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Romeo's Rivals In Courage: Davit Hovhannisyan And Alexandre Ferreira

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  • Romeo's Rivals In Courage: Davit Hovhannisyan And Alexandre Ferreira

    ROMEO'S RIVALS IN COURAGE: DAVIT HOVHANNISYAN AND ALEXANDRE FERREIRA IN MILWAUKEE BALLET'S 'ROMEO AND JULIET'

    Express Milwaukee
    Oct 23 2013

    By John Schneider

    Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet unfolds over six days. The teenage
    lovers meet on Monday and on Saturday they're dead. "Many productions
    miss the pivotal moments where it could have gone differently," says
    Michael Pink, whose exciting choreography for Sergei Prokofiev's
    musical rendering will be performed for the third time by Milwaukee
    Ballet on Oct. 31-Nov. 3. "In addition to youthful energy, you have to
    focus on the points of decision that change their lives." The dancers
    who will alternate as Romeo in Pink's production made life-changing
    decisions as teenagers that rival their character's.

    Davit Hovhannisyan was born in Yerevan, Armenia. At six, he started
    ballet lessons. Under Armenia's communist system, children who aspire
    to dance careers audition at age 10 to train with the Armenian National
    Ballet. He won that scholarship. The trouble was that Armenian boys
    must spend two years in the army after they turn 17, a crucial time
    in a dancer's development.

    At 15, Hovhannisyan found his passion. He was allowed to leave the
    country for ballet competitions. Inspired by dancers he witnessed,
    he states, "I got really serious about becoming good. I started
    training like crazy. Then I started to love ballet."

    He did an American tour with the Armenian National Ballet in 1999. He
    was 17. "They almost didn't let me tour," he says, "because I was so
    close to army age." The last stop was Burbank, Calif. "I had to choose:
    either stay in the United States and find a way to survive, or go home
    to the army which would be the end of my career as a ballet dancer."

    He believes defecting was easier for him than for Mikhail Baryshnikov
    and Rudolf Nureyev, dancers who abandoned Russia for the West during
    the Cold War. Maybe. He was alone, illegal and, unlike those Russians,
    not famous. He didn't know English. He stayed with acquaintances,
    worked in a carwash and restaurants. He was barred from Armenia;
    his family couldn't come here. He had no way to dance.

    At 18, he fell in love with Alisa, an Armenian-American. Three months
    later, they married. "She gave me confidence," he says. "If it weren't
    for her, I wouldn't have gone back to dancing." It took a year of
    hard training to get his body back in shape, several more to make an
    audition video to send around the country. In 2004, Milwaukee Ballet
    offered him a job. He didn't know where Milwaukee was.

    He was 22. He was quickly cast in principle roles that pushed him
    beyond what he'd trained for. He loves it here. He's danced all of
    Pink's important ballets; this will be his second go at Romeo. Now 31
    and a full U.S. citizen, he and Alisa have four children. The oldest,
    Edmond, age 9, will dance in Romeo and Juliet, the first time father
    and son will appear together in a ballet.

    Alexandre Ferreira will dance his first Romeo. He joined Milwaukee
    Ballet in 2011 at the age of 20. His story is no less a tale of
    courage and devotion, qualities so evident in both men's dancing.

    After his father's death, Ferreira and his younger brother were raised
    by their mother in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. The family is poor. An
    important dance school in Rio gave scholarships to qualifying public
    school children. At age 10, Ferreira won one almost on a lark. It let
    him travel and watch older dancers perform, as he says, "all the cool
    movements." His passion was born.

    After seven years of dancing in Rio, he received a scholarship to the
    Miami City Ballet School. "I turned 17 and three weeks later I left
    Brazil," he said. "I didn't speak English. Miami was good but I wanted
    something more intimate where you spend more time dancing and can be
    close to everyone." Someone told him he would find that in Milwaukee.

    He has.

    Until he qualifies for a green card, he must return to Brazil each
    summer to reapply for a work visa. He's saving money to bring his
    mother and brother to see him perform.

    Of Romeo he says, "You have to fall in love, lose your best friend,
    kill someone, run away, see your love dead; you go from bring the
    happiest you've ever been to losing everything. Also stamina-wise,
    it's very difficult. I go to the gym every day at 7 a.m., then ballet
    class at 9:30 for two hours, then rehearse for six. I've been careful
    with my diet for three months-no sugar, no fried foods. I see this
    role as a big achievement for me. I've been working very hard for it."

    Romeo and Juliet runs Oct. 31-Nov. 3, at the Marcus Center for the
    Performing Arts, 929 N. Water St. For tickets, call 414-902-2103 or
    visit milwaukeeballet.org.

    http://expressmilwaukee.com/article-22004-romeo%25E2%2580%2599s-rivals-in-courage.html

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