QUOTE (carbro @ Jan 2 2010, 08:18 PM)

With your consent,
onetimehoofer, I will send Gina your e-mail address, and if she is willing (as I trust she will be

), perhaps we can get it to Mr. Marinaccio, so he can then contact you. You can also use the "Contact Us" link to relay your phone number to administrators, who will pass it along to Gina.
Thank you! My Email is: chapmanba@gmail.com
I have lived in South America for the past 27 years, 16 of them in Argentina, where I'm currently interpreter and translator for the UN and many commercial international companies. I was a war and terrorism journalist for 26 years, currently finishing a novel about my 9 years in Perú, where I reported on the nearly successful drive of the Maoist
Sendero Luminoso (Shining Path) to overthrow the government.
(Gina, I seem to remember seeing you dancing somewhere, perhaps in Coppelia ???)
My passion for dance has affected the entire course of my life, perhaps most in discipline, resolve and the will to survive. Memories of the dancers I knew and those I observed from a distance—fellow performers and classmates, as well as those seen briefly at auditions—have bobbed up at odd moments in my life and literally saved me in at least two.
I was not a personal friend of Gene's, although I took class with him for two years. Seeing myself through his eyes, I think I was for him a late-starting, but doggedly determined question mark: would this passionately dedicated novice go on? He was always polite. All expression of his ego was somehow channeled into movement, never surfacing as a personal trait; he was always effective, never in affect. Like Bruce Lee, he was focused on one subject, and that subject drove him. As I remember, “The Dance” and gossip seemed Gene’s only topics of conversation. (I can just hear Gene snickering and saying, "Well, sounds good!")
My initial interest in ballet began in Atlanta, Georgia, where a Marine friend, Judd Bell, dragged me to a rehearsal of the Atlanta Civic Ballet, where his girlfriend was a performer. On sight, I fell in love with one of the other dancers, Jo Anne Rader, who went on to dance with the Royal Ballet. In one of those truly unlikely, but probably logical turns of events, a year later found me drawn to attend a performance in L.A. of, I believe, the Alicia Alonso Ballet Company, with Alonso herself and 46-year-old Igor Youskevitch as principals.
At intermission, I listened to three young men seated directly in front of me animatedly talk with obvious authority about the dancers and their performances. Still in love with Jo Anne, I tapped one on the shoulder and asked if they really knew those dancers on the stage. The three, Gene Marinaccio, Douglas Hinshaw and Donald Eryck, turned, eager to talk. Donald had toured South America with the Alonso company. He told me about how Miss Alonso had to be turned upside down and shaken by two dancers just before each of her entrances, to reset her optic nerves in place at least long enough for her to find her bearings once she was on stage. And, they corroborated what I had seen, that Youskevitch managed to find within himself movement and leaps that convinced me he was still a young man.
The three fellow watchers of the Los Angeles performance invited me to their dance studio. I remember thinking, yeah, sure! I politely said I’d “try,” as convinced that I wouldn’t go as my three fellow theatergoers were as their eyes shied politely from my lie. But . . . Dance is so physical, and so passionate. I went the next day. Michael wasn't what I expected a man teaching ballet might be. Dance in the classroom didn't fit my niggling prejudices. Something in me moved like the ocean tide answering the moon as the dancers gestured, turned and leapt. I went only to watch, but somehow was cajoled into borrowed tights and slippers for the second class.
Toward the close of my first year of study with Michael Brigante I began performing as soloist in the Wilson Morelli Ballet Company (later, the Los Angeles Opera Ballet), and danced in two movies. I met Bronislava Nijinska (Nizínskaya), a fellow tenant where I lived in Hollywood, who presented me with her brother’s worn costume from Petrushka after seeing me dance at Hollywood High School with the then Wilson Morelli Ballet Company. I never showed the tattered and torn, crimson costume to anyone, but kept it for many years. I remember once looking at it, then at a Photo of Waslaw Nijinski dancing Petrushka, then back at the faded material in my hands, suddenly overwhelmed by my own insignificance. Perhaps it is still among my things left with my younger brother, Arnold, in L.A.
For more than a year my brother and parents were politely noncommittal about my choice of caree. They saw me dance for the first time in Manuel de Falla’s El Amor Brujo at the Greek Theater. I cannot express how much they warmed my heart when they appeared backstage after the performance to congratulate me, eyes shining with admiration and pride. Although I was nobody in the ballet world, that moment backstage meant the world to me. Sorry . . . MEANS the world to me.
Most dancers find they were absent when God handed out the right bone, muscle, proportions and hormones to begin an advantaged life as a dancer. Most of us didn't get light bones, long, powerful muscles, graceful arches, and hips that both turn a leg out and let toes point through the roof. While we turn a blind eye to our imperfections, and strive to transform our bodies into fleeting instruments of universal expression, a few, like Gene, are genetically blessed. Maybe you too are one of those whose arches are beautiful, whose naturally sculpted torso and limbs answer easily to emotional and artistic implulse. Or, like me, in spite of imperfections, were determined to go on anyway, just for a few moments of immortality in class and on the stage. A providential mishap prevented me from continuing as a dancer, but fortuitously led to my ongoing career in my other love: writing. (My, how I do go on!)