COSTA MESA, United States — Joy Womack built herself a fairytale
life in Russia's notoriously tough world of classical dance after becoming the
first American to graduate from the Bolshoi Ballet Academy.
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But a career that inspired a Hollywood film exploded as
Moscow's first bombs rained down on Ukraine, and she became one of dozens of
dancers who fled
Vladimir Putin's war.
"I mourned because it was the end of knowing what was
next. And for me, it felt almost in some ways like the end of my career,"
Womack told AFP in California.
As Russian troops rolled into Ukraine in February, the Texan
was in Poland choreographing "Joika".
The film, starring Diane Kruger, tells the story of Womack's
life: from arriving in Moscow at the age of 15, not speaking a word of Russian,
to assuming lead role in the Kremlin Ballet.
Womack knew at that moment that she could not return to
Russia, and must leave behind her belongings, her friends, and the years of
sacrifice that had helped her to succeed in one of the world's most competitive
ballet environments.
"I was building a future in Russia. I was trying to
walk both lines being a ballerina from America, but also working in Russia.
"And my career and my education in Russia led to an
international career in the West. So for me, it's really hard to say goodbye to
that chapter," she says, pulling off her shoes to reveal feet scarred by
her trade.
'Fear and sadness'
Dozens of foreign and domestic dancers had already fled
Russia for fear of being called to the frontlines, before Putin ordered a mass
mobilization of 300,000 people to bolster his flagging war effort.
But even without a call-up, the drumbeat of conflict was
crowding out the cultural spaces, says Ilya Jivoy.
A native of
St Petersburg with a 26-year career, Jivoy left
Russia with his Ukrainian wife as war broke out.
They did not know what they would do, or where they would
go, but he remains convinced it was the best decision.
"We couldn't work normally since it all started,"
he says. "I think now to work in the cultural space in Russia... it may be
impossible.”
"It's not about the art. It's just about fear and about
sadness."
Now exiles in the United States, Womack and Jivoy know they
are comparatively lucky because they were able to leave.
Others were not.
"I have a beautiful partner that I used to work with
last year," Womack said. "He was served papers. He's a ballet dancer,
not in the army, and it's the end of his career."
Reunited
Some exiled dancers have now reunited with one-time
colleagues from the Russian stage for a single performance near
Los Angeles
next month.
The Segerstrom Center for the Arts, a state-of-the-art
cultural center in the small town of Costa Mesa, will host "Reunited in
Dance".
The one-night-only performance will showcase choreography
and recreate some of the repertoire that has wowed Moscow audiences.
The performance's artistic director is Xander Parish, a
Briton who lived and worked in Moscow for 12 years, including at the Mariinsky
Theater.
Parish, who trained at the
Royal Ballet in Britain, recounts
the emotional weight of the uprooting these dancers have endured.
"The theater becomes your family. You work with these
people, you dance with them, you get to know them very intimately, working in
such close proximity. Your coaches are like your parents," he said.
During rehearsals that AFP watched, the camaraderie was
evident as the cast slipped in and out of Russian and English, discussing how
each minute of the performance should work.
The November 12 show could, Parish thinks, be the
springboard for something bigger: a more permanent ballet company that would
have space for these talents in exile.
"That's going to take a long time to sort out. But I mean,
that'd be my dream, if we can build that in the future," he says.
"These are the first small steps, the foundations that
bring us together."
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