Wayne Eagling

Last updated

Wayne Eagling (born 27 November 1950) is a Canadian ballet dancer, now retired. After more than twenty years as a popular member of The Royal Ballet in London, he became well known as an international choreographer and company director. [1]

Contents

Early life and training

Wayne John Eagling was born in Montreal, Quebec, to Anglophone parents, Edward and Thelma Eagling. [2] He spent much of his childhood and youth in California, where his family had moved. As a boy, he augmented his academic studies by attending classes at the Patricia Ramsey Studio of Dance Arts. [3] There, he developed into a gifted student of classical ballet and, as he matured, was encouraged by his teachers to pursue a career as a professional dancer. In 1965, when he was 15, he was noticed by Michael Somes and Gerd Larsen of the Royal Ballet during the company's tour of the United States and was offered a place at the Royal Ballet School in London. [4] He moved to England in the late 1960s, when "swinging London," the vibrant cultural phenomenon of fashion, popular music, and entertainment, was at its peak. Eagling resisted its allure, however, and remained a devoted student of classical ballet and related arts. A strapping young man, he was invited to join The Royal Ballet in 1969, when he was only 18.

Professional career

Eagling proved to be a valuable addition to the company. A supple and powerful dancer, he was promoted to soloist in 1972 and to principal dancer in 1975. As the product of "an eclectic training with a mix of lots of different methods," [5] he was exceptionally versatile. He performed the leading roles of princes, gallants, and swains in the nineteenth-century classics—partnering with dancers including Margot Fonteyn, Jennifer Penney, and Merle Park—but he was best known for his work in the twentieth-century repertory. [6] A favorite of renowned British choreographer Kenneth MacMillan, he created roles in a number of his works, including Elite Syncopations, a suite of ragtime dances, and Gloria, an elegiac work about the futility of war. He danced the role of Crown Prince Rudolf in the New York premiere of MacMillan's Mayerling in April 1983. He also danced in ballets by Frederick Ashton, George Balanchine, Jerome Robbins, and Rudolf Nureyev, among others. He was especially admired as Balanchine's Apollo, as Woyzeck in MacMillan's Different Drummer, and as the Chosen One in Glen Tetley's The Rite of Spring, the first male dancer to undertake that dramatic role. While still active as a principal dancer, Eagling began to take part in choreographic workshops sponsored by the Royal Ballet. His first work for the company was Frankenstein, the Modern Prometheus, made in 1984. Other works soon followed, mounted for his home company and for companies abroad.

In 1991, Eagling retired from dancing and took up the post of artistic director of Het Nationale Ballet (Dutch National Ballet) in Amsterdam. As chief choreographer, he created a spate of new works in the following years. In 1996, he collaborated with Toer van Schayk on a new production of The Nutcracker and the Mouse King. Set in Amsterdam around 1810, with skaters on a frozen canal and Saint Nicholas instead of Herr Drosselmeyer, [7] it was an immediate hit with the Dutch public and was later staged by the Finnish National Ballet and the Polish National Ballet. During Eagling's tenure as artistic director, he not only maintained the classical and neoclassical repertory of the Dutch National Ballet but actively commissioned new works by contemporary choreographers such as Ashley Page and David Dawson. [8] After he left his post in Holland in 2003, he worked on the international scene for two years, occasionally staging works for the legendary Italian ballerina Carla Fracci.

In December 2005, Eagling was appointed artistic director of the English National Ballet in London, where he continued to invent new stage works. Notable among them were the witty Men Y Men, set for nine male dancers in 2009, and, in 2010, yet another version of The Nutcracker, a perennial favorite. During his seven years with this company, he was warmly appreciated by audiences and was both respected and beloved by his dancers. In 2012, however, he was forced to resign in a controversial dispute with the governing board over drastic cuts to the company budget. [9]

Roles created

Eagling created numerous roles in the works of Sir Kenneth MacMillan and other choreographers. Among them are the following. [10]

In MacMillan ballets

In other works

Works choreographed

Among the works choreographed by Eagling for various companies are the following. [11]

Legacy

Eagling can be seen dancing on three DVDs that are commercially available. In a Royal Ballet performance of MacMillan's Romeo and Juliet, recorded in 1984 and released by Kultur Video in 2005, he is partnered with Alessandra Ferri, [12] an acclaimed interpreter of the role of Juliet. At the end of 1984, the BBC recorded the New Year's Eve gala performance of Johann Strauss's operetta Die Fledermaus at the Royal Opera House, starring Dame Kiri Te Kanawa and Hermann Prey. In the party scene, it featured Ashton's exuberant pas de deux set to the famous waltz "Frülingsstimmen" ("Voices of Spring") and danced with joyous abandon by Eagling and Merle Park. Both these recorded performances show him in the prime of his career. Eagling can also be seen performing the "Four Seasons" ballet from Giuseppe Verdi's opera I vespri siciliani , in a production from the Teatro alla Scala, opposite Carla Fracci to choreography by Micha van Hoecke. [13] The production opened La Scala's season in December 1989.

Related Research Articles

Rudolf Nureyev Soviet-born ballet dancer and choreographer

Rudolf Khametovich Nureyev was a Soviet-born ballet dancer and choreographer. Nureyev is regarded by some as the greatest male ballet dancer of his generation.

The Royal Ballet Ballet company in the United Kingdom

The Royal Ballet is an internationally renowned classical ballet company, based at the Royal Opera House in Covent Garden, London, England. The largest of the five major ballet companies in Great Britain, the Royal Ballet was founded in 1931 by Dame Ninette de Valois, it became the resident ballet company of the Royal Opera House in 1946 and was granted a royal charter in 1956, becoming recognised as Britain's flagship ballet company.

