Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

WOMAN OF THE YEAR

Vanessa Williams, Nevada Ballet Theatre’s With a career at the top of the entertainm­ent industry for 28 years, the glamorous singer, actress, author, model and fashion designer doesn’t hide the fact that she’s 53 and as beautiful as ever.

- By ROBIN LEACH NICHE DIVISION OF LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL Read the rest of this story at robinleach.reviewjour­nal.com.

I am surprised. I have tremendous gratitude and am in awe at how life takes you in places you never would’ve thought ... I’m happy to still be here and still be doing what I love.”

When you first meet gorgeous Vanessa Williams, you are mesmerized by her extraordin­ary eyes. They captivate and pierce right to your heart and soul. It’s an instant hypnosis of love at first sight, but strangely enough I had to talk with the singer, actress, author, model and fashion designer about … her feet.

Glamorous Vanessa will be honored as Woman of the Year at the 33rd Annual Nevada Ballet Theatre Black & White Ball on Saturday at Aria. With a career at the top of the entertainm­ent industry for 28 years, Vanessa doesn’t hide the fact that she’s 53 and as beautiful as ever.

NBT co-founder Nancy Houssels said: “As our 2017 Woman of the Year honoree, we will celebrate not only Vanessa’s artistic talents but also her giving spirit with her work for charities, especially Special Olympics, where she has served on its board for over 20 years.

“She is a well-respected artist whose versatile career path and longevity is one to be admired. Growing up immersed in music and dance, Vanessa’s ambitions and drive forged an amazing career.”

As a singer, Vanessa was at the top of the charts, and three albums earned multiple Grammy nomination­s: “The Right Stuff,” “Comfort Zone” and “Sweetest Days.” Her 2009 album “The Real Thing” won her a NAACP Outstandin­g Jazz Artist nod.

Vanessa is known for her hits “Save the Best for Last,” “Colors of the Wind” from “Pocahontas” and “Love Is” with Brian McKnight. She earned a Tony nomination for her role as “The Witch” in “Into the Woods” and was a box office sensation when she replaced Chita Rivera in “Kiss of the Spider-Woman.”

As a silver-screen actress, she debuted in the 1986 film “Under the Gun” and followed with “Shaft” and Disney’s “Hannah Montana.” She starred in 1998’s “Dance With Me,” which showcased her ballroom and Latin dance acumen. She received three Emmy nomination­s during her run in “Ugly Betty.”

Her TV resume also includes “Desperate Housewives” and “The Good Wife.” She’s currently filming a Barbara Walters-type role in “Satan’s Sisters” based on the book Star Jones wrote about her departure from “The View.” Her clothing line V for Vanessa was launched last year.

The 2012 book she coauthored with her mother, “You Have No Idea: A Famous Daughter and Her No Nonsense Mother,” was a New York Times bestseller. There are two fascinatin­g Las Vegas connection­s tied to Vanessa’s appearance at the gala:

Longtime friend David Weinreb, CEO of Howard Hughes Corp., developers of Downtown Summerlin, is dinner chairman. Vanessa and David attended grade school together and were star leads in their high school stage orchestra. Broadway director Randy Slovacek will introduce her; they were music theater majors together at Syracuse and performed as a song-anddance duo.

Vanessa follows an impressive list of arts and entertainm­ent icons named Woman of the Year, among them Celine Dion (2004), Twyla Tharp (2008), Marie Osmond (2009), Bette Midler (2010), Eva Longoria (2012), Debbie Allen (2015) and Olivia Newton-John last year.

Funds raised from the gala support a variety of endeavors, including the profession­al company ballet production­s at NBT’s performanc­e home at The Smith Center for the Performing Arts, plus dance program initiative­s for at-risk youth serving more than 20,000 students a year.

When she accepted the invitation, Vanessa said: “What an honor! This event will be the culminatio­n of my love for the arts and the achievemen­ts in my career. Dance has been a part of my life from the very beginning.”

And that’s where our Q+A started and the subject of her feet arose: “You’re talking about my eyes, but my feet are the worst feature on my body. I probably started having bad feet as a dancer.

“Most of my years in training were in modern dance, which were all barefoot. I started ballet when I was 3 years old. It was a local recreation­al program, not formal ballet but modern creative dance. The ballet was in third grade outside New York City, a year of ballet with a fantastic Russian teacher.

My mom knew that I had a talent, and I started with a contempora­ry modern dance school in Westcheste­r. I danced all the way until I graduated high school, then majored in musical theater in college. Mostly modern but certainly several years of ballet and tap later.

People don’t realize the pain that dancers endure. They get injured, they break arches, their toes bleed — what was the worst that happened to you?

A back injury. When I was in college doing a show, I had to do a lift, a sit lift where you jump up and your guy behind you is holding your waist and you jump up and you end up sitting on his shoulder. Unfortunat­ely, my partner didn’t quite have me strongly enough, so I wound up flipping off his shoulder and wrenched my back.

It’s one of those injuries in the lower back that just never goes away, especially when I get stressed or overworked. It’s easy to get a wrench in it, but that’s how Pilates became so popular because it originally was used for injured dancers. I started studying Pilates 30 years ago when nobody knew what it was. The postures helped to rehabilita­te hips, the lower back and arms.

Today it’s a fitness phenomenon, which is fantastic, but back in the day, it began just for dancers. I look back, I played a dancer in “Dance With Me,” which is about ballroom dancing. I got a chance to learn ballroom dance particular­ly for that movie. That was in 1997, and I look at what I was doing, and it takes my breath away to watch what I used to be able to do ...

 ??  ?? Vanessa Williams | Gilles Toucas
Vanessa Williams | Gilles Toucas
 ??  ?? Vanessa Williams | Mike Ruiz/Getty Images
Vanessa Williams | Mike Ruiz/Getty Images

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States