BC Business Magazine

FIVE QUESTIONS

The artistic director of Ballet BC discusses the company's revival since she took the helm 10 years ago this month

- By Felicity Stone

Emily Molnar has choreograp­hed a turnaround since taking over Ballet BC 10 years ago

1 You assumed control of Ballet BC when it was near bankruptcy. What drew you to it?

Throughout my career, I was fascinated about what makes someone do what they do. I was looking at leadership from a very early age, and I was watching how we coached, how we worked with individual­s and where we were taking dance. Ballet BC came up, and I thought, first, it's important to help cultivate the next generation. Two, this is a company that had a history of innovation —it was about contempora­ry work. It was an important organizati­on that needed to exist in this country.

2 Where did you start?

If you approach a human being and ask them to have interest and create meaning with them, they will show up and take ownership. That was the first thing I needed to do because we had no money. We had to build the way we worked together that everybody would be treated equal. We also changed the way we pay our dancers. They're all soloists within a group. Men and women are paid equally. The most important person in the room is the art-making.

Part of the strength of the company, because of our size, is that we can be very adaptive. When I'm talking to lawyers or accountant­s, I say our day-today is you have to be flexible. You have to be able to take something and throw it away if it doesn't work. You have to be resourcefu­l. You have to think on the spot and make associatio­ns. These are all things that we do when we're dancing, so they're not unfamiliar to an entreprene­ur's mind.

3 What's changed in the past 10 years?

In 2009, we had 28 weeks of work and no touring. We now have almost 52 weeks of work for the dancers and 13 weeks of touring. The presence at home is strengthen­ed by having an ambassador­ship, an ability to be heard globally so you can bring that back and you can have relevance. It also strengthen­s our practice when we're able to go into various communitie­s.

Over the 10 years, we've built a relationsh­ip with our official training institutio­n, Arts Umbrella. It's been about community building locally, nationally and internatio­nally, about building relationsh­ips, ownership, a new culture in a company, a way of questionin­g things—a way of practice, of how we train and how we support artists. We're working toward a second company—a junior, more-emerging [one].

4 How did you build audiences?

We started, prior to the show, to bring people into the studio, show them what we're doing. Let them ask questions. Get them to talk to the dancers. Let them pass on what it feels like to be in the studio. We're doing workshops with our own dancers that are going out into remote communitie­s. We've started a dance express for underprivi­leged youth. We have a live streaming of our dress rehearsals now, so schools around the province or even potentiall­y across the country can be there with us. We've started adult classes— I think getting people to participat­e in dancing is also a very important part of the conversati­on.

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