Ronald Hynd is an English choreographer, and in his youth was a ballet dancer.

Monica Mason

Dame Monica Mason,, is a former ballet dancer, teacher, and artistic director of The Royal Ballet. In more than fifty years with the company, she established a reputation as a versatile performer, a skilled rehearsal director, and a capable administrator.

Rudi van Dantzig Dutch dancer and choreographer

Rudi van Dantzig was a Dutch choreographer, company director, and writer. He was a pivotal figure in the rise to world renown of Dutch ballet in the latter half of the twentieth century.

Sir Anthony James Dowell is a retired British ballet dancer and a former artistic director of the Royal Ballet. He is widely recognized as one of the great danseurs nobles of the twentieth century.

Amedeo Amodio is an Italian choreographer and former ballet dancer.

Dame Merle Park is a British ballet dancer and teacher, now retired. As a prima ballerina with the Royal Ballet during the 1960s and 1970s, she was known for "brilliance of execution and virtuoso technique" as well as for her ebullience and charm. Also admired for her dramatic abilities, she was praised as an actress who "textured her vivacity with emotional details."

David Blair was a British ballet dancer and a star of England's Royal Ballet during the 1950s and 1960s.

Maryon Lane was a South African ballet dancer who became well known in Britain as a ballerina of the Sadler's Wells Theatre Ballet and as a soloist with the Royal Ballet.

Ernst Meisner is a Dutch dancer and choreographer. He trained at the Nationale Ballet Academy in Amsterdam and at the Royal Ballet School in London.

Viviana Durante

Viviana Durante is an Italian ballet dancer, considered one of the great dramatic ballerinas of recent times. She was a principal dancer of The Royal Ballet, American Ballet Theatre, Teatro alla Scala and K-Ballet. She is currently Artistic Director of English National Ballet School and Artistic Director of Viviana Durante Company, with which she occasionally performs.

Sergei Polunin Soviet-born ballet dancer, actor and model

Sergei Vladimirovich Polunin is a Soviet-born ballet dancer, actor and model. He has Ukrainian, Russian, and Serbian citizenship, but has "always regarded himself as Russian".

Manuel Legris French ballet dancer (born 1964)

Manuel Legris is a French ballet dancer, born in Paris on October 10, 1964. He was a étoile of the Paris Opera Ballet for 23 years. Since September 1, 2010, he has directed the Vienna State Ballet. He will assume the position of artistic director of La Scala Theatre Ballet in December 2020.

Richard Cragun American ballet dancer

Richard Cragun was an American ballet dancer, teacher and ballet director who performed with the Stuttgart Ballet in Germany from 1965 to 1996.

Derek Rencher

Derek Rencher was a British ballet dancer. A commanding figure among Royal Ballet character dancers for more than four decades, he was probably the most prolific performer in the company's history.

Alfred Rodrigues was a South African ballet dancer and choreographer. His works have been produced by ballet and opera companies in many countries of the world.

Toer van Schayk

Toer van Schayk is a Dutch ballet dancer, choreographer, scenic and costume designer, painter, and sculptor. Along with Rudi van Dantzig and Hans van Manen, he is one of the creative triumvirate that brought the Dutch National Ballet to international prominence in the latter half of the twentieth century.

Francesca Hayward English ballet dancer and actress

Francesca Hayward is a Kenyan-born English ballet dancer and actress. She is a principal dancer in the Royal Ballet at Covent Garden in London. In 2019, she starred as Victoria the White Cat in the musical film Cats, an adaptation of the stage musical of the same name.

An Evening with the Royal Ballet is a 1963 British documentary film produced by the British Home Entertainment for the Royal Ballet company.

References

  1. Debra Craine and Judith Mackrell, "Eagling, Wayne," in The Oxford Dictionary of Dance (Oxford University Press, 2000).
  2. "Eagling, Wayne," in The International Who's Who (London: Routledge, 2004).
  3. "Wayne Eagling", online biography, Royal Opera House: People. Retrieved 20 October 2019.
  4. "Wayne Eagling, Choreographer", online biography, Teatr Wielki Opera Narodowa (Polish National Opera), Warsaw. Retrieved 20 October 2019.
  5. Charlotte Kasner, "On Midnight Express and tutus: A Talk with Wayne Eagling," interview, Ballet-Dance Magazine (London), 10 April 2013.
  6. Craine and Mackrell, "Eagling, Wayne," in The Oxford Dictionary of Dance (2000).
  7. "Dutch National Ballet Presents The Nutcracker and the Mouse King", online program notes.
  8. Titus van Amerongen, "Dutch National Ballet," Dance Now (London), 5.1 (Spring 1996), pp. 79-81.
  9. Matthew Holehouse, "Wayne Eagling Quits the English National Ballet", The Daily Telegraph (London), 21 February 2012.
  10. Horst Koegler, "Eagling, Wayne," in The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Ballet, 2d ed. (Oxford University Press, 1987).
  11. Craine and Mackrell, "Eagling, Wayne," in The Oxford Dictionary of Dance (2000).
  12. "The Royal Ballet's Romeo and Juliet: 50 years of star-crossed dancers – in pictures". The Guardian. 2 October 2015. Retrieved 20 October 2019.
  13. "I Vespri siciliani [videorecording] : opera in five acts". Stamford University Libraries. Retrieved 20 October 2019.