ANGEL
CORELLA, Dancer
Angel Corella began his ballet training in Colmenar Viejo, a region
of his native Madrid, followed by studies with Victor Ullate and Karemia
Moreno, also in Madrid. He joined American Ballet Theatre as a
soloist in 1995 and was promoted to principal dancer in 1996. His
broad repertoire with the company includes Prince Siegfried in “Swan
Lake,” Albrecht in “Giselle,” Solor in “La Bayadère,” Franz
in “Coppélia,” Basilio in “Don Quixote,” Romeo
in “Romeo and Juliet” and multiple leading roles in “Le
Corsaire.” Corella originated leading roles in Twyla Tharp’s “The
Brahms-Haydn Variations” and “Known by Heart,” Stanton
Welch’s “Clear” and “HereAfter (earth)” (choreographed
with Natalie Weir), James Kudelka’s “Sin and Tonic,” Mark
Morris’s “Gong,” Lar Lubovitch’s “…smile
with my heart, ” David Parsons’s “The Pied Piper” and
Robert Hill’s “Baroque Game” and “Concerto No.
1 for Piano and Orchestra.” Corella has been guest artist
with the Royal Ballet, the Australian Ballet and at La Scala. He
was awarded First Prize in the 1991 National Ballet Competition of Spain,
the 1994 Grand Prix and Gold Medal at the Concours International de Danse
de Paris and the 2000 Prix Benois de la Dance. In 2003 he received
the National Award of Spain.
JOHAN
KOBBORG, Dancer
Born in Odense, Denmark, Johan Kobborg entered the Royal Danish Ballet
School in 1988 at age 16. After a year at the school he became
an apprentice with the company, and in 1991 joined the Royal Danish Ballet
as a full-time member. After his debut as James in “La Sylphide,” Kobborg
was promoted to principal dancer by Peter Schaufuss in 1994. In
1999, he left Denmark to join the Royal Ballet as a principal. His
classical repertoire includes Albrecht in “Giselle,” Solor
in “La Bayadère,” Romeo in “Romeo and Juliet” and
Basilio in “Don Quixote” and the roles of Prince in “The
Nutcracker,” “Cinderella,” “Sleeping Beauty” and “Swan
Lake.” Choreographers who have created work on him include
Flemming Flindt, Peter Schaufuss, David Bintley, Ashley Page, Stanton
Welch, Anna Laerkesen, William Tucket and Christopher Hampson. He
has guested with the Kirov Ballet, the Bolshoi Ballet, La Scala Ballet,
National Ballet of Canada, Teatro San Carlo (Naples), Ballet Nacional
de Cuba, Hungarian National Ballet, Hamburg Ballet, National Ballet of
China, South African Ballet Theater and Stuttgart Ballet, among others. In
1994, Kobborg won both the Grand Prix at the Nureyev Ballet Competition
in Hungary as well as the Grand Prix at the USA International Ballet
Competition in Jackson. He also received a Gold Medal at the 1993
Erik Bruhn Competition in Canada and placed third in the 1991 Eurovision
Ballet Competition in Helsinki. In 2001, he received Britain’s
Critics’ Circle National Dance Award for Best Male Dancer. Recently,
he was nominated for the 2006 Laurence Olivier Award for his Royal Ballet
performance of “The Lesson.”
ETHAN
STIEFEL, Dancer
Pennsylvania-born Ethan Stiefel began his dance training at the age
of eight in Madison, Wisconsin. He studied for two years at the
Milwaukee Ballet School with both Ted Kivitt and Paul Sutherland, as
well as with Marcia Dale Weary at the Pennsylvania Youth
Ballet. He moved to New York to attend American Ballet Theatre’s
School of Classical Ballet and The School of American Ballet on scholarship. At
16, Stiefel joined the corps de ballet of New York City Ballet. After
leaving to perform with the Zurich Ballet for a year, he returned to
NYCB in 1993 as a soloist and was promoted to principal dancer in 1995. He
remained with NYCB until 1997 when he joined American Ballet Theatre
as a principal dancer. Stiefel has danced principal roles in a
range of George Balanchine’s masterpieces including “A Midsummer
Night’s Dream,” “The Four Temperaments,” “Apollo,” “Symphony
in Three Movements,” “Stars and Stripes,” “Harlequinade,” “Theme
and Variations,” “Divertimento #15,” “Valse Fantasie”, “Symphony
in C,” “Tarantella,” “Tchaikovsky Pas de Deux,” “Chaconne” and “The
Nutcracker.” His repertoire of Jerome Robbins’s ballets
includes “Dances at a Gathering,” “West Side Story
Suite,” “The Goldberg Variations,” “2+3 Part
Inventions,” “Interplay,” “The Cage” and “Quiet
City.” Peter Martins created “Fearful Symmetries,” “Ash,” “Tchaikovsky
Pas de Quatre” and “Mozart Piano Concerto” on him,
and he was featured in “Eight More,” “Les Gentilhommes,” “Sinfonia” and
in Martins’s production of “The Sleeping Beauty” as
Prince Désiré. Choreographers who have created original
roles for him also include William Forsythe, Paul Taylor, Kevin O’Day,
David Allan and Robert La Fosse. His classical repertoire includes
roles as Solor in “La Bayadère,” Lensky in “Onegin,” Cassio
in “Othello” and Franz in “Coppélia,” among
many others. Stiefel won a Silver Medal at the Prix de Lausanne
in 1989 and received a 1991 Princess Grace Foundation-USA grant. In
1998, Stiefel was nominated for the Benois de la Danse Award as one of
the rising stars in ballet. He starred in the 2000 film “Center
Stage” and in 2004, was named artistic director of Ballet Pacifica
in Orange County.
Nikolay
Tsiskaridze, Dancer
A native of Tbilisi, Georgia, Nikolay Tsiskaridze began dancing in
1984 at age 11 at the Tbilisi Ballet School, and in 1987, continued his
studies at the Moscow State Academy of Choreography under Petr Pestov. Upon
his graduation in 1992, he was invited to join the Bolshoi Ballet where
he has worked with legendary Bolshoi ballerinas Galina Ulanova and Marina
Semyonova, as well as balletmasters of the theater Nikolay Simachev and
Nikolay Fadeechev. As a principal dancer, he presently performs
almost the entire Bolshoi repertory, including Mercutio in Yuri Grigorovitch’s “Romeo
and Juliet,” the King in Vladimir Vasiliev’s “Swan
Lake,” Albrecht in “Giselle,” James in “La Sylphide” and
Jean de Brienne in “Raymonda,” among others. Tsiskaridze
has won numerous awards, including the 1995 Silver Medal at the Japan
World Ballet Competition in Osaka, the 1997 First Prize and Gold Medal
at the Moscow International Ballet Competition, Peter van der Sloot’s
personal prize “For Confirmation of Russian Classical Ballet Traditions” and
the 1999 National Theatre Prize “Golden Mask” for the best
male ballet performance in 1998 (for his role as Albrecht in “Giselle”). In
1999, he won the Laureate Prize of the International Choreography Association
for the best male performance (for his role as Jean de Brienne in “Raymonda”).