'Nutcrackers' For All - 27 East

Arts & Living

Arts & Living / 1363070

'Nutcrackers' For All

icon 26 Photos

Former Secretary of State General Colin Powell visited with students at Tuckahoe School on Tuesday morning. DANA SHAW

Former Secretary of State General Colin Powell visited with students at Tuckahoe School on Tuesday morning. DANA SHAW

Former Secretary of State General Colin Powell visited with students at Tuckahoe School on Tuesday morning. DANA SHAW

Former Secretary of State General Colin Powell visited with students at Tuckahoe School on Tuesday morning. DANA SHAW

Town & Country real estate agent Amy Forst and Michael Forst of Forst Construction made a dynamic duo building and raising a family in this home on Three Mile Harbor Road in East Hampton Village. JD ALLEN

Town & Country real estate agent Amy Forst and Michael Forst of Forst Construction made a dynamic duo building and raising a family in this home on Three Mile Harbor Road in East Hampton Village. JD ALLEN

An inflatable dolphin pool float at Spring & Summer Activities in Hampton Bays.

An inflatable dolphin pool float at Spring & Summer Activities in Hampton Bays.

A rendering of the Salt & Loft interior. COURTESY KAROLINA NESKO

A rendering of the Salt & Loft interior. COURTESY KAROLINA NESKO

Chef Greg Grossman cooked his first meal at age 8 and is known, by some, as a prodigy. COURTESY GREG GROSSMAN

Chef Greg Grossman cooked his first meal at age 8 and is known, by some, as a prodigy. COURTESY GREG GROSSMAN

Cliff Foster and family at Foster Memorial Long Beach in Sag Harbor.

Cliff Foster and family at Foster Memorial Long Beach in Sag Harbor.

May 16: Boston Marathon bombing survivor Jeff Bauman plays a guitar signed by approximately 100 East End musicians and music lovers, and driven up to him earlier in the month by Donald Bracken. Ross Lilley delivered the Takamine acoustic guitar to Mr. Bauman while he was recovering from his wounds at Boston Medical Center. “He truly loved the guitar and it made him smile, big time,” Mr. Lilley reported. The gift idea was thought up by musician Bryan Downey and purchased at Crossroads Music in Amagansett.

May 16: Boston Marathon bombing survivor Jeff Bauman plays a guitar signed by approximately 100 East End musicians and music lovers, and driven up to him earlier in the month by Donald Bracken. Ross Lilley delivered the Takamine acoustic guitar to Mr. Bauman while he was recovering from his wounds at Boston Medical Center. “He truly loved the guitar and it made him smile, big time,” Mr. Lilley reported. The gift idea was thought up by musician Bryan Downey and purchased at Crossroads Music in Amagansett.

Hampton Ballet Theatre School will stage "The Nutcracker" this weekend. DURRELL GODFREY

Hampton Ballet Theatre School will stage "The Nutcracker" this weekend. DURRELL GODFREY

Hampton Ballet Theatre School will stage "The Nutcracker" this weekend. DURRELL GODFREY

Hampton Ballet Theatre School will stage "The Nutcracker" this weekend. DURRELL GODFREY

Hampton Ballet Theatre School will stage "The Nutcracker" this weekend. DURRELL GODFREY

Hampton Ballet Theatre School will stage "The Nutcracker" this weekend. DURRELL GODFREY

Hampton Ballet Theatre School will stage "The Nutcracker" this weekend. DURRELL GODFREY

Hampton Ballet Theatre School will stage "The Nutcracker" this weekend. DURRELL GODFREY

Megan Cancellieri performs as an Arabian dancer in last year's Danse Arts production of "The Nutcracker." COURTESY MEGAN CANCELLIERI

Megan Cancellieri performs as an Arabian dancer in last year's Danse Arts production of "The Nutcracker." COURTESY MEGAN CANCELLIERI

Danse Arts is celebrating its 25th year of "The Nutcracker." COURTESY MEGAN CANCELLIERI

Danse Arts is celebrating its 25th year of "The Nutcracker." COURTESY MEGAN CANCELLIERI

Danse Arts is celebrating its 25th year of "The Nutcracker." COURTESY MEGAN CANCELLIERI

Danse Arts is celebrating its 25th year of "The Nutcracker." COURTESY MEGAN CANCELLIERI

Danse Arts is celebrating its 25th year of "The Nutcracker." COURTESY MEGAN CANCELLIERI

Danse Arts is celebrating its 25th year of "The Nutcracker." COURTESY MEGAN CANCELLIERI

Danse Arts is celebrating its 25th year of "The Nutcracker." COURTESY MEGAN CANCELLIERI

Danse Arts is celebrating its 25th year of "The Nutcracker." COURTESY MEGAN CANCELLIERI

authorMichelle Trauring on Dec 3, 2012

Megan Cancellieri turned 4 during the week of Danse Arts’ first-ever “The Nutcracker.” The young girl made her ballet debut as a polichinelle, or gingerbread girl, on the Southampton High School stage.

