BRINGING BALLET BACK ON STAGE WITH THE NUTCRACKER
By
Margaretta wa Gacheru (posted 22 November 2021)
Having performed
in The Nutcracker from the time she was two, Cooper Rust says the production of
this classical ballet is a time-honored tradition that’s been practiced annually
at Christmas time in Kenya since 2015 when her Dance Centre Kenya (DCK) first
staged it at Kenya’s National Theatre.
“It’s not
only staged in Kenya at Christmas time,” the DCK founder tells BDLife. “It’s
performed all over the world since it’s a story about a little girl who receives
a [fantastical] Christmas toy,” she adds.
This year
Cooper, 36, won’t actually be in the Ballet. But she has choreographed and
directed the show which opens December 3rd at the National Theatre.
“I’ll
perform in Cinderella in February,” she says. “I’ll play the wicked
step-mother,” she adds with a twinkle in her eye.
Explaining
that her choreography varies every year, depending on her dancers, many of whom
will be new, Cooper says that her students have been rehearsing and dancing
throughout the lockdown.
“We are
really excited about coming back on stage, since some of us didn’t know if it
would ever happen again,” she says, recalling the last time DCK staged a ballet
[Romeo and Juliet] was in February 2019.
But her dancers
never doubted they would come back. That is why they rehearsed non-stop with
this former prima ballerina instructor who’s become like a mother to many of
them.
In fact, eleven
of the dancers that are in this year’s Nutcracker actually live with Cooper 80
percent of the year. “All eleven have families who they stay with part of the
year,” she explains. But she knew that if these dancers were going to fulfill
their full potential, they would need to work hard. And she was prepared to
work with them.
But as all eleven
come from informal settlements, either Kibera or Kuwinda, Cooper says the
biggest headache was transport. That was the first consideration for having her
most promising young dancers come to live, dance, and study with her.
It all began
with the 15-year-old Joel Kioko from Kuwinda, a slum burrowed away deep inside
Karen. Joel had come to Dance Centre Kenya as a scholarship student after
Cooper had spotted his tremendous potential when she was still teaching dance
to under-served kids in the slums. But she quickly realized that in order to ensure
he fulfill his full capacity and also be able to travel for further dance
training that she was prepared to organize for him, she would need to tutor him
academically as well as dance-wise. And that couldn’t happen unless he came to
stay and work with her, which is what he did.
Today, Joel
just graduated from the English National Ballet School and now has a full-time
job working professionally with one of the most acclaimed dance companies in
America, the Joffrey Ballet.
Two other of
Cooper’s former ‘family members’, Francis Waweru and Pamela Atieno, have also
gone on for further studies, Waweru to study lighting design in Oklahoma, in the
US, and Atieno to South Carolina where she’s continuing her studies in ballet.
And soon,
the fourth housemate, the lovely Lavender Orisaa, 15, will soon be following
Joel’s footsteps in travelling to the UK on a full scholarship to study at the
English National Ballet School.
Lavender
will costar in the Nutcracker as the Dew Drop Fairy. Other members of the
Cooper family household who are in the ballet are George Okoth playing the Snow
Cavalier, Shamick Otieno as the Sugar Plum Cavalier, and Mithelle.. and Elsy
together play the leaders of the rat pack.
“Then there’s
the six boys from Kibera [ages 12-14] who will comprise the rat pack in the
ballet,” Cooper adds.
Noting that
she only missed four days of rehearsals during the lockdown, Cooper says she
did spend a couple of weeks in the States, fundraising for her children’s
school fees. “Besides transportation, I realized that education was also a problem
for my dancers. That’s why we had to fundraise for the young ones to go to ISK,”
she adds.
In addition
to her housemates, Cooper’s cast is international. The 13-year-old boy who
plays the actual nutcracker, Aske Ballan, is from Denmark. Clara is played by a
girl from Bulgaria, Jana Landolt, the Sugar Plum Fairy is French, Oceane
Deloge, and the Snow Queen is played by the British girl Anamika Govani.
This
weekend, on Sunday at 1pm, DCK will stage a dress rehearsal of The Nutcracker
for hundreds of children from informal settlements. At 4pm there will be a
preview for adults.
But the
official opening is Friday, December 3rd at Kenya National Theatre.
margaretta.gacheru@gmail.com
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