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Melissa Hayden (dancer)

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Full Name
  
Mildred Hermen

Role
  
Ballerina

Name
  
Melissa Hayden

Spouse(s)
  
Don Coleman

Occupation
  
Ballerina


Melissa Hayden (dancer) Running On Empty March 2007

Born
  
April 25, 1923
Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Children
  
Stuart and Jennifer Coleman

Parent(s)
  
Jake Herman and Kate (nee Weinberg) Herman

Died
  
August 9, 2006, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, United States

Movies
  
Limelight, Dancing for Mr. B: Six Balanchine Ballerinas, Firestone Dances: Historic Ballet Performances

Books
  
Dancer to Dancer: Advice for Today's Dancer

Similar People
  
George Balanchine, Rudolf Nureyev, Charlie Chaplin, Deborah Dickson

Melissa hayden and andre eglevsky sleeping beauty beauty


Melissa Hayden (born Mildred Herman, April 25, 1923, Toronto; died August 9, 2006, Winston-Salem, North Carolina) was a Canadian ballerina at the New York City Ballet.

Contents

Melissa Hayden (dancer) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Melissa hayden interview on george balanchine


Early life

Melissa Hayden (dancer) Melissa Hayden American ballet dancer Britannicacom

Hayden was born in Toronto as the second daughter of Jacob Herman and his wife Kate Weinberg, Jewish immigrants from Russia. The young Mildred was called Millie at home, a nickname she kept for the rest of her life.

Professional life

Melissa Hayden (dancer) criticaldance balletdance magazine A Tribute to Melissa

In the early 1940s, she moved to New York City to join the ballet corps at Radio City Music Hall. From 1945 to 1947, she was a member of the American Ballet Theatre; she joined the New York City Ballet shortly after its founding in 1948. She performed there many times with noted dancer Jacques d'Amboise. From 1955 until her retirement in 1973, Hayden was the prima ballerina of the New York City Ballet.

Film and television

Melissa Hayden (dancer) Ballet Cook Book Dinner on April 13 Will Feature Recipes

Hayden appeared frequently on television, especially The Kate Smith Show and The Ed Sullivan Show. In 1952 she performed as the dance double for Claire Bloom in the film Limelight.

In 1965, she was seen on American TV as the Sugar Plum Fairy in a one-hour German-American adaptation of The Nutcracker. Filmed in 1964, and first shown in the United States by CBS just four days before Christmas 1965, the production, with a heavily altered storyline, featured an international cast of dancers and English narration by Eddie Albert, who was at the time in the first year of the run of Green Acres. Edward Villella and Patricia McBride also starred.

Retirement

After appearing in over 60 ballets, mainly works by George Balanchine, Hayden retired as a dancer in 1973. Balanchine honored her on her retirement by creating the ballet "Cortege Hongrois", which is still part of the New York City Ballet's repertoire. At the premiere of the piece, Mayor John Lindsay presented Hayden with the city's Handel Medallion, praising her as an "extraordinary ballerina who has filled the hearts of her audience with joy."

After her retirement, she became head of the ballet department at Skidmore College, and taught ballet at the School of Pacific Northwest Ballet in Seattle, and in New York City, where she opened her own school. From 1983 until just a month before her death, she taught at the North Carolina School of the Arts in Winston-Salem, where she stressed and impressed upon the student body the importance of the Balanchine technique with which she was most famously associated. She rehearsed and staged some of Balanchine's most demanding works including Concerto Barocco, and the masterful Theme & Variations.

Marriage and children

Hayden married lawyer-businessman Donald Coleman. The couple had two children, Stuart (b. 1954) and Jennifer (b. 1961). Hayden died at her home in Winston-Salem of pancreatic cancer, aged 83.

Published works

Hayden was also an author of several books:

  • Melissa Hayden, Offstage and On (1963)
  • Ballet Exercises for Figure, Grace & Beauty (1969)
  • Dancer to Dancer: Advice for Today's Dancer (1981) ISBN 0-385-15582-4
  • The Nutcracker Ballet, illustrated by Stephen Johnson (1992) ISBN 0-8362-4501-6
  • References

    Melissa Hayden (dancer) Wikipedia