Now 24 years later, Ms. Cancellieri—who bought the Bridgehampton-based dance studio six years ago—has two reasons to celebrate. On Wednesday she turned 28. And this weekend, “The Nutcracker” production turns 25 on the very same stage where it began.

Ms. Cancellieri hasn’t missed a single performance.

“You have that moment,” she said with an emphatic snap of her fingers last week during dress rehearsal at her studio, “right after Thanksgiving where it’s like, ‘Oh, the show’s in two weeks.’ It’s stressful, it’s panicky and then it’s perfect and it’s great and the curtain opens and the show starts and everyone looks amazing and you’re like, ‘It works! Yay!’ It’s so exciting.”

Several other dance studios across the Hamptons are also gearing up for their respective “Nutcracker” productions this month, starting with the Hampton Ballet Theatre School staging this same weekend.

Hampton Ballet Theatre School and Danse Arts, which feature 50 to 75 dancers respectively, take a classical stab at the 19th century ballet. The ballet, set to the score by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky, tells the beloved tale of Clara, a young girl whose godfather, Herr Drosselmeyer, gives her a wooden nutcracker which comes to life and takes her on a magical journey to the Land of Sweets, ruled by the Sugar Plum Fairy, after they defeat the Mouse King.

“The music is so beautiful and it’s an imaginative story, the story of Clara,” Hampton Ballet Theatre Company director Sara Jo Strickland said during a telephone interview last week. “It’s just timeless. There’s a bit of fantasy to it and I think that kids can relate to that. I have kids in ‘The Nutcracker’ that are 3 and 4 years old. They start doing a little role and graduate. Every year it gets bigger and better until they, of course, reach Clara and, ultimately, reach the Sugar Plum Fairy.”

The Sugar Plum Fairy is the pinnacle role for any young ballerina, Ms. Cancellieri explained. This year, she offered it to two senior dancers in her company—16-year-old Julia Talasko and 20-year-old Cornelia O’Connor.

Both girls were shocked to be asked, they said, but immediately snatched up their first-time opportunity.

“It’s the main part. You have a partner, and that’s really exciting,” Ms. Talasko said at the studio last week, referring to the Cavalier, who will be danced by 28-year-old professional Leonard Linares. “And any ballerina wants it just because you’re the Sugar Plum. You’re a princess.”

However, the Sugar Plum Fairy—which is danced

en pointe

—is no joke. It’s the hardest role Ms. O’Connor has ever done, she said.

“It’s so physically demanding,” she said. “I was surprised I was doing it this year. I was, like, obsessed with it when I was younger. When I was younger, my living room was basically a dance studio. I would move all the furniture and dance.”

The same is true of many ballerinas, including Christiana Bitonti, who watched every version of the ballet she could find while growing up in East Moriches. Now a choreographer, Ms. Bitonti prefers the original, but with a twist.

She calls it “The Nutcracker ‘Sweet,’” which features a cast of 55 student dancers and seven professionals and will stage next weekend at the Westhampton Beach Performing Arts Center.

“The Queen Rat should be very interesting this year because we have a girl who’s doing it who’s a pop-and-locker hip-hop dancer,” Ms. Bitonti said during a telephone interview last week. “That should be really, really fun for the audience because it’s really different choreography. It’s much more contemporary. She actually looks like a rat, the way she moves.”

Of all the East End productions, Studio 3 in Bridgehampton strays furthest from the original production with “Mixed Nuts,” which incorporates tap, jazz, contemporary and hip-hop into the standard ballet, according to studio owner Diane Shumway.

Last year, Ms. Shumway and her daughter, Meredith, set the inaugural “Mixed Nuts” during the present day. This weekend, the ballet is rewinding to the 1950s with a jazzy, rock-and-roll feel.

“I think there are many other personalities to young girls and boys that is not being a prince or a princess. It is not a reality,” Ms. Shumway said during a telephone interview last week. “I think my ‘Nutcracker’ is showing the real world. And it’s a fantasy. It’s like going to the movies. It really evokes the imagination. It’s a fun dream.”

Ms. Cancellieri has danced every role “The Nutcracker” has to offer, she said, though she never felt like a proper princess until last year’s production—one that will never be forgotten.

After Saturday night’s bows, the curtain shut and the dancers huddled together for a group photo, celebratory of a ballet well done. Then, out from the wings came Alfred Callahan, Ms. Cancellieri’s boyfriend.

“What’s going on?” Ms. Cancellieri recalled asking her dancers, who urged her, “Megan, go stand with him,” as she whined, “Why? What’s happening here?”

Reluctantly, Ms. Cancellieri—dressed in a purple Arabian dancer costume—approached her boyfriend. The curtain flew open as he dropped to one knee.

