By Laura Di Orio of Dance Informa.
‘Tis the season…for some dancers to perform Nutcracker after Nutcracker, week after week, company to company. As most dance companies or schools put on a production of The Nutcracker, opportunities abound for professional dancers to pick up multiple guesting gigs. Dancers in professional companies will perform in other productions as their own company’s schedule allows, and freelance artists bounce from city to city for their own personal Nutcracker tour.
The benefit: these guestings tend to be a one-stop-shop and allow for multiple gigs to pile on. The disadvantage: each production is slightly different, so there are sometimes quick adjustments to be made. But most Nutcracker guest artists will agree that the season is a reliable one for making decent money and getting much performance experience.
Here, Dance Informa speaks with three professional dancers who are quite seasoned in the Nutcracker guesting world to get the full scoop on how they juggle it all.
MULTIPLE GIGS
While a dancer in a big ballet company, such as New York City Ballet or the Joffrey Ballet, may do close to 40 performances of The Nutcracker in a given season, he/she is usually in one place, one city. A freelance guest artist, however, may do dozens of shows over the course of a season, but across multiple cities or even countries.
Principal Guest Artist Abigail Simon, for instance, has an average of 14 shows with three or four different companies, and the most she’s ever performed is 30 shows in one season. Likewise, Barry Kerollis, interim artistic director of Alaska Dance Theatre and a freelance dancer, averages 12-20 shows per season, with performances every weekend from Black Friday to Christmas Eve. And Carlos Lopez, international guest artist and ballet master for the American Ballet Theatre Studio Company, has done 15 shows in three different countries with three different companies!
What this boils down to is that guest artists must organize their rehearsals, schedules, travel plans and accommodations, sometimes with the help of the companies with which they’re guesting, and sometimes on their own.
In addition, Simon says, “Traveling to different countries and towns can be exhausting and lonely at times.”
“The challenge is that I rarely have the comfort of my home or staying in one place for more than a handful of days,” Kerollis adds. “Dancing Nutcracker with a company is a work commitment, while dancing Nutcracker as a national guest artist means that you are on the job 24/7 for five weeks. You are essentially on tour by yourself.”
MORE GIGS=MORE MONEY
While the sacrifice of being a Nutcracker guest artist may be a busy, travel-filled holiday season, with more gigs come more paychecks.
Kerollis says that his Nutcracker guestings allot for anywhere between one-third to half of his yearly income as a freelancer. “I survive for a few months afterward, buy holiday gifts, pay off debts and pay my self-employment taxes with this income,” he adds.
Simon notes that guest performances tend to pay much better than dancing in one company’s production. “Nutcracker guestings are the highest paying jobs of the year, are reliable and allow for multiple guestings in one season,” she says.
“You negotiate your fee per show or production,” Lopez adds. “It also depends on your fee and your career, but you need to have a lot of self-discipline and deliver to those audiences what they are paying for. I always give my best in each show and don’t take anything for granted because I am lucky to do what I do, no matter what they pay me.”
CHOREOGRAPHY AND PARTNERS
Most dancers who do Nutcracker guestings perform the role of Sugar Plum Fairy or Cavalier, especially when the gigs are in a ballet school setting. Some dancers bring their own choreography from gig to gig, while others use each director’s set choreography. Regardless, guest artists will have to learn the movement for each production’s Act II Opening and Finale scenes.
Simon enjoys the artistic freedom to do the choreography that she prefers. “I perform the same choreography in each production,” she says. “It is my own personal choreography, adapted from various productions that I’ve done, with the best parts from each added in.”
Kerollis, on the other hand, generally performs the choreography that is asked of him. “This means that I am learning the next show’s choreography while on the plane, bus or train to the next gig,” he says.
Sometimes, guest artists may bring their own partner to a gig, while other guestings may require the guest artist to partner with someone from the school or company, chosen by the director.
