Tumgik
#nutcracker ballet
breebird33 · 5 months
Text
Tumblr media
a dance with a sugar plum 🐀🧚🏻‍♀️✨
3K notes · View notes
laurenillustrated · 6 months
Text
It’s Nutcracker season! 🩰🎄
Tumblr media
2K notes · View notes
staticsnowfall · 5 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
the nutcracker (1993)
*ੈ‧₊˚ ❆ .ೃ࿔*
corps de ballet of the new york city ballet performing “waltz of the snowflakes”
dir. by emile ardolino, choreo. by george balanchine
438 notes · View notes
shakespearefreak · 4 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
I took Samantha to our local ballet's version of The Nutcracker last night! She brought her own ticket (to the bemusement of the usher 😂) and the mini-nutcracker she received from Santa last year. We had so much fun: Sam got tons of compliments and attention, I picked up a new ornament for my tree at the merch table, and the show itself was nothing short of magical. ✨ The only real disappointment was that one of the Mouse King's subjects 🐭 was out in the lobby at Intermission, interacting with the audience, but we missed getting a photo with him because I took too long at the merch booth. 😕 Ah well, hopefully I'll have better luck next year.
99 notes · View notes
Text
Tumblr media
Finally finished @loganisanobody ‘s late Christmas gift this year! I’ve never really done an art trade like this so it was a lot of fun!
Enjoy a Nutcracker au of Janus, Logan, Roman, and Virgil from Sanders Sides!
Wanted to give them a little bit of a background but here’s them without it too - (total time: ~ 22 hrs)
Tumblr media
Separate pictures and details on their designs in the readmore below
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Logan - Rat King
Outline Color: Blue
Costume Details: Tie, Orange eyes, Mask to replace his glasses, blue accents are meant to look a little like neurons
Janus - Uncle
Outline Color: Green
Costume Details: Bowler hat & gloves, Snake cape
(I actually drew him facing the other direction first and then realized you wouldn’t be able to see his scales haha)
Roman - Nutcracker Prince
Outline Color: Red
Costume Details: Prince outfit & ballet tights
(He fits right in! Barely had to make any outfit changes)
Virgil - Clara
Outline Color: Purple
Costume Details: Vest & cape instead of the usual dress, logo & hoodie design on his cape, purple eye makeup & hair
This au idea & costume designs were partially inspired by @luxmoogle ‘s kingdom hearts nutcracker au (go and look at their art, it’s beautiful) and bc I saw the Nutcracker ballet in person right after we decided on characters for each other.
Thanks @tharkflark1 for some help on their anatomy.
I’ll add on some of the references in another post!
44 notes · View notes
musicboxdoll444 · 5 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
this will be me someday ୨୧
28 notes · View notes
Text
The Story of the Original "Tea" Dancer
There was a delightful story in the Times on February 4th about George Lee, on whom Balanchine created the Tea variation in The Nutcracker. Here it is.
From Ballet to Blackjack, a Dance Pioneer’s Amazing Odyssey
George Lee was the original Tea in “George Balanchine’s The Nutcracker.” A documentary filmmaker found him and a lost part of ballet history in Las Vegas.
By Siobhan Burke Feb. 4, 2024
Among the blaring lights and all-hours amusements of downtown Las Vegas, in a sea of slot machines at the Four Queens Hotel and Casino, George Lee sits quietly at a blackjack table, dealing cards eight hours a day, five days a week, a job he’s been doing for more than 40 years.
Lee, 88, was likely in his usual spot when the filmmaker Jennifer Lin was sifting through old photos at the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts in 2022, wondering what had become of a dancer with a notable place in ballet history. Pictured in a publicity shot for the original production of “George Balanchine’s The Nutcracker,” in the role known as Tea, was a young Asian dancer identified as George Li.
For Lin, a veteran newspaper reporter turned documentarian, the picture raised intriguing questions. In 1954, when the photo was taken, it was rare to see dancers of color on the stage of New York City Ballet, the company Balanchine co-founded. Who was this young man, this breaker of racial barriers, this pioneer? Was he still alive? And if so, what was he up to? “I became absolutely obsessed with trying to find out what happened to George Li,” Lin said in a video interview.
In just over a year, that obsession has blossomed into a short film, “Ten Times Better,” that chronicles the unexpected story of Lee’s life: from his childhood in 1940s Shanghai, where his performing career began; to a refugee camp in the Philippines, where he fled with his mother, a Polish ballet dancer, in 1949; to New York City and the School of American Ballet, where Balanchine cast him in “The Nutcracker” to “Flower Drum Song” on Broadway, his first of many musical theater gigs; and ultimately, to Las Vegas, where he left dance for blackjack dealing in 1980. (He changed the spelling of his last name in 1959, when he became a United States citizen.)