“The girls started screaming and jumping everywhere and I don’t think I even heard anything after that,” she laughed. “It’s funny. He says I never answered him. I was just standing there, going like this.”

She quickly nodded her head up and down, eyes wide.

“I looked at him and was like, ‘You couldn’t have waited until I was in clothes?’ because I was in this little purple Arabian top and the billowy pants,” she continued. “For eternity, my engagement photos will start and end with me in an Arabian outfit. It’s definitely one of the more shocking moments of our ‘Nutcracker’ career.”

From her younger dancers, Ms. Cancellieri is accustomed to receiving hand-drawn birthday cards after the last “Nutcracker” performance every year. But on Sunday afternoon, her polichinelles came bearing a different gift: crayon drawings of “Miss Megan’s proposal,” complete with the choreographer’s purple costume and Mr. Callahan, in a matching purple tie, presenting the ring box.

One of the pictures still hangs on the couple’s refrigerator, Ms. Cancellieri said.

“I don’t know what we’re gonna do this year to top it,” she said. “If somebody does something else, I’m going to probably die of shock.”

This month, four local productions of “The Nutcracker” will appear at venues across the East End. Danse Arts will stage the holiday classic on Friday, December 7, at 7 p.m., Saturday, December 8, at 5 p.m. and Sunday, December 9, at 2 p.m. at the Southampton High School. Tickets are $15, $10 for seniors and children age 3 to 16, and toddlers are free. For more information, call 537-1684 or visit dansearts.com.

Hampton Ballet Theatre School will stage its production on Friday, December 7, at 7 p.m., Saturday, December 8, at 1 p.m. and Sunday, December 9, at 2 p.m. at Guild Hall in East Hampton. Advance tickets are $20 and $15 for children under 12, or $25 and $20, respectively, the day of the performance. For more information, call (888) 933-4287 or visit hamptonballettheatreschool.com.

Studio 3 will stage “Mixed Nuts” on Friday, December 7, and Saturday, December 8, at 7 p.m., and Sunday, December 9, at 2 p.m. at Bay Street Theatre in Sag Harbor. Tickets are $20 and $15 for seniors and students. For more information, call 537-3008 or visit dancestudio3.com.

“The Nutcracker ‘Sweet’” will stage on Saturday, December 15, at 7 p.m. and Sunday, December 16, at 3 p.m. at the Westhampton Beach Performing Arts Center. Tickets are $15. For more information, call 288-1500 or visit whbpac.org.

You May Also Like:

‘Where Light Meets Water,’ Art Inspired by North Sea

Experience art inspired by the beauty of Southampton’s northern coast — where the reflected light ... 9 May 2025 by Staff Writer

Witness and Resistance With Jaime T. Herrell

On Saturday, May 24, at 4 p.m., Jaime T. Herrell, an independent curator and education program developer, will examine the intersection of her curatorial work and the themes of resistance, witnessing and reclaiming space that are alive and vibrant in “Eternal Testament,” the exhibition currently on view at The Church. Herrell will take a deeper dive into a few works — Natalie Ball’s “You Usually Bury the Head in the Woods Trophy Head,” James Luna’s “Take a Picture With a Real Indian,” Marie Watt’s “Placeholder (Horizon)” and Cara Romero’s “Last Indian Market.” Following the in-depth look at the works, Herrell ... 8 May 2025 by Staff Writer

The ‘Acquisition Exhibition’ at the Bridgehampton Museum

Although the Bridgehampton Museum has had several iterations, it has come to life in just ... 7 May 2025 by Staff Writer

‘Independency: The American Flag at 250 Years’ at Southampton Arts Center

This month, Southampton Arts Center will present “Independency: The American Flag at 250 Years,” a ... by Staff Writer

'Round and About for May 8, 2025

Music & Nightlife Mysteries, Deceptions and Illusions Allan Zola Kronzek, a sleight-of-hand artist, will perform ... by Staff Writer

His Life in Pieces: Ambrose Clancy's New Book Offers Four Decades of Stories Worth Telling

Ambrose Clancy is always on the lookout for a good story — especially if it’s ... 5 May 2025 by Annette Hinkle

A Designer of Dreams: Pieces of Tony Walton's Legacy Seek New Homes

Tony Walton believed in the power of theater. For the award-winning production designer and longtime ... by Michelle Trauring

At the Galleries for May 8, 2025

Montauk The Lucore Art, 87 South Euclid Avenue in Montauk, is showing “A Little Bit ... by Staff Writer

The Gil Guitérrez Trio Live in Concert at The Church

Join the Gil Guitérrez Trio at The Church on Friday, May 23, at 6 p.m. ... by Staff Writer

Artist Talk and Demonstration With Chié Shimizu at The Church

Join The Church for an artist talk and process demonstration with Chié Shimizu on Wednesday, ... by Staff Writer