- Katherine Healy
Katherine Healy (born Sunday,
January 26 ,1969 inNew York City ) is a former principalballerina who also had a professional performing career infigure skating .Biography
Healy never competed at an elite level in figure skating; instead, she turned professional at the age of eleven. In 1975, at six years old, she appeared in the televised SuperSkates exhibition at
Madison Square Garden . A few years later, she was the subject of the book "A Very Young Skater", published in 1979. She was a protegee ofJohn Curry and skated professionally with his company.Healy's true career goal, however, was not to be a figure skater, but to become a professional
ballet dancer. She was trained in George Balanchine's School of American Ballet, and performed the character of Marie/Clara in the New York City Ballet's production of "The Nutcracker " in 1978 and 1979.In 1982, Healy had a major role in the film "Six Weeks", with
Mary Tyler Moore andDudley Moore , portraying a youngballet dancer with terminalleukemia . She was nominated for aGolden Globe Award for this role in the category "Best New Star -- Actress".Shortly afterwards, Healy concentrated exclusively on ballet. After having won the silver medal in the junior division at the 1982
USA International Ballet Competition , the following year she won the same event inVarna ,Bulgaria , becoming the youngest ever to be awarded the gold medal. In 1984, at the age of 15, she joined the London Festival Ballet (now theEnglish National Ballet ) as a senior principal dancer, and performed with that company for two seasons. During her time in England, she performed roles such as Swanilda in Coppelia, and the principal roles in Etudes, Nutcracker, Balanchine's Tchaikovsky Pas de Deux and the Don Quixote Pas de Deux. At the age of sixteen, Sir Frederick Ashton chose her as the first cast and personally coached her for the role of Juliet in the revival of his production of Romeo and Juliet. She performed Juliet in the premiere of this production in London in July, 1985, at a royal gala attended by the late HRH Princess Margaret.After returning to the United states in 1986, she entered Princeton University. She graduated Magna cum Laude from
Princeton University in 1990 with a degree in Art History. She was also the recipient of the Senior Thesis Prize in the Department of Art and Archaeology for her thesis on French Impressionism. During her time at Princeton, she continued her ballet training exclusively with Wilhelm Burmann, who remained her private ballet coach for the rest of her dancing career. Also during her college years, she performed as a guest artist in Japan, Canada and with several local companies in the New York area such as the Eglevsky Ballet, Connecticut Ballet and New Jersey Ballet. She performed the title role of Cinderella, Odette in Swan Lake (Act II) and the lead role in Balanchine's Allegro Brillante for the Eglevsky Ballet, the role of Swanilda in Brett Raphael's production of Coppelia for the Connecticut Ballet and Odette in Swan Lake (Act II) for the New Jersey Ballet (partnered by Leonid Kozlov). In addition, during her time at university, she trained once again with John Curry and made some sporadic skating appearances. Among these were televised appearances in An Evening With Champions (PBS), Symphony of Sports (ABC Wide World of Sports) and Happy New Year USA (PBS) where she performed a solo La Rose du Bal and was partnered by John Curry in an ensemble waltz to Tchaikovsky's music Eugene Onegin, choreographed by Tim Murphy.Following her graduation from Princeton, she worked as a principal ballerina with
Les Ballets de Monte Carlo and theVienna State Opera Ballet . In Monte Carlo, she danced (among other roles) the leading roles in George Balanchine's Theme and Variations, Tarantella, Rubies and Tchaikovsky Pas de Deux as well as in Antony Tudor's ballet Gala Performance. Roland Petit created a principal role for her in Mozart et la Danse in 1991. In Vienna, her roles included (among other roles) Lise in La Fille Mal Gardee, Kitri in Don Quixote, Juliet in John Cranko's production of Romeo and Juliet, the title roles in Giselle and in Sir Kenneth Macmillan's production of Manon, as well as the title role of Raymonda in revived excerpts of Rudolf Nureyev's production of Raymonda. She also performed leading roles in John Neumeier's production of A Midsummer Night's Dream, Hans von Manen's Letzte Lieder, George Balanchine's Serenade, Apollo and Tchaikovsky Pas de Deux and the principal role of Marie in Yuri Grigorovich's production of the Nutcracker. She was featured in the Vienna Philharmonic's New Year's Day Concert on PBS with Walter Cronkite in 1993, 1994 and 1996 on worldwide broadcasts. Her appearance in 1996 was in a piece choreographed especially for her by Heinz Spoerli. She returned to the United States in 1997, where she resumed her skating career.In addition to her work with Curry, Healy was coached as a skater by
Glyn Watts andRichard Callaghan , and passed theUnited States Figure Skating Association 's gold-levelice dancing test. She has been married to World and Olympic figure skating coachPeter Burrows for ten years and currently works as a skating coach and choreographer inMonsey, New York and in New Hyde Park, NY. She was a regular performer and choreographer for theIce Theatre of New York until 2005. Ice Theatre commissioned two original works from her and she restaged Jean Pierre Bonnefoux's work Ice Moves for the Company. She has also appeared in shows such asAn Evening with Champions , the Equal Challenge of Champions and the Vail Figure Skating Festival.She taught on the faculty of the Valentina Kozlova Dance Conservatory of New York (New York City) until June, 2008. In January 2008, she won the Outstanding Choreography Award at the Dance Educators of America Semi-Final Competition in New York City for the ensemble piece "Por Una Cabeza" she choreographed for the advanced students at VKDCNY. She currently is on the faculty of the American Theater Dance Workshop (the school affiliated with the Eglevsky Ballet Company) in New Hyde Park, NY and also teaches at Connecticut Ballet (Stamford, CT), in addition to her skating school affiliations.
References
*
*Jill Krementz , "A Very Young Skater". ISBN 0-394-50833-5
* An Evening with Champions program booklet, 2004
* "Katherine Healy", "Blades on Ice", July-August 1998.
* [http://www.hfpa.org/browse/member/29418 Golden Globe Award nomination]
* Biography for Valentina Kozlova New York Conservatory of Dance
* Ice Theatre of New York Program biographies
*Company programs and playbills from the Vienna State Opera, Les Ballets de Monte Carlo, London Festival Ballet, Connecticut Ballet, Eglevsky Ballet, New Jersey Ballet
*Faculty rosters Valentina Kozlova Dance Conservatory of New York (vkdcny.com) and Connecticut Ballet, class schedules for American Theatre Dance Workshop
*Broadcast of Happy New Year USA, Baltimore Harbor, Maryland, New Year's Eve 1988, televised on PBS
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