i thought it was a social media april fools, but then when i went to buy groceries
will byers stan first human second
Fai_Ryy
đ©” avery cochrane đ©”

bliss lane
macklin celebrini has autism
Today's Document

pixel skylines
todays bird
I'd rather be in outer space đž
Sweet Seals For You, Always

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The Bowery Presents

if i look back, i am lost
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
Noah Kahan
sheepfilms
Monterey Bay Aquarium
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ojovivo
wallacepolsom

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@papaija
i thought it was a social media april fools, but then when i went to buy groceries
Danses Concertantes (Balanchine), 1944, Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo.
Dancers: Maria Tallchief, Mary Ellen Moylan
nimble, a border collie-papillon mix, wins the 12â class in the 2024 masters agility championship. the first time a mixed breed has won at westminster ever.
and not just 12" that run won her the whole thing https://www.westminsterkennelclub.org/results-masters-agility/
still the fastest dog in 2026, good job 29.19 seconds
impeccable message, happy birthday ingrid silva đ
the ultimate alasebesque:
so one of your first partners was boxes of sweaters
stop at 39 minutes or you'll start having nightmares about leg cramps
recording, 2025.10.19 radio special
chacott with a new entry in cat leotards
its little face
They fly through the night as one...
News clipping from George Balanchine's ballet Die Fledermaus, 1936
flexed foot frappés are hideous, and the only accent is OUT
"The piano is an extension of my body. When I am performing, I simply monitor the exits on the highway. It plays itself;
I am not actively doing anything. All the work is done already."
- Margaret Leng Tan (at the toy piano, with Eiko Otake dancing) on performing practised pieces
who costumed these poor men
and special mention to tiler peck's hem
it's over, she won grand pas classique
video @ dancersdiary
Jennifer Ringer in Who Cares
âPerhaps their most famous piece is The Conquest of America (1989), a bloody homosexual pas de deux in which, bare-chested and barefoot, they performed the cueca, a traditional (and often politicized) dance in Chile, over a map of South America made of glass shards from Coke bottles. This was in front of the Chilean Commission on Human Rights, the committee responsible for calculating the number of people who were killed or tortured by the Chilean military between 1973 and 1989.â â Pedro Lemebel, A Last Supper of Queer Apostles: Selected Essays (Affiliate link)
(George Balanchine observing as Debra Austin performs Ballo Della Regina) Debra Austin received a scholarship to the school of American Ballet when she was twelve years old. At the age of sixteen she was hand picked by George Balanchine to join the New York City Ballet. While there, she danced many principle roles by both Balanchine and Jerome Robbins. One of these was filmed for a PBS television special, âLive From Lincoln Centerâ. Additionally, she appeared with Jerome Robbins in a TV special for NBC, âLive From Studio Hâ. Ms Austin also toured with the company throughout Europe and the former Soviet Union. Leaving New York City Ballet, she went on to join the Zurich Ballet of Switzerland. There she danced many principle roles in works by Balanchine as well as Panov, Von Manon and Heinz Sporli. When Rudolph Nureyev choreographed Manfred on the company, Ms. Austin was given the opportunity to dance one of the leading roles with him as well. She toured with Nureyev and the Company to Italy, London, Englandâs Convent Gardens. Returning to the United States, she was invited to join the Pennsylvania Ballet as principal dancer. There she went on to dance most of the Companyâs contemporary works by many choreographers as well as the classics such as Swan Lake, Coppelia, A Mid-Summers Night Dream and both roles in Giselle and Myrtha. She danced the Sylph in La Sylphide, staged by Peter Martins, now director of the New York City Ballet, to again dance with Rudolph Nureyev, alongside Suzanne Farrell, as one of the three ballerinas in Balanchineâs Apollo. she danced at a Gala Performance at the Academy of Music, hosted by Bill Cosby, in which Grover Washington played the saxophone. Ms. Austin was asked by Lynne Taylor-Corbett to be her assistant in Ms. Taylor-Corbettâs âThe Dancing Princessesâ commissioned by Edward Villella to be choreographed for Miami City Ballet. This work premiered at the Kennedy Center in Washington D.C. on April 25, 1995. Ms. Austin has taught in many schools in Florida including the American Cultural Center in Miami, the Palm Beach Dance Center and the Miami City Ballet School. Ms. Austin relocated to North Carolina in the summer of 1998 with her husband Marin Boieru (principal dancer, Carolina Ballet) and daughters Bianca and Olivia to join the faculty of the Cary Ballet Conservatory, directed by Suzanne Clark and also to serve as the âBallet Masterâ for the Carolina Ballet, directed by Robert Weiss, training their professional company members and staging performances.Â
American Ballet Theatre Dancers and their dogs