The Mercury News

BALLET SCHOOL A HAVEN FOR VENEZUELAN DANCING DIASPORA

- By Adriana Gomez Licon

MIAMI >> Lusian Hernandez’s eyes watered when she recalled receiving a free pair of pointe shoes after arriving in Miami on a dance scholarshi­p as her native Venezuela descended into an economic crisis.

On a recent night, Hernandez appeared on a South Florida stage in a burgundy gown for the opening scene of “The Nutcracker.” She glided through the scene, hugging the lead, Clara, and waving to guests during the Christmas Eve party scene of the holiday favorite.

Hernandez, 25, is a profession­al dancer for Arts Ballet Theater of Florida, a Miami school and company that has built a reputation as a haven for the Venezuelan dancing diaspora. More than 20 dancers of Venezuelan origin are playing roles in the holiday production, from tiny mice gobbling cheese to snowflakes waltzing in a winter land.

Some of these dancers are seeking asylum with their families. Others, such as Hernandez, have secured visas and green cards through the company or their parents’ work.

“Dancing has saved them,” says Ruby Romero-Issaev, the Venezuela-born executive director of Arts Ballet Theater of Florida. “The parents feel they are protected here.”

Venezuelan­s have been drawn to this school and company in the Miami suburb of Aventura because of its Russian artistic director — a familiar name in the ballet scene of the South American nation. Vladimir Issaev, husband of Romero-Issaev, left the former Soviet Union when he was hired to be ballet master at the National Ballet of Caracas, working alongside late choreograp­her Vicente Nebrada from 1987 to 1997 before founding the school and company in Florida. Issaev had worked as a ballet dancer and graduated as a choreograp­her from the GITIS institute, a leading arts school in Moscow.

Famous for adding a modern theatrical style to ballet, Nebrada heavily influenced Issaev. And Issaev says he, in turn, persuaded Nebrada to create versions of classic ballets the Venezuelan initially shunned such as “Romeo and Juliet,” “Swan Lake” and “Coppelia.”

Issaev is credited with training a generation of Venezuelan dancers in Caracas who have become prima ballerinas, principal dancers and soloists at U.S. dance companies.

As the economic crisis worsened in Venezuela over the past decade, old acquaintan­ces of the Issaevs began recommendi­ng the school in Miami to families emigrating to Florida.

The dancers in Miami often organize collection drives to send ballet shoes, leotards and costumes to a school in Barquisime­to, Venezuela, which is Lusian Hernandez’s hometown.

Hernandez continues to perfect her skills and learn from the Russian choreograp­her what he learned from Venezuela’s Nebrada.

“It’s not just that you will lift your arm — it’s how you will lift your arm. It’s being connected to your soul when you dance,” she says.

 ?? BRYNN ANDERSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Dancer Lusian Hernandez, who fled Venezuela, dances during a rehearsal of Vladimir Issaev’s rendition of “The Nutcracker” ballet in Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
BRYNN ANDERSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Dancer Lusian Hernandez, who fled Venezuela, dances during a rehearsal of Vladimir Issaev’s rendition of “The Nutcracker” ballet in Fort Lauderdale, Fla.

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