The Michigan Daily-Thursday, August 7, 1980-Page 9 da e' erts A dacer's dream realiz ed By ELLEN RIESER Starting this fall, Ann Arbor's dance community will welcome a new mem- ber-Ann Arbor Ballet Theatre. The ballet company is the result of a long- time dream of a local ballet teacher, Carol Scharp. Ms. Scharp, who was raised in Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti, began her training in Ann Arbor and then went on the Joffrey, Harkness, IN RESPONSE TO student demand, Ms. Scharp began to teach more and more performance-oriented classes such as advanced pointe classes, variations classes, in which dancers learned parts of the established ballet repertoire and original works choreographed by Ms. Scharp, and pas de deux or partnering classes. However, the problem of an outlet for performan- of dealing with spangles and tutus, Ms. Scharp was spending inordinate amounts of time in lawyers' offices pouring over incorporation procedures for non-profit organizations, tax laws, and insurance policies. According to Ms. Scharp, Ann Arbor Ballet Theatre will be different from other local dance companies in several important aspects. First, unlike Ann Arbor Civic Ballet, it will not recon- stitute itself for each performance. In- stead, a permanent roster of soloists, corps dancers, and auxiliaries (charac- ter dancers, mimes, etc.) will work together continuously throughout the company's active season. Special classes will be offered for members of the company and beyond these, the dancers will be required to take a minimum number of weekly ballet classes at any of the local dance studios. SECONDLY, THE company will have a significant educational com- ponent. It will go into Michigan public schools to introduce students to ballet and to encourage young people, especially boys, to dance. Thirdly, the company will provide opportunities for local choreographers who desire to work within the ballet idiom to choreograph their works on adult dan- cers and see them performed. Finally, says Ms. Scharp, "the company will welcome and encourage the in- volvement of anyone who does anything with the theatre." She notes that the company will need lighting and makeup experts, scenery painters, and costume designers. "I'd like to see the whole Ann Arbor artistic community get in- volved in this," she said. In September, audition notices will be posted about Ann Arbor and Ms. Scharp will have the task of picking her com- pany from the dancers who respond. With numbers pinned to their leotards, the dancers will be put through their paces in a combination technique and variations classe. Dancers will be selected on the basis of technical ability, strength, musicality, style, line, and (unfortunately) weight. The stage adds some ten to fifteen pounds to the human figure, and to steal a line from the movie "Nijinsky", "Nobody loves a fat faun." At the moment, none of this exists. To be more precise, the rehearsal space is available, a theatre is being engaged, and the company has even acquired a resident doctor, James F. Herbertson, a local orthopedist. But as of yet, the most important aspect, the dancers, is not even a shadow in the highly polished mirrors of Ms. Scharp's studio. As artistic director of Ann Arbor Ballet Theatre, Carol Scharp will be re- sponsible for everything that the com- pany does. During occasional black moments, she admits to being "scared to death of the whole thing." However, after listening to her talk about the quality of local ballet students and the service and pleasure that she thinks the company could provide for the com- munity, doubts vanish and one gets caught up in the joy and passion of the undertaking and hopes for its future. Country singer Pride survives air mishap Deborah White and Thomas Ward, two dancers from the C.A.S. Ballet Theatre School, will be among many local dancers auditioning this fall for Ann Arbor's newest dance group the Ann Arbor Ballet Theatre. DECATUR, Texas (UPI) - A large, executive aircraft with country music star Charley Pride and his entourage aboard collided with a light aircraft west of Fort Worth yesterday, sending the other plane plummeting to the ground and killing two persons. Pride's aircraft landed safely. The larger aircraft, a chartered Fairchild 27 with Pride and 15 others aboard, was returning from Rapid City, S.D. It landed safely at Meacham Field in Fort Worth with damage to its tail section and an engine. THE SINGER, a resident of nearby Dallas, was en route to a private per- formance for 600 Catholic nuns at the University of Dallas. Pride's agent, Randy Jackson, who was not aboard the aircraft, said the performance would go on. "I wouldn't stand them up now for anything," he said. Jackson said he had talked to several persons-on the plane and was told the light aircraft skimmed over top of the Fairchild. "It damaged part of the tail and I think it destroyed one of the cables, causing one of the engines to malfun- ction," Jackson said. "The pilot tem- porarily lost control of the airplane but he regained control. Nobody was hurt in Pride's plane. It's a miracle. I don't see how it could happen." A Wise County sheriff's department spokeswoman said the plane that crashed was a Cessna 172 on a training flight. It went down in a field about a mile east of a church on Highway 380 between Decatur and Bridgeport just west of Fort Worth. Briansky, and other nationally noted schools of ballet. However, as with many other dancers, she eventually moved from dancing ballet to teaching it. After experimenting with teaching ballet in the Ypsilanti public school system six years ago, Ms. Scharp decided to establish her own ballet school in Ann Arbor, C.A.S. Ballet Theatre School. As things worked out, her clientele was largely composed of adults, many of whom were already experienced dancers. This afforded her the opportunity to experiment with her own choreography. Through talking with her students, it also revealed to her the limited performance oppor- tunities for adult ballet dancers in the Ann Arbor area. "They don't want to do recitals or to perform for children," said Ms. Scharp. "And Ann Arbor Civic Ballet doesn't do much with men, especially in terms of'partrierwork." ce remained. Eventually Ms. Scharp began to toy with the idea of founding a company. "Ann Arbor's dancers have a lot of potential. And they're very en- thusiastic. I've gotten a lot of en- couragement for what started out as a daydream." In March of this year, Ms. Scharp succumbed to the lure and did all the of- ficial and rather disappointingly bureaucratic things that one needs to do to establish a ballet company. 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