The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, October 31, 1984 - Page 7 Ballet star recalls Balanchine MINNEAPOLIS AP -- Through speed, vitality and technical wizardry, Merrill Ashley has become a star of the New York City Ballet. Critics ap- plaud the special clarity to Ashley's movements -- a verve and precision. And audiences adore her. From the age of 5, she knew that dan- ce would be her career, and when she was 12, she became a student at New SYorkCity Ballet's School of American v ballet. "I saw my older sister taking ballet classes and that's when I first decided I } wanted to be a dancer," she said in an interview. Ashley, 34, was born_ in St. Paul, Minn.,the daughter of Mardelle and Harvie Merrill, who named her Linda. She changed her name when she joined the corps de ballet of the New York City Ballet at age 16 because there was another Linda Merrill in the company. Before her family moved to Rutland, Vt., when she was 5, Ashley remem- bered going to see performances by } professional dance companies at the University of Minnesota's Northrop Auditoriun with her parents. She ap- peared there earlier this month when the Ciy Ballet made its only Midwest engagement of the 1984-85 season. "They said I was too young to start taking ballet lessions while we lived in Minnesota. I was about 7 when I star- ted taking lessons in Vermont," she said. Ashley began studying at the School of American Ballet when she was 12. Then she missed a year. "I went back when I was 13. I had a Ford Foundation scholarship so I was able to spend the full school year there," she recalled. That extended into three full years, then she joined the company in 1967 and spent 16 years under the tutelage of the legendary George Balanchine. The late choreographer and dance director changed her life, she said In her book "Dancing For Balan- chine," to be published by E.P. Dutton Inc., Nov. 16, Ashley writes of the years she worked with the choreographer who built the New York City Ballet and created more than 200 ballets before his death in 1983. "There was an air about Balan- chine that I think anyone sensed im- mediately. He seemed to have this per- sonal interest in people," she said. "He gave people some sort of energy about themselves, made them feel good," she continued."That quality helped us give more. He kept proving day after day that the things he asked for were possible. It gave you an in- credible respect for him. "He always used to say about us that we're like race horses and we need somebody on our back to get us going. It's very hard sometimes to make your- self self-disciplined." Ballanchine's spirit remains the driving force behind the company, she said, as dancer Peter Martins and choreographer Jerome Robbins grap- ple with administrative duties. "The dancers are still trying to main- tain what Mr. Balanchine taught us. We're not going down a different path. We still feel that we're his company," she said. Ashley, who is married to Kibbe Fit- spatrick, a simultaneous interpreter at the United Nations, said her dance discipline is often a part of her private life. "I have a great sweet tooth," she said, and it must be controlled. "I'm 5-foot-7 and my weight ranges from 115 to 118. The three-pound dif- ference is noticeable on stage because I'm wearing very form-fitting costumes," she said. Ashley said she burns off the calories when she is preparing a new role because she works so hard. Shen she's living her normal routine of classes, rehearsals and performances, she eats dairy products and a lot of raw vegetables, even though she doesn't really like them. During her years with Balanchine, Ashley developed extreme muscular strength and athletic agility, but said she felt emotion often was lacking in her performances. "Balanchine always wanted to see steps. Every time I started working on presence, he'd say, 'You're acting too much. Don't act.' Now, I think I'm a lit- tle freer on stage -- my personality is a little more developed on stage. I relate a little more to my partner," she said. "I feel that I have more to offer than technique. I think I already was going in that direction, buy I do think that maybe I've gone a little further than I would have if he were here." Whether she's working on technique or feeling, however, dancing is always a joy for Ashley, who teaches at the School of American Ballet when the company is not in its performing season. "There's nothing I'd rather be doing," she said. D Support the March of Dimes llnIIIIIIIIWRTH DEFECTS FOUNDATION THIS SPACE CONTRIBUTO BY THE PUISHER To get an 18" by 2134" poster of an Erlanger label send check or money order for $2.95 and your name and address to: Erlanger Label Poster, Dept. N, P.O. Box 49206, Atlanta, GA 30359. Allow 4-6 weeks for delivery. Offer expires 3/31/85 or sooner if quantities are exhausted. Limited to persons of legal drinking age. Void where prohibited. (Erlanger is a very interesting beer. Enjoy it at your favorite bar or restaurant.) @O1984, The Stroh Brewery Co., Detroit, Wt Heller recovers with typical irreverent humor p NEW YORK AP -- Three years ago, Joseph Heller was 325 pages into his new manuscript when he discovered one day that he couldn't take off his sweater. The next day he was in intensive care at Mt. Sinai Hospital in Manhattan, unable to pick up his manuscript. He had Guillain-Barre syndrome, a disease of the nervous system that, leaves its victims weak with some numbness. Most Guillain-Barre patien- ts recover. "I couldn't read. That was the hard part, because reading made the time go at night," the author said at a recent in- teview. The easy part for Heller now is that he's recovered and busy promoting the book he had started before his illness. "God Knows" Alfred A. Knopf, $16.95, a rip-roaring tale of King David that's appeared on best seller lists. "I would call myself 100 percent recovered. But I still have trouble saying certain words, like 'walk,"' he said with that impish Heller smile. Heller, 61, spent 42 days in Mt. Sinai before transferring to the Rusk Rehabilitation Institute at New York University for four months. Later, he went to his house n East Jampton to recuperate and to pick up the pages of his book. "For a period of five or six months, I couldn't write," he siad. "I had to re- read what I had written because I had forgotten the rhythms and what I had put in. "I couldn't use a typewriter, because I couldn't move the roller," Heller con- tinued. "A friend lent me a word processor." Heller's first book, the celebrated "Catch-22," made him in 1961 at the age of 38 a welcomed addition to American literature. Each book since then -- "Something Happened" and "Good as Gold" -- has been highly praised but also criticized for not measuring up to that debut. But "Catch-22," which made min- cemeat out of World War II and the military, was not a best seller in har- dback. It was in paperback and sold well again during the Vietnam War. Heller has never written a sequel to the book, which later was made into a movie starring Alan Arkin and Jon Voight. Nor has he ever set out to em- brace the same subject matter. "With all of my books, there's an imaginative way I deal with the narrative contents," he said. "It would be a failure on my part and a failure of the imagination if I were to imitate myself. With 'Something Happened,' I deliberately tried to write something different from 'Catch-22.' In both, I tried to select a prose style that would reflect what was happening in the stories. "If I ever imitated myself, I would feel I had lost my vitality." A driving force in Heller's works is his irreverent humor. "God Knows" is written in the first person. And King David tells us: "I have the best story in the Bible. Where's the competition? Job? Forget him. Genesis? The cosmology is for kids, and old-wives' tale, a fey fantasy spun by a nodding grandmother already dozing off into satisfied boredom." Heller did not realize any significamt income from "Catch-22" until the '70s. He worked on other projects, including the screenplay for "Sex and the Single Girl," and taught at Yale University and City College of New York. Then he did the play, "We Bombed in New Haven," which kept him away from novel writing for another two years. "But with the completion of 'Something Happened,' and submission of it to paperback even before that, I knew I would have enough money so I would have no excuses for not writing novels," Heller said. Heller never has more than one idea for a book at a time, but said he usually knows what he's going to write about by the time he's finished the last. Right now, he's working on a book about Guillain-Barre syndrome with his close friend, Speed Vogel, who also helped him with his recovery. "It's amusing,"' he said with a grin. And Heller knows how the book will end, as he dos all of his works before he even begins to write. "I regard writing my books as some kind of journey," he said. "When I move into the ending, it's like coming home." ...*Ox . Y.:tm.a4 t... ...ekntc l ,b be :"au~ {vtiu'it is~} . 4'}:":}:;sensa;ti i nal-:n:ewfall }:}and \.nt"r{.bric .all;d:C.dd'skin.m.b ,at k "s}"., n :it}.::a.,.:' e in s fn. C.m}}vt .r'he 'ate.t{styles of C} d dlekYnM "' n n.w at ..{.t .er Lne..r.. i s .swse we:genme...sd nre. You may not have known what to call it, but you certainly know how soft, warm and beautiful it is. It's the sensational new fall and win terfabric called Cuddleskin that combines the elegant look of satin with the coziness of flannel. Come see the latest styles of Cuddleskinm gowns now at The Lingerie Store along with other current designer gowns, robes, intimate apparel, foundations, hosiery and fragrances. And remember it'0s all discounted 20% or more every day! You'll receive an additional 5% off your purchase with a ' ~curren t studen t I.D. Designer names at discount prics VISA Arborland Consumer Mati 3623 Washtenaw Ave. open Monday-Saturday 10-9 Sunday Noon-5 971-2229 NL986 Photography exhibit stirs senses at DIA (Contined from Page 6) in this particular series are in silhouet- te; some blended with natural images such as forests and trees and some with manmade images such as urban buildings and heating radiators. Each unites man with his environment. In one print, Eleanor is so finely blended into a large tree with tiny branches that she almost seems to grow from the tree. Similarly, in one of the urban collages, Eleanor's image is in com- plete harmony with the building that surrounds her. Her straight stance, with hands upon her hips, directly models (or mimics) the shape of the windows which cover the entire front of the urban dwelling. So well, in fact, that the top of one of the windows comes together to form the hips and vagina of the majestic silhouette. This seems the ultimate blending of man with his ur- ban environment. This feeling is enhanced by the discomfort of the horizontal silhouettes of sticks from a natural environment dissect the center of the image. Two fine prints, one of Barbara, Callahan's daughter, and the other od Eleanor, each sprawled upon a mat- tress (Chicago c.1952), successfully bridge the transition from the photographer's collage to his later photographs' (c.1953-53) tendency toward stark contrasts between small shafts of light and vast areas of all en- compassing blackness. Possibly the most impressive print on display was one of Callahan's earlier attempts (Indiana c.1948). Eleanor stands majestically alone atop a small hill in the sand. Callahan's mastery of printing gives the sand a striking texture made even righer by the foot- prints dissecting the image itself. The most exciting component of the photograph, however, is the shadow which Eleanor casts upon the sand. The photograph, taken at a distance, gives the shadow the appearance of a thin line which curves its way over the sandy slope abd reaches outward away from Eleanor, gently gripping the sand beneath it. The photograph is so rich in texture that even the small lines upon the sand, created by the wind, almost beg to be touched. The prints that compose this photographic tribute to the human form are, for the most part, soft and serene. However, the occasional clash between light and dark give the entire display a dramatic flair, rounding out an utterly sensuous exhibit. 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