The film will have its premiere on Feb. 10 as part of the Dance on Camera Festival at Film at Lincoln Center. Lee, who last visited New York in 1993, will be in town for the occasion, an opportunity for long-overdue recognition.
“So many years I haven’t done ballet,” Lee said over coffee at the Four Queens on a recent Sunday, after his shift. “And then suddenly Jennifer comes and tries to bring everything up. To me, it was like a shock.”
Tumblr media
George Lee today. He has been a blackjack dealer in Las Vegas for more than 40 years. Photo: Saeed Rahbaran for The New York Times
But Lin’s interest has been welcome. “Jennifer is so perfect, she knows exactly everything,” he said. “She knows my background more than I do.”
Lin was not the only one who had been searching for Lee. In 2017, while organizing an exhibition on “The Nutcracker,” Arlene Yu, who worked for the New York Public Library at the time and is now Lincoln Center’s head archivist, was puzzled by the relatively few traces of him in the library’s vast dance collection.
“I think I’d tracked him down to 1961, but after that, it was really hard to find anything,” she said. “Whereas if you look at some of his peers in ‘The Nutcracker’ in 1954, they went on to careers where there was a lot more documentation.”
Lin’s fascination with Lee emerged through her work on another film, about Phil Chan and Georgina Pazcoguin, the founders of Final Bow for Yellowface, an initiative focused on ending offensive depictions of Asians in ballet. The role of Tea, a divertissement historically rife with such stereotypes—in Balanchine’s canonical version of “The Nutcracker” and others—has been a flashpoint in those efforts. Chan, too, had been struck by the 1954 images of “The Nutcracker,” which he came across during a library fellowship in 2020.
“I’m like, wait, there’s actually a Chinese guy,” he said — as opposed to a non-Chinese dancer with the saffron makeup or heavily painted eyes or even the artificial buck teeth worn in some old productions. “Who is this guy? And why do I not know about him?”
Tumblr media
The "Tea" variation in The Nutcracker at City Ballet in 2015. The dancers are Ralph Ippolito, Claire Von Enck, and Baily Jones. Photo: Andrea Mohin for The New York Times
Lee, in his heyday, was a dancer to know. At just 12, he was already winning public praise. In a preview of a recital of the King-Yanover School in Shanghai, the North China Daily News called him an “extremely promising young Chinese boy, whose technique is of a very high standard.” A reviewer wrote that he “already may be said to be the best Chinese interpreter of Western ballet.” (Lee saved these newspaper clippings and shared them with Lin when they eventually met.)
Born in Hong Kong in 1935, Lee moved to Shanghai with his mother in 1941, when Shanghai was under Japanese occupation. During World War II, his father, a Chinese acrobat, was in Kunming in western China; he died in an accident on his way to visit Lee in 1945.
Lee’s mother, Stanislawa Lee, who had danced with the Warsaw Opera, was his first ballet teacher; as a child, he would follow along with her daily barre exercises. Shanghai had a significant Russian population, and with that a robust ballet scene. To earn money, Stanislawa arranged for her son to perform in nightclubs—“like a polka dance, or Russian dance, or sailor dance,” Lee said. The clubs would pay them in rice.
Tumblr media
Little George Li in his Shanghai days. Photo: George Lee private collection via the NY Times
Fearing the Chinese Communist Party’s takeover in 1949, the two evacuated to the Philippines. An expected four months as refugees turned into two years. In 1951, an American friend of Lee’s father sponsored them to come to New York, where he introduced Lee to the School of American Ballet, City Ballet’s affiliated school.
As Lee narrates these twists and turns in the film, one memory anchors his recollections. Before they immigrated, his mother issued a warning. “You are going to America, it’s all white people, and you better be 10 times better,” he recalls her saying. “Remember that: 10 times better!”
The footage of Lee in his 20s suggests he took that advice to heart. In television appearances — with the company of the ballet star André Eglevsky, and in a number from “Flower Drum Song” on the Ed Sullivan Show — his power and precision dazzle.
“He was good; he was really good,” Chan said. “Clean fifth, high jump, polished turns, stick the landing—the training is all there. He’s already 10 times better than everybody else.”
In a 1979 interview heard in the film, the former City Ballet soloist Richard Thomas, who took over the role of Tea, raves about Lee’s peerless acrobatic jumps: “He was wonderful! Balanchine choreographed a variation for him that none of us have ever been able to equal.”
As Lee remembers it, Balanchine spent 15 minutes with him in the studio. “He said, ‘What can you do good? Show me what you can do good,’ so I show him something,” Lee said. “I did things like splits and double turns, down and up, turn again like a ball, and that’s it. He picked up some things and put them together.”