Lopez, who usually brings his own partner but has also done guestings with a dancer from the school, says he prefers the former. In previous seasons, for instance, Lopez partnered with American Ballet Theatre Soloist Misty Copeland in regional gigs. This year, he will dance with Boston Ballet Principal Ashley Ellis at one of his guestings at Central Wisconsin School of Ballet.
“You get to dance with partners whom you can choose from other companies and are interested in dancing with,” Lopez says. “But the changes of partners can be hard on your body because you have to rehearse every week with a different one.”
OTHER RESPONSIBILITIES
Guest artists often have other commitments aside from the dancing aspect of their gigs. They are often responsible for their own costume and music (if there isn’t live music, guest artists will want to perform to music of the same tempo to which they’ve been rehearsing), and they sometimes arrange transportation plans to and from each gig.
They also usually arrange their own rehearsal time, especially in preparation for out-of-town guestings.
“I normally rehearse on my own or with my partner,” Lopez says. “I rehearse at studios that I rent, or at ABT, where I work. Sometimes I have to travel out of the city for a rehearsal at the school that I’m dancing with.”
While Lopez says that the advantage of rehearsing on his own is that he can stop when he is tired, he adds that it can be difficult to find studio rentals and coordinate a schedule with his ballerina. In addition, Simon says that the cost of a studio rental falls on the guest artist.
Traveling to different towns also entails dancing in different studios and theaters than one is used to.
“I’m always dancing on different stages I’m not used to,” Simon says, “and some are slippery or hard, which can make it difficult.”
“Most of the gigs that I dance at are local schools that don’t necessarily have professional facilities,” Kerollis explains. “This leads to performing in facilities that aren’t appropriate for dance – no warm-up space, wildly slippery floors, straight-up concrete.”
But it’s up to these guest artists to take care of their bodies and to make sure they find adequate time and space to warm up before performing, especially if a class is not offered.
KEEPING THEM STRAIGHT
When doing several back-to-back gigs of the same type of show with the same music, it may take some extra effort to keep each production’s choreography straight. Whether they take their own choreography with them or perform what is asked of them, guest artists will face some differences show to show.
“My trick to keep the choreography for each production straight is to completely avoid looking at the choreography for the gig until the week of the show,” Kerollis says. “If I try to learn the choreography for Grand Pas de Deux C while performing Grand Pas de Deux A, I may accidentally confuse the two. It is extremely important that I focus on exactly what I am performing to avoid confusing the four or so versions I perform each season. Nothing is more difficult than performing different choreography to the same music week after week!”
“I have the videos ahead of time and record the parts that I’m on and keep them on my iPad,” Lopez explains. “This way, I have them handy, and I can look at them at any time. Most of the productions have similarities in the steps of the finale or beginning, so it makes it easier.”
CREATING OPPORTUNITIES
Being a Nutcracker guest artist and finding and performing multiple gigs is a bit like being one’s own boss.
Lopez says he has found his guestings through fellow dancers, directors and even through social media.
Likewise, Kerollis says that as his reputation as a freelance dancer grew, people and organizations generally reached out to him. “Often, I get so many requests to dance that I can start passing out work to my friends,” he adds.
Simon, too, says that networking has proven to be a wonderful asset to her freelancing career. She adds that, as a freelance guest artist, she also has more artistic opportunities than she did as a company dancer.
“I find it really interesting that when I danced for Joffrey, I waited for years to have the opportunity to perform the Sugar Plum Fairy,” she says. “When I finally decided to become a freelance artist, so many doors opened up, and I now do multiple Sugar Plum Fairies each year. It taught me that sometimes you have to create your own career and not wait for someone to hand it to you, because at the end of the day, it’s all about how much experience you’ve had in order to grow artistically.”
To keep track of these busy guest artists, follow them on their websites: www.abigailsimononline.com, www.barrykerollis.com and www.carloslopez.org.
Photo (top): Barry Kerollis juggles multiple Nutcracker gigs each season. Photo by Ruth Judson.