Dance should mean something to you.
From Damian Woetzel
Where a city is only focused on one aspect, it becomes a city without a soul, not a city people want to live in.
I like that feeling of letting loose, of not planning every step. The best performances are the ones that you just let happen.
The retirement timing is always a tricky thing for a dancer. I think it's different for everyone. How you say goodbye to the thing you have really focused on that much is a tough one. I've always intended to leave in good shape, to exit on a high note.
There are a lot of possibilities I'm looking at for the future, but I'm very insistent on not limiting myself.
I'm going to do some consulting for nonprofits and arts agencies. These are areas I'm interested in that didn't come directly out of Harvard, but certainly I started looking at things in a different manner.
My whole life was geared toward being a highly educated person.
As a dancer running around the world, I always questioned whether that's what I wanted to do.
The chance to work on Broadway choreography as opposed to having to deliver Broadway choreography can be two distinct things.
I traveled so much to dance that I feel a part of many places, but New York is where I spent most of my life and where my career has been - it's the place where I exist.
4 perspectives
3 perspectives
1 perspectives