Nimble and Creatively Flexible

The Chamber Dance Project of Washington, D.C. Carries on Their Mission

When circumstances derail plans, creativity sets artists free to experiment with and present exceptional virtual opportunities to even more people than would have originally enjoyed performances. Such is the case for the Chamber Dance Project (CDP) in Washington, D.C.

Artistic Director and choreographer, Diane Coburn Bruning, founded the CDP because she believed that dance should be a collaborative process between dancers, musicians and the audience. That process, she says, “Deepens the audience’s experience.”  They have grown to be Washington’s  premier contemporary ballet company.

Their ballet season takes place in the summer when other companies and dancers are off. Because of this, CPD attracts and features exceptional dancers. Two such dancers are Austin Powers and his wife, Grace-Anne Powers. They are slated to dance in this summer’s CDP performances.

With theaters being dark now, this is an opportunity to expand creativity and communication with audience and patrons. CPD has moved their Open Rehearsals and Evenings with the Artist to on-line adventures via Zoom.  

A recent Evening with the Artist featured Emmy Award – Winning ballerina, Grace-Anne Powers. She is a ballerina with Ohio’s BalletMet in the regular season. Grace-Anne met us from her living room in Ohio where she and her husband built a sprung wood floor upon which to rehearse. Typically, a dance floor is covered with a sheet of plastic called Marley which is both smooth and anti-slip for safe dancing.  Resourcefully, the couple covered their floor with a fish pond liner instead. This decision was made based on economics and size of the floor.

The Shoe Must FitGrace-Anne Powers via Zoom

Pointe shoes are the quintessential piece of equipment for a ballerina. Pointe shoes are  generally pink satin with pink ribbons that crisscross over the ankles. What else is there? Grace-Anne calls them, “The most beautiful and torturous item.” She spoke about the manufacturers, the construction, the fragility, and the importance of perfect fit of the beloved pointe shoe in a recent CDP Evening With An Artist.

Grace-Anne’s favorite pointe shoes are made by Freed of London. Every shoe is handmade by highly skilled craftsmen. The craftsmen each have their own mark that they place on the leather sole of the shoe. The “Butterfly” is the shoe that she finds most comfortable. The shoes are handmade just for her. “When I get a new pair of pointe shoes, I have to prepare them for dancing. The toe box is round. The first thing I do is flatten it so that it sits flat on top of my foot,” she demonstrated the process of putting the perfectly new shoe on the floor and unceremoniously stomps on it with her foot. The process continues with the insoles – tearing and cutting away until the arch is in the perfect place. Elastics and ribbons are sewed on and more maneuvering of the shoe continue until it fits like a glove. “It takes about two hours to prepare a pair of pointe shoes,” she told us.  

A pair of shoes costs up to $125. Grace-Anne gets 40 pairs of pointe shoes form her home ballet company. “I have bendy feet that are stronger, so I tend to go through my shoes faster,” she explained. She tries to extend their lives with some unorthodox techniques involving jet glue.

There is a fine line between being perfectly comfortable and “dead.” Dead shoes are not fit for dancing and can be harmful to the dancer. Did you know that the life of a pointe shoe is very short? Sometimes it is just a week and sometimes two weeks. Let’s see, they are satin, there is a leather outer sole, the sides are canvas with a satin outer shell. The “box” is made of fabric and cardboard and biodegradable materials like water soluble glue.  Perspiration tends to dissolve the hardening materials of the box. For that reason, Grace-Anne has devised  to coat inside of her well-fitting shoes with jet glue.

“There can be no movement in my shoe, so I double the elastics to keep them tight against my foot. Also, my ribbons are not just ribbons, I like my ribbons to give a little so they have some stretch and give. After the shoes have been flattened, potions cut out, and glued, Grace-Anne darns the pointe part of the shoe and creates a “box.” That also extends the life of the shoe and provides a flat space to “stand.” She uses a doubled macramé cord to create the rim then  sews it onto the satin of the shoe. This further helps save the shoe in the contemporary repertoire when the angles become more exaggerated. “I wear a shoe that is a little larger than my foot to help me pad so that I keep corns and bunions from forming.”