Tumblr media
George Li as a student at the School of American Ballet. Photo: George Lee private collection via the NY Times
He recalled that during a “Nutcracker” dress rehearsal, the City Ballet makeup artist put him in full yellowface, and Balanchine insisted he take off the makeup. “He is Asian enough! Why do you make him more?” he remembers Balanchine saying. Lee was costumed in the Fu Manchu mustache, queue ponytail and rice paddy hat often associated with the role, now widely critiqued as racist caricatures. But he said he didn’t take offense. “Dancing is dancing,” he said.
Lee performed in “The Nutcracker” as a student; he was never invited to join City Ballet. But he clearly excelled in his classes and onstage. For that, he credits his strong foundation of Russian training in China — and his mother’s exacting standards. He can still see her standing in the studio doorway at the School of American Ballet, observing closely.
“She was watching the class and then would go home and tell me, ‘You did this wrong or that wrong, you got to do it this way,’” he said. “So I really worked hard, and I was good.” (His favorite teacher at the school was the demanding Anatole Oboukhoff: “He always wanted more, and that’s why I liked him very much.”)
To make a living Lee turned to musical theater, performing in shows like “Baker Street” on Broadway and the cabaret “Carol Channing with her 10 Stout-Hearted Men,” which opened in London. He pieced together jobs for more than 20 years, often unsure of what would come next.
Tumblr media
Lee in flight in a production of “Flower Drum Song” in Las Vegas in the early 1960s. Photo: George Lee personal collection via the NY Times
He was dancing in a Vegas revue, “Alcazar de Paris,” now in his 40s, when a blackjack dealer friend suggested he go to dealer school. “I can’t dance all my life,” he remembers thinking. He decided to give dealing a try and soon landed a job at the Four Queens. Aside from four years at another casino, he has worked there ever since.
In December 2022, he got a voice mail message from Lin. With her reporting skills and some crucial assists from Yu, she had determined that he lived in Las Vegas. Of the five phone numbers she found for George Lees, four led nowhere; his was the last she tried.
When they finally connected, she put her other project on hold to focus on his story; she and her small creative team had a final cut by November. “George is 88, and I wanted him to be able to enjoy this moment, where people recognize him for his dancing,” she said.
As he prepares to return to New York, Lee said he felt gratified, most of all, for his mother.
“I’m proud for her that I didn’t let her down,” he said. “It makes me feel better to look up at her and say: ‘Look, mother, now you see what’s happening, what you did for me. You gave me all the good foundation, everything. Through you, I’m here now.’”
Tumblr media
George Lee today. Photo: Saeed Rahbaran for The New York Times
21 notes · View notes
fiddler-sticks · 5 months
Text
Reblog to turn a nutcracker gay
22 notes · View notes
Text
Tumblr media
Four WACs of the Month, having demonstrated outstanding traits of leadership, initiative, and alertness in the performance of their duties, were treated to a three-day "Special Monday" in New York, December 11, 1952. They attended a performance of The Nutcracker by the New York City Ballet and afterwards went backstage to meet the Sugar Plum Fairy, Maria Tallchief.
Photo: Sgt. Wallace via the National Archives
113 notes · View notes
disast3rtransp0rt · 6 months
Text
my dealer: got some straight gas🔥😛 this strain is called “nutcracker suite” 😳 you’ll be having visions of sugarplums💯
me: yeah whatever. i don't feel shit
5 minutes later: dude i think I need to throw my slipper at that mouse with nine heads
my grandfather's christmas present, doing an arabesque: hey babygirl do you wanna grow several years older during a light transition and run away to rule a country with me?
(thank you @artemisthehuntress for the inspo)
15 notes · View notes
queer-cartoons-quotes · 4 months
Text
Me watching Disney's Nutcracker:
Tumblr media
9 notes · View notes
laurenillustrated · 4 months
Text
Sugar Plum Fairy 🍬
Tumblr media
925 notes · View notes
wdillustration · 5 months
Text
Tumblr media
Coming so very Soon...
8 notes · View notes
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Nutcracker lineup ✨❄️🎄🍬💕
52 notes · View notes
ribbonsandsnow · 2 years
Text
𝓈𝓊𝑔𝒶𝓇𝓅𝓁𝓊𝓂 𝒻𝒶𝒾𝓇𝓎 𝓌𝒾𝓃𝓉𝑒𝓇 𝓂𝑜𝑜𝒹 𝒷𝑜𝒶𝓇𝒹
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
91 notes · View notes
majokkoradio · 1 year
Audio
“Arabia no Odori” - Princess Tutu - BGM
44 notes · View notes