The Commercial Appeal

Copeland leads dancers in virtual ballet for charity

- Brooke Lefferts ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK – A ballerina in Australia floats across the dining room floor in a hijab. Another leaps in the air on a rooftop in the Philippine­s, while still another showcases her intricate footwork in her backyard in the United States.

Wearing tutus or tank tops, bowing to kitchen stoves or trees blowing in the wind, 32 dancers from 14 countries strapped on their toe shoes to perform a dance for a virtual audience to benefit the struggling dance community.

“It really felt like an opportunit­y to bring the dance world together and to really bring our forces together. And I felt like we could have more impact that way,” said Misty Copeland, who is the first dancer featured in the video and came up with the initiative with her former colleague, Joseph Phillips.

“Swans for Relief ” is designed to raise funds for dancers all over the world who have lost their jobs after ballet performanc­es, like most public events, were shut down due to social distancing requiremen­ts to stem the spread of COVID-19.

“Once you’re let go of a company, it’s really difficult to find work again within that company or another company. So… I started reaching out to my friends,” she told The Associated Press in a Zoom interview Tuesday from her New York City home. “And it was just incredible that everyone I was reaching out to, I was just shocked that it was like: ‘Yes! I’m in!’ ”

Copeland partnered with the Entertainm­ent Industry Foundation (EIF), with seed funding provided by K Period Media, to launch the program. A $500,000 goal has been set to help ballet dancers maintain their living expenses, since so many ballet companies and venues are closed.

The 32 ballerinas in the compilatio­n video represent companies from all over the globe, including China, Russia, Europe, Cuba, Mexico, Philippine­s, South Africa, Canada, and the United States. The video, released Wednesday, shows each dancer at home performing the iconic steps from “Dying Swan,” set to “Le Cygne (The Swan),” performed by cellist Wade Davis.

Having a diverse group for the video was a top priority for Copeland, a trailblaze­r who is the first black female principal dancer at her company, American Ballet Theatre.

“I think that’s something that I’ve been fighting for my entire career, is to truly show the representa­tion of what the world looks like within the ballet community,” she said. “You’ll see the diversity within this film. But it was also important for me to not just go for the biggest ballet stars, but to look within these companies and see talent, see upand-coming talent and see diversity.”

For Copeland, the video also represents an opportunit­y for the ballet world to rethink how it interacts with fans.

“We’ve needed this reset, to kind of step back and reassess how we do things, especially for an art form that doesn’t really rely on media as much,” Copeland said. “It’s about time that we learn how to exist in this virtual world for the ballet community. So I do think there’s some positives in there and maybe just figuring out, you know, new ways of bringing theater to people so that it reaches more people.”

She added: “There are more ways than just stepping into a theater, that may be a bit scary for people, you know, for some time to come.”

 ?? FILE//INVISION/AP ?? Misty Copeland, center, performed at the 62nd annual Grammy Awards in Los Angeles. Thirty-two dancers from 14 countries have performed a ballet for a virtual audience to benefit the struggling dance community.
FILE//INVISION/AP Misty Copeland, center, performed at the 62nd annual Grammy Awards in Los Angeles. Thirty-two dancers from 14 countries have performed a ballet for a virtual audience to benefit the struggling dance community.
 ?? FILE/INVISION/AP ?? Dancer Misty Copeland created
“Swans for Relief,” an initiative designed to raise funds for dancers all over the world who have lost their jobs after ballet performanc­es were shut down due to COVID-19.
FILE/INVISION/AP Dancer Misty Copeland created “Swans for Relief,” an initiative designed to raise funds for dancers all over the world who have lost their jobs after ballet performanc­es were shut down due to COVID-19.

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