Ill fitted shoes can cause blisters, bruised toe nails, bunions, even stress reactions. Properly fitted shoes are key to successful classes and performances. Grace-Anne experimented with different shoes, “Some had plastic in the toe. They lasted longer, but did not give me the correct fit and I could not fully articulate my foot. The Freed of London shoes give me the fit and articulation for artistry that I need. It is hard finding the right shoe. When you find the right shoe, it is no longer a foot inside a shoe, but it becomes a part of you.“

A world-class ballerina, Grace-Anne, is comfortable with both the classical ballet repertoire and the contemporary realm. She is a perfect fit for CDP with her classical background and ability to extend into the extraordinary. “Contemporary ballet pushes you beyond the vertical  and many times off-center. That is when pointe shoes deteriorate even faster since the contact with the floor changes dramatically and parts touch and wear faster,” she explained.

What does Grace-Anne find rewarding in dancing with CDP? “Working in smaller groups is very satisfying. Getting to know the people and the creativity is exciting,” she shared. She likes having the musicians on stage, “They help make dance spontaneous and interactive.” This season she and her husband, Austin, will have the opportunity to dance together. It will be a new experience for them to dance in a partnering capacity.

Grace-Anne Powers
pc: Jennifer Zmuda
Image courtesy of Grace-Anne Powers

Concluding the evening’s program, Grace-Anne and Austin demonstrated some partnering techniques and the resilience of their new floor. “With a partner, there is greater scope of movement, extension, and reach,” explained Grace-Anne and Austin. They are both able to stay in shape by working together, doing their own barre workouts, Austin works with weights, and there is lots of gardening for the both of them at their new home.

About the 2020 Season, Diane Coburn Bruning said, “I have utmost optimism for our season. For now, we will remain virtual. We are Nimble and creatively flexible.”

Powers’ presentation and Q&A is the first of four planned for May with dancer Julia Erickson discussed transitioning from classical to contemporary ballet roles on May 12.  Luz San Miguel and Davit Hovhannisyan will demonstrate classical ballet partnering on May 19 and contemporary ballet partnering on May 26. For further scheduling, please visit the CDP website.

You Can’t Hide a Piece of Broccoli in a Glass of Milk

A “Pearl of Wisdom” From Barbara Bush’s Latest Book,

Pearls of Wisdom

A journalist with  USA Today, Jean Becker, ultimately  became the chief of staff for former President George Herbert Walker Bush, deputy press secretary for former First Lady, Barbara Bush, and oversaw the opening of the George Bush Presidential Library Center.

That is a long way from the newsroom. What happened? Jean was  assigned to the 1988 election team. She wrote feature articles about the candidates. She wrote a column about  the ‘Candidates at Home.’ “ I met everyone,” said, Jean. “The wives of the presidential candidates, Barbara Bush and Kitty Dukakis, wrote weekly columns and I was assigned to edit them. I wound up loving it,” shared Jean. “I gained much respect for both women. I tried to catch up with them every week. I mostly worked with Kitty’s press secretary, but Barbara wrote her own. We discussed her column every Sunday night,” recalled Jean. After George H.W. Bush won the presidential election, USA Today assigned Jean to be imbedded in the inauguration activities. “ I got to hang out with the Bush family,” she told me,

Mrs. Bush confers with Jean Becker as she prepares to participate in television interviews with various media outlets at the RNC Convention in Houston, Texas. 18 August 1992 Photo Credit: George Bush Presidential Library and Museum

Fast forward to 2020  – Jean never left the Bush family. “Among the many wonderful and unexpected benefits of my time with the Bush family, was to witness the great love story between President Bush and Mrs. Bush,” she shared.

Of her position with former President Bush, she recalls, “President Bush called me to his office one day in 1994, and told me, ‘Barbara thinks you would be a good place holder until we figure things out,’ about the recently vacated chief of staff position. I agreed to help for a short period of time. Well, that conversation never surfaced again. I dove in with both feet. I never left.”

Jean went from living in Washington, D.C. to spending summers in Kennebunkport, Maine and the rest of the year in Houston, Texas. She was chief of staff, editor, and family friend.

Barbara Bush with Jean Becker at the Presidential Trust reception in St. Louis, Missouri, 16 Sep 1992, Photo Credit: George Bush Presidential Library and Museum

Jean helped with and edited Mrs. Bush’s memoirs and subsequent books. After Mrs. Bush passed away in 2018, with a trove of her writings, speeches, and so many family members and friends reminiscing about her wisdom and love, the book, Pearls of Wisdom -Little Pieces of Advice (That Go a Long Way), came to life.  Jean explained, “Barbara Bush is the author because these were her thoughts, words, and wisdom. She wrote most of her own speeches [she was a good writer] – I helped edit them. For the book, I compiled, organized, and added context.”  Jean writes in the ‘Author’s Note,’ “It is indeed written in her voice and in her spirit.”

Pearls of Wisdom is written in three voices, Mrs. Bush’s, her family’s and friends’, with Jean Becker’s, as narrator. “  Barbara’s advice is impossible to miss. It is printed in bold.

Barbara Bush was the mother of 6 children. She was the First Lady of the United States. She was the wife of the Vice President of the United States,  of a US congressman,  of the US Ambassador  to the United Nations, of the Director of the CIA, the mother of the 43rd President of the United States and 46th Governor of Texas,  and the mother of the 43rd Governor of Florida. Barbara was an accomplished author with four published books before Pearls of Wisdom. She was all that in a single lifetime. She was the love of former President George H. W.  Bush’s life. He called her “The Sliver Fox.” No job was too tough or inconvenient for Barbara as long as she and the love of her life were together. She focused on “the good.” What was the secret  to her sanity and success?

She was America’s Mom. She gave advice to her family, friends, politicians, heads of state, Supreme Court Justices, students, and graduates. “After all, in 80 years of living, I have survived 6 children, 17 grandchildren, 6 wars, a book by Kitty Kelly, two presidents, two governors, big Election Day wins and big Election Day losses, and 61 years of marriage to a husband who keeps jumping out of perfectly good airplanes. So, it is just possible that along the way I’ve learned a thing or two,” said Barbara Bush, owning up to her advice-giving.

Jean Becker with Mrs, Bush
Image Courtesy of Jean Becker

Former President, George W. Bush, writes in the book’s Forward, “There are those who might say Mother was bossy. . . opinionated . . . a bit of a blurter. She had a wonderful sense of humor . . . Her honesty came from a heart for others.” He concludes,  “We are better people for having listened to her.”

Family came first for Barbara. Neil Bush credits his mother, “Mom has taught me to be a better parent, a better person, and a better citizen.” According to Neil, Barbara doled out advice about “How to eat, how to dress, how to behave, how to make their bed, whom to date.”  She made her positions quite clear.

Opinions aside, Barbara shared a great love with her family and friends. She gave advice out of love. She encouraged people to “Look for the good in others, to value your friends, enjoy life,  and not to buy what you cannot afford.” Barbara embraced change and was ready and willing to go on to the next adventure. While she took her duties seriously, she did not take herself  seriously. “She said, Birds fly high because they take themselves lightly,” writes Neil Bush.

Former Governor of Florida, Jeb Bush, says of his mother, “She had …plain-spoken wisdom. … a successful life is defined first and foremost by loving your children with all of your heart and soul.” Jeb calls his mother’s form of discipline that of a “benevolent dictatorship.”  According to Jeb, Barbara tried “… to leave this a better world” by the manner of her life and her faith.

Flying to another adventure
Image Courtesy of Jean Becker

Son, Marvin Bush, recalls valuable lessons, “Be on time, be yourself. Love one another. Have a sense of humor.”  He writes, “…we had a front-row seat at one of the greatest love stories that ever existed.”

Daughter, Doro Bush Koch,  credits her mother for teaching her to “lead with love.”

In the many commencement speeches that Barbara gave, she stressed the importance of tolerance, “…Tolerance …is a constant stream of little acts in our daily lives, big and small choices we face every day in the way we think about, and talk about and deal with other human beings.”

Mrs. Bush was an fervent advocate of literacy. She is quoted in the book, “I truly feel that if more people could read, write, and comprehend, so many of our social problems could be solved.” She believed that literacy begins at home.

A few more “Pearls?” “Always be grateful.  Do your summer reading. Listen, learn, lead. Stay current. Be patient. Words matter. Treat everyone equally. You can’t hide a piece of broccoli in a glass of milk. Never pay top dollar for department store lipstick when you can get the same thing at the drug store for a fraction of the cost! Don’t feed Millie”

Pearls of Wisdom, so aptly titled, offers wisdom sprinkled with humor and much love. There is something for everyone. After the many years of working with the Barbara Bush, what is Jean’s take away? “Choose to be happy.”

All author royalties from PEARLS OF WISDOM will be donated to support the Barbara Bush Foundation for Family Literacy.

To get your copy of PEARLS OF WISDOM Little Pieces of Advice (That Go a Long Way) by Barbara Bush

Hardcover ISBN: 978-1-5387-3494-0 ▪ $22.00 ▪ 256 pages

eBook ISBN: 978-1-5387-3493-3 ▪ $12.99

Also available from Hachette Audio