8A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, April 12, 1999 Young dancer promoted to soloist of Harlem theater The Washington Post Somewhere in Arnold and Martha Graf's comfortable brick home, across the road from a sheep farm about 10 miles from Baltimore, lies a forgotten pair of binoculars. They seemed a rea- sonable purchase at the time - the Grafs assumed they'd need help spot- ting their daughter Alicia in the blur of corps dancers when, still in high school, she first joined Dance Theatre of Harlem. But Alicia Graf didn't spend much time in the back. She vaulted into prin- cipal roles in her first season with the company, and now that she's in her third year, her name frequently tops the cast lists. Most recently, the 20-year-old danced leading parts in two of the three works during the company's week-long engagement at the Kennedy Center Opera House in Washington, D.C. Graf is not the typical doll-size bal- lerina. Poised on her toes, she stands over 6 feet tall; she's the kind of dancer for whom the term "long-legged" is a woeful understatement. In motion, she is at once bracingly free-spirited and extraordinarily mature. Recently pro- moted to the middle rank of soloist, she has been entrusted with some of the most demanding and showy roles in the DTH repertory, roles she takes to like a birthright. Graf is an ideal the way all ballerinas are - with feet, legs and spine pos- sessed of that rare mix of length, plian- cy and strength. But in other terms, she is a different sort of ideal: a woman of color gaining recognition in an intense- ly competitive, white-dominated pro- fession. Her father is a white communi- ty organizer from Manhattan's Lower East Side and her mother an African- American social worker and former model raised on a North Carolina farm. They settled in Maryland's Howard County when Arnold Graf became the regional director of a community foun- dation. Graf took her first dance class while still in diapers. Serious training began in nearby Columbia at the Ballet Royale Academy, where Graf's muscles were molded under the eye of Donna Harrington-Payne, a Welsh native. From the first, Harrington-Payne says, she knew Graf was a born dancer. "She was very, very light and agile, and movement for her was extremely natur- al," she says. "Her limbs went into positions that many dancers fight to get to. When you look at a body like that you think, 'My God, this young lady would be a marvelous classical dancer."' In pursuing ballet, however, Graf was on a path that too often leads to heartbreak. It's a profession with impossibly particular physical require- ments. Trim and tiny is the norm. Few male dancers have the size and strength to support a woman as tall as Graf (5 feet 10 in socks). Then there is the issue of race. Ballet is abysmally segregated. African- American dancers are rare in the major companies outside the primarily black Dance Theatre of Harlem. Even Harrington-Payne knew her student would have a hard time getting hired by a classically based company; as she notes, "Choices are quite limited for someone of a multiracial background." Graf, however, was undeterred. "I never had a race issue with myself," she says. "I knew my talent was good enough that it would take me somewhere. ... I never thought that race would have too much to do with it. That might have been my naivete talk- ing, but I always thought that if I work hard enough and I'm just as good as the Mitchell told her he thought she had promise, but he wanted her to first fin- ish her senior year at Centennial High School in Ellicott City. "That's not really what I was inter- ested in," Graf says. "I didn't want to be in school. Miss Donna said there wasn't anything else she could do for me. I was ready to be performing. We said thank you and went'home." - A few months later, she attended a DTH master class in Virginia, after which Mitchell stunned her with the news that not only did he want to hire her on the spot but he would also pay for her to finish her academic studies at New York's Professional Children's School. "I was so ready to leave," Graf says. "I liked high school. I was a good stu- dent and got A's and everything. But I knew I wanted to dance more than any- thing." It was that readiness, that stalwart self- confidence, that appealed to Mitchell. "There's a mix of a kind of youthfulness and an old soul," he says. "She does things with such a sense of authority you forget how young she is. She doesn't really know how good she is." With her towering,' womanly body, her voluptuous feet and legs and obvi- ous beauty, Graf has been a natural in the sexier dance roles. Still, she needed a little tutoring in the art of seduction. That fell to Suzanne Farrell, the leg- endary Balanchine muse who coached Graf last year in "Prodigal Son," in which the Siren hotly romances the hapless son, only to leave him in utter emotional ruin. "She'd say, You're like a bitch you don't care about this man. You just want to take his virginity, take money,"' Graf recalls. "I'm really ot like that at all. But the roles that aren't you are the best onstage. It's like sub- consciously, I guess I really want to be like that." Sitting in a crowded diner, she ducks her head with a shy grin. Now Graf is firmly in the spotlight. Beyond her eye-catching height and polished technique, what is most capti- vating about Graf is a sense of abun- dant joy, as if her steps were another form of bubbling, unselfconscos laughter. Mom and Dad saw her first big per- formance at the Kennedy Center last year from the President's Box, arranged through a friend on the center's board of directors. That night Graf danced in "Prodigal Son," and in the first-ever performance of "South African Suite." It was a magical experience, they say. "We were right there in this box" says Arnold Graf, "and there she ' His eyes dampen, and his voice almost disappears. "I was stunned by her. Just stunned by her." Courtesy of The Washington Post Alicia Graf strikes a creative position. next person, I can go anywhere." Harrington-Payne took Graf to sum- mer workshops in New York, where she studied at the venerable School of American Ballet (the training arm of the New York City Ballet) and American Ballet Theatre. She took master classes with Dance Theater of Harlem when the company was in the Washington area, and When she was 16 took a class at its Harlem studios. 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