once due to illness. “I’ll bet we hold the record,” Shelley said. Nutmeg’s “Nutcracker” has since outgrown the high school auditorium, of course, and now is performed yearly at the 1,750-seat Warner Theatre and the 900-seat Belding Theatre at The Bushnell in Hartford. It opens Dec. 7 at the Warner. “I remember going that first time with my mother,” Shelley said, “but I don’t really remember how I felt when I left. I do remember all the pretty ballerinas and the pretty costumes, but I can’t say I ran out of there saying I want to be a ballerina.” Rosemarie said she had taken Shelley to Christmas Village and was looking for something new to share with her. She saw an advertisement for “The Nutcracker” in what was then The Torrington Register. “I thought that was something that I’d like to start with her as a tradition,” she said. “We realized at some point in the performance that it was not going to be a play,” she said. “There was not going to be singing, or any kind of dialogue, but we just watched it in awe because the dancers were so talented and the costumes were so beautiful and the scenery was beautiful. And as the years have gone by, it’s gotten better and better.” Costumes and scenery have evolved, and this year the mother-daughter duo are looking forward to revolutionary changes. To mark Nutmeg’s 50th anniversary, hundreds of the 1,200 costumes will be new, designed by Janessa Urwin and Susan Aziz and hand-finished at Nutmeg’s own costume shop. And the 22-year-old set by Campbell Baird will be replaced by spectacular scenery by Boston’s theatrical designer Roger LaVoie. Artistic director Victoria Mazzarelli has reimagined the choreography, and Brian Sciarra has designed new lighting. There will be some delightful surprises. “There have been little tweaks every year,” Shelley said. “Maybe the lighting is a little different, or the choreography is different, or maybe there’s a sash on a costume that’s a different color. My mother and I would bump elbows and whisper, ‘Did you see that?’ This is the first year that we can’t compare our notes.” When they heard that things would look very different this year, Shelley said she and her mom were at first nervous. “But I’m sure it will be beautiful.” Rosemarie said, “I can’t wait to see this year’s new scenery and costumes. We’re both really excited about it.” Rosemarie and Shelley both love family traditions, especially around Christmastime. Since Shelley was a child, she helped her mother every year bake cookies. Now, though she lives in New Hartford and her mom lives in Torrington, Shelley says she still bakes more than 1,000 cookies every Christmas and gives them to co-workers, family and friends. “The Nutcracker” is perfect for tradition-minded people, she believes. “I love the story because it’s the whole Christmas Eve party, and I come from an Italian family,” she said. “Christmas Eve is the biggest celebration in my family. It’s such a magical time, even for me now. I carry on the cookie-baking traditions my mother and my two Italian grandmothers carried throughout the years.” Nutmeg’s new 2019 “Nutcracker” ushers in a brand-new tradition as Nutmeg Ballet enters its second half-century. Tickets can be ordered through Nutmeg’s website – also reimagined and redesigned for the occasion – at www.nutmegconservatory.org. Warner Theatre performances are Dec. 7 at 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. and Dec. 8 at 2 p.m. Performances at The Bushnell in Hartford are Dec. 14 and 15 at 12:30 p.m. and 4:30 p.m.
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