TOUR Feld Ballets/NY will visit the Music Hall and Macomb Center next weekend. SUZANNE CHESSLER SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS E liot Feld would pre- fer not to talk about the 79 ballets he has choreographed. Rather, he wants people to see them and move to their own conclusions. "It's in the seeing of the bal- let — the beauty of the dancers, the coherence of the bodies, the organization in space — that the audience can make the only relevant judgment," said Mr. Feld, who is bringing his troupe to Michigan and nine other states. Metro Detroit audiences will have the opportunity he rec- ommends Oct. 1-2 at the Music Hall and Oct. 3 at the Macomb Center for the Performing Arts. In addition to 20 dancers, the company travels with technical staff and computerized lighting and sound systems. "I think we've been to Detroit four or five times in the past 10 years,". said the 51-year-old founder of Feld Ballets/NY. "When I was younger I danced with my company, but I don't any longer." Mr. Feld, who recalls being on stage at the Music Hall, con- tinues to work at the ballet bar every day as his personal ex- ercise regimen. "Michigan will be the princi- pal state on this tour because we're visiting 10 cities here and we're not visiting more than two cities in any other state," ex- plained the choreographer, who established his current compa- ny in 1974, three years after his first failed. The Michigan Non-Profit Presenters Association has or- ganized the engagements in Michigan, supported in part by grants from the National En- dowment for the Arts, the Michigan Council for Arts and Eliot Feld is coming to Michigan. Cultural Affairs and Arts Mid- west. "I always knew I wanted to be a dancer, and I began taking classes when I was 11," ex- plained Mr. Feld, who moved back and forth between ballet and modem dance studies. "I was studying two months at the School of American Bal- let when they made me the lit- tle prince in the first production of Balanchine's Nutcracker, and I've been trying to recreate the thrill that I had then ever since." While enrolled at the High School of the Performing Arts in New York, Mr. Feld joined the Broadway cast of West Side Story and appeared in the role of Baby John in the film version. He also was on Broadway in I Can Get It For You Wholesale and Fiddler on the Roof. A former dancer with the American Ballet Theatre, he be- gan his transition to choreog- rapher in 1966. The first ballet he created, Harbinger, was for the American Ballet Theatre, and he went on to work with the Joffrey Ballet, the National Bal- let of Canada, Royal Danish Ballet and others. "Dancing is a wonderful tool for learning because you're learning about yourself," said the artistic director, who estab- lished the New Ballet School in 1978 to provide New York City public school children with tu- ition-free, professional ballet training. Darren Gibson, the first grad- uate of the New Ballet School to join the company, has been a featured performer and has helped run rehearsals. Mr. Feld makes educational initiatives part of the tour pro- gram by providing outreach ac- tivities for young people through open rehearsals, ques- ON TOUR page 78