"A riveting look into the life and times of a great dance artist. From a small island shrouded in mystery, Fernando Alonso changed the face of ballet for the world. Bravo! A standing ovation for a great read about a fantastic life."--Ben Vereen, Tony Award winner
"One of the most fascinating books I have ever read. Cuba is a mystery to so many of us, and this book gives an insight into the making of a great ballet style and company. A must-read for dancers, students, and balletomanes."--David Howard, Broadway Dance Center
"A long-overdue book about one of the most influential figures in the making of the Cuban ballet miracle."--Lynn Garafola, author of
Legacies of Twentieth-Century Dance "A greatly informative--and unusually structured--account of one of ballet's most influential and impressive teachers from the past hundred years. The English-speaking dance world has lost track of him owing to two cold wars?that between the United States and Cuba and that between Alonso and his former wife and inspiration, Alicia. The interviews Singer conducts here unflinchingly take stock of both."--Mindy Aloff, author of
Dance Anecdotes "An illuminating biography of one of the most important pedagogues in twentieth-century ballet. Fernando Alonso not only codified the formidable Cuban ballet technique, but he trained many of the extraordinary Cuban dancers who grace the international stage today."--Suki John, Texas Christian University
"Alonso's philosophies are gems for ballet dancers."--Miko Fogarty, Gold Medalist, World Ballet Competition, and star of the award-winning film,
First Position The Cuban National Ballet, complete with its own training school and indigenous twist, was built in large part by Fernando Alonso, a remarkable man who danced on Broadway, studied with the greatest figures of the Golden Era of Ballet, and helped win the support of the post-1959 revolutionary government for the advancement of ballet.
Written records of Alonso's work are scarce, yet Toba Singer's quest to spotlight his seminal role in the development of the modern ballet canon yields key material: pre-blockade tapes from Lincoln Center, Spanish-language sources from the Museum of Dance in Havana, and interviews