The Royal Danish Ballet
The Royal Danish Ballet is one of world's best renowned ballet-companies. It was founded in 1748 at Kongens Nytorv where it is still located today.
Dancers
Artistic Director
Amy Watson was born in 1981 and trained as a ballet dancer at The School of American Ballet in New York. Became a corps dancer at the Royal Ballet in 2000. Appointed soloist in 2003 and principal dancer in 2007.
Amy has danced principal parts in a large and versatile ballet repertoire. She has danced Bournonville's heroines on the Royal Danish Ballet's international tours to, among others, the Palais Garnier, the Mariinsky Theater and The Kennedy Center. She has also guested at the American Ballet Theater as Myrtha in Giselle in 2014 and New York City Ballet in 2009 in the part of Choleric in The Four Temperaments.
Her repertoire as a dancer included Balanchine, Robbins, Martins, Petipa, Neumeier, Cranko, Lander, Naharin, Wheeldon, McGregor, Tharp, Ashton, MacMillan, Wheeldon, Ratmansky, Hübbe, Larbi, Kloborg, Dean, Lærkesen, Forsythe, Kylián and Dove with more.
She began teaching The Royal Danish Ballet in 2016 and assisted on the ballet's productions until her retirement as a dancer.
Amy Watson is a Knight of the 1st Degree of the Order of Dannebrog
Koreorama
Koreorama is The Royal Danish Ballet’s development initiative, that focuses on the future’s ballet choreographers and choreography.
The overall ambition of the project is to develop a diverse range of new ballet choreographers, that can be driving forces in the development of the future of ballet nationally and internationally.
Ballet is an artform that lives in the present and is danced by young people, whose bodies carry the current tendencies and the potentials of the future. We see a great potential for development in giving these artists a platform to express themselves through choreographic experiments, that connect the classical steps with contemporary life experiences and artistic perspectives, that can drive the artform forward. We believe that the classical steps of ballet can be the fundament of artistic innovation and physical breakthroughs in dance.
The development project centers around a talent program in which we through custom designed developmental programs cultivate the choreographic talents of the ballet company.
History of The Royal Danish Ballet
The Royal Danish Theatre has been housed at Kongens Nytorv in Copenhagen since 1748. In the first seasons, the company was very modest. At the opening, it consisted of only 8 actors, 4 actresses, 2 male dancers and 1 female dancer. The Royal Danish Orchestra was the first major expansion when it became a permanent orchestra in 1770. Towards the turn of the century, the acting company had more than doubled, the opera chorus had grown to almost 30 singers, and the number of dancers had increased significantly.
Administration
Artistic Director: Amy Watson
Administratitive Director: Dorthe Gude
Department Secretary: Anna-Sofie Deckmann
Financial Controller - Brendan Hayes
Producers - Susanne Ørskov, Line Hauger og Stig Debois
Planning - Camilla Melander
Stage Managers - Michelle Steen Nielsen, Bryant Steenstra
Programme Editor - Lise Kaiser
PR-Manager - Anna-Katarina NaNa Gravgaard | akgr@kglteater.dk
Shoe Department - Henriette Brøndsholm
Physical therapists - Lærke Friis Hansen, Henrik Emmer
Massage - Toni Tanil
Company Doctor - Henrik Aagaard
Sports Psychologist - Jørn Ravnholt
Pilates - Claire Ratcliffe
Production assistant: Selene Bornati
Dietitian: Pia Lund
International coordinator, artists: Boriana Nielsen
General contact for the ballet: post-ballet@kglteater.dk
Audition
At the moment the Royal Danish Ballet has no open auditions. All requests regarding auditions should be made to job.ballet@kglteater.dk.
An applicant would be required to submit the following material only:
a video with no introduction or fancy editing, consisting of the following performed in leotard and tights for women and tight fitting dance attire for men:
a short classical variation drawn from the standard repertoire, danced in pointe shoes by female applicants
a short contemporary variation (that could consist of something drawn from repertoire, phrases from classwork or an applicant-created work) that illustrates the applicant’s command of a range of movement different from that demonstrated in the classical variation
3-5 minutes of barre work, incorporating both sides, danced in soft shoes by male applicants and pointe shoes by female applicants
3-5 minutes of center work that includes adagio, pirouettes, petit and grand allegro, danced in pointe shoes by female applicants
a CV
a head shot
2-3 dance photos that reveal the dancer’s body proportions and line
We follow the IAP guidelines for auditions, see more at: www.iapguidelines.squarespace.com