Miami Herald (Sunday)

Lupe Serrano, 92, ballerina who soared with strength, radiance

- BY MICHAEL S. ROSENWALD The Washington Post

Lupe Serrano, a prima ballerina for nearly two decades with the American Ballet Theatre who dazzled audiences with flawless technique and startling power, soaring higher and turning faster than many men, died Jan. 16 at a hospital in Syosset, N.Y. She was 92.

The cause was complicati­ons of Alzheimer’s disease, her daughter Veronica Lynn said.

Serrano’s performanc­es in “Swan Lake,” “Giselle,” “La Fille Mal Gardée,” “Aurora’s Wedding” and other classic ballets frequently bewitched audiences. During a tour in the Soviet Union in the early 1960s, one audience showered Serrano with rapturous applause during a dozen curtain calls. Another implored her to perform her solo a second time in lieu of taking a bow.

“Miss Serrano is a dancer of muscle rather than line,” New York Times dance critic Clive Barnes wrote in 1968, explaining her unique appeal. “Her physique is tightly knit, her style, although often surprising­ly delicate, has a tenseness, a dynamic potential” that produces “excitement rather than unalloyed lyricism.”

Serrano joined the American Ballet Theatre in 1953, becoming the company’s first Hispanic principal dancer. Before that, she danced profession­ally in Mexico and toured Central

America with Alicia Alonso, the founder of the Ballet Nacional de Cuba.

Rudolf Nureyev, the Russian ballet superstar, was among the admirers of Serrano’s performanc­es in the Soviet Union. After defecting at a Paris airport in 1961, Nureyev asked Serrano to dance with him. They performed “Le Corsaire” during an episode of “The Bell Telephone Hour” on NBC in 1962.

In 1965, Allen Hughes, another Times dance critic, pronounced her “one of the greatest ballerinas dancing today.” Reviewing Serrano’s performanc­e in “Giselle,” Hughes wrote that “as usual, her technique was flawless, but it never became an end in itself.”

“She seemed to know,” he added, “just how much time she had in which to execute every movement, no matter how great or how small, and how to make the best use of that time to achieve an expressive result.”

Dancing with the music, rather than to it, Hughes wrote that Serrano’s exquisite timing was aided by how in sync she was with the conductor – her husband, Kenneth Schermerho­rn, the music director of the American Ballet Theatre, whom she married in 1957. Schermerho­rn conducted many of her performanc­es.

“He was ready,” Hughes wrote, “with big rallentend­os when they were needed for expansive lifts and with accelerand­os when fleet footwork was involved.”

Guadalupe Martínez Desfassiau­x Serrano was born Dec. 7, 1930, in Santiago, Chile, where her father, a Spanish musician, had been touring with her mother, whom he met in Mexico. She began dancing almost as soon as she could walk, demanding, when she turned 3, that her birthday party guests watch her perform.

Her parents signed her up for dance classes. At age 4 or 5, she was already dancing on pointe.

At 13, the family settled in Mexico and she began training with the Mexico City Ballet. The following year, she joined the company’s production of “Les Sylphides.” She quickly became a star, touring with Alonso not long after she turned 18. After briefly returning to Mexico, she moved to New York to continue her career.

Serrano retired from dancing in 1971, turning to teaching. She taught ballet at colleges and dance schools in Wisconsin, Illinois and Pennsylvan­ia while conducting master classes at companies such as the San Francisco Ballet, the Minnesota Dance Theatre, the Cleveland Ballet, and the Washington Ballet, where she was artistic associate.

She also taught at the American Ballet Theatre.

Her marriage to Schermerho­rn ended in divorce. Survivors include their two daughters, Veronica Lynn of Locust Valley, N.Y., and Erica Ancona of Big Sky, Mont.; and five grandchild­ren.

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