An enchanting production of a seasonal favorite: Christmas Eve festivities inAct One (left), the 'Coffee' dance DANCE Joifrey Finds a Home in Iowa The university cosponsors a new 'Nutcracker' The bicoastal Joffrey Ballet considers New York and Los Angeles its homes, but when the company unveiled its enchanting production of the seasonal dance favorite "The Nutcracker" in De- cember, the premiere took place at the Uni- versity of Iowa in Iowa City. Iowa City? Not a place usually associated with major bal- let events, you say. But without the involve- ment of the university, there would have been no Joffrey "Nutcracker" in 1987. The university stepped into the breach when the Joffrey was having trouble raising seed money for the "Nutcracker" that artistic di- rector Robert Joffrey had long dreamed of. Iowa's contribu- tion-in cash from private gifts and in services and facilities provided by the school-ulti- mately came to $500,000, one- third of the cost. This largesse grew from the longstanding relationship be- tween the Joffrey and the university's Hancher Auditori- um. The company has per- formed there regularly since 1974 and its following is large and loyal. Two years ago Hancher administrators com- missioned a ballet from the company, and the Joffrey II2 Dancers, an apprentice group, has had three residencies in Iowa City in the past six years. In addition, a former principal Creating:. dancer for the Joffrey heads the Iowa dance department. "Iowans suffer some- times pridewise because they're regarded as hicks or living in the cornfields," says Hancher director Wallace Chappell. "We do live in cornfields-but there are a lot of people out here with taste and a lot of interest in the performing arts." Bankrolling "The Nutcracker" has been more than a pride booster for Iowa. Stu- dents got to watch and interact with the choreographers, dancers and designers while the troupe was on campus creating the ballet. And at every stop the Joffrey makes with "The Nutcracker" during the holiday season each year, audiences will learn that Iowa helped to produce it. Addi- tional public-relations mileage can be gained from organizing alumni events around performances. Iowa's financial support enabled the Jof- frey to spend last June, which would oth- erwise have been an unwelcome layoff pe- riod, at the university developing "The Nutcracker" and rehearsing, as well, what turned out to be its very successful reconstruction of Nijinsky's "Rite Of Spring." And the two weeks of theater time in Iowa City for technical rehearsals just prior to "The Nutcracker" premiere would have been un- affordable or unavailable in the company's hometowns. But the Iowa-Joffrey connec- tion runs deeper than dollars and cents. "It gives us an oppor- tunity to maintain the identity of the Joffrey being a national touring company," says execu- tive director Pennie Curry. "If we create everything in New York and give all the premiares to New York or even Los Ange- les, then when we go to other cities we become a touring product that doesn't really have much contact with the community." In Iowa City, there is already talk of a fu- ture project. As Iowa's Chap- pell sees it, "I guess we would qualify as the third home-if VAN ALLEN there were a coast here." n Iowa ABIGAIL KUFLIK JON Associate director Gerald Arpino, dancersi MARCH 1988 NEWSWEEKONCAMPUS 37