The Borneo Post

For ballet companies, ‘Nutcracker’ loss is heartbreak­ing blow

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JOFFREY Ballet dancer Victoria Jaiani hadn’t performed for three months as a result of pandemic shutdowns, and she was doubtful she’d dance this fall.

But when her bosses announced the unthinkabl­e — canceling ‘The Nutcracker’ — she lost it.

“I sobbed and sobbed,” said Jaiani, who learned the news in a recent companywid­e Zoom meeting.

“I had a hard time. It just broke me.

“That’s 30-plus performanc­es for the artists,” she added. “That’s a lot of stage time, which is heartbreak­ing.”

For Jaiani and dancers across the country, the pain of separation from their art is entwined with anxiety about their profession­al futures. American Ballet Theatre has canceled its fall season in New York, but plans for its ‘Nutcracker’ run in Costa Mesa, Calif., are yet to be determined, a company official said last week. Other dance companies have gone further: So far, New York City Ballet and Pennsylvan­ia Ballet have joined the Joffrey in canceling the rest of their 2020 seasons, including their ‘Nutcracker­s.’

These troupes — and there will probably be many more — are watching the coronaviru­s crisis engulf nearly a year’s worth of performanc­es. (The Washington Ballet’s fall season ‘will most likely be completely digital,’ said marketing director Scott Greenberg, and a decision on ‘The Nutcracker’ will come in August.)

Yet the scrapped “Nutcracker­s” are not just any performanc­es. With its festive, recognizab­le Tchaikovsk­y music, nostalgic vision of family togetherne­ss at Christmas, and broad appeal to all ages, ‘ The Nutcracker’ is generally a ballet company’s only box-office triumph. Its ticket sales dwarf those of other production­s. This ballet alone can help keep a company afloat, its multiple weeks of revenue funding the year’s less-marketable and more adventurou­s works.

Its absence can mean a massive revenue loss. New York City Ballet projects that the lack of ‘ Nutcracker’ ticket sales will result in a US$14.5 million loss. According to Jonathan Stafford, NYCB’s artistic director, with the rest of the scratched fall season taken into account, losses could total US$20 million.

The cost of cancellati­on, however, isn’t only financial. Artistical­ly, ‘The Nutcracker’ is a massive playing field where dancers can achieve breakthrou­ghs, because over the unusually long run of performanc­es, they are typically cast in many different roles: the living dolls, snowflakes and toy soldiers, the embodied sweets and flowers, to name just a few. The annual ‘ Nutcracker’ marathon offers chances to experiment and become comfortabl­e in a range of characters and styles. It’s a prized platform for showing off strengths and catching the director’s eye.

So while missing a cherished holiday ritual is surely a letdown for audiences hoping for some bright light in the months ahead, it’s an incomparab­le hardship for the dancers, whose careers are idling as precious time is lost, and for the ballet companies struggling to pay them, amid grave financial losses.

For those involved in bringing this ballet to the stage — and we can’t forget the musicians, designers and stage crews — canceling ‘ The Nutcracker’ is a blow to morale and their already strained resources.

For Stafford, the decision to cancel ‘ was devastatin­g for me, personally, and for the organisati­on.’

‘The Nutcracker’ was the first ballet he saw, as a child.

“It’s one of the reasons I started dancing,” Stafford said.

“To take that live opportunit­y away for even a year has an impact on the young people out there. You never know who might be in the audience and who might be inspired to start dancing.”

Then there are the students from NYCB’s affiliated School of American Ballet who won’t have the chance to inhabit the stage with their grown-up idols.

For the company, Stafford said, “it’s another 10 weeks that our dancers will lose from their careers. And maybe they’ll have an injury next year, or had one last year. The lost weeks of performanc­e really are devastatin­g from an emotional standpoint.” A couple of issues drove the decision to cancel, Stafford said.

First came the safety of the artists, children in the cast, crew and audiences, amid the virus: ‘Crowded indoor space,’ he said, “is the hardest challenge for any organisati­on like ours to overcome.”

It takes an army to put on ‘The Nutcracker’ night after night. NYCB’s version, choreograp­hed by George Balanchine, includes about 125 children, for starters. With the rest of its large cast, plus wardrobe staff and stagehands, social distancing onstage and off is impossible.

Also, Stafford added that children’s rehearsals normally start early in the fall, but the company may not be permitted back in its studios by then.

Up to now, NYCB administra­tive staff has been paid. But the new fiscal year, beginning July 1, will likely include pay cuts and furloughs, Stafford said. The dancers and musicians are on a planned layoff, as usual in the summer.

As for the future?

“We’re working on how we’ll compensate them if we’re not performing,” he said.

The Joffrey Ballet is in a similar bind.

“We couldn’t have asked for a harder blow,” said artistic director Ashley Wheater.

“When you’re at the top of your game as a profession­al dancer, like being a profession­al athlete, your practices and rehearsals are driving you to an end point, which is to be on the stage in front of an audience,” Wheater said.

“So when you take that away, it’s hard to have motivation.”

The Joffrey stands to lose US$6.5 million from its three canceled production­s: a ‘ Don Quixote’ in May, ‘Manon’ in October and “The Nutcracker” in December. “The Nutcracker” accounts for US$4.5 million of that loss, said Joffrey president and chief executive Greg Cameron.

“Trust me, I’ve had lots of tears,” he said. “But we feel if we don’t do this, there could potentiall­y not be a Joffrey Ballet next year to do a ‘Nutcracker.’ “

It sounds counterint­uitive to shelve your biggest-selling ballet to save your company. But this is the problem: Ballet troupes need to start rehearsing and spending money in advance to make those ticket sales happen. And this year, those big sales won’t materializ­e, in these directors’ estimation­s, because the social distancing required will make it impossible to get hundreds of artists and thousands of spectators into and out of the theater safely.

Cameron points to the specific complexiti­es of the Joffrey’s ‘Nutcracker,’ created with a Chicago World’s Fair theme by Christophe­r Wheeldon and unveiled in 2016.

Auditions usually start in August for the 90 children in the cast, but Joffrey studios may not be able to open until at least a month later. Then the orchestra needs a financial commitment. — The Washington Post

 ?? Frey — Washington Post photo by Katherine ?? Washington Ballet dancers in a dress rehearsal for ‘The Nutcracker’ in 2010.
Frey — Washington Post photo by Katherine Washington Ballet dancers in a dress rehearsal for ‘The Nutcracker’ in 2010.
 ?? Joffrey Ballet — Cheryl Mann/The ?? Anais Bueno and Greig Matthews in the Joffrey Ballet’s 2019 production of ‘The Nutcracker.’
Joffrey Ballet — Cheryl Mann/The Anais Bueno and Greig Matthews in the Joffrey Ballet’s 2019 production of ‘The Nutcracker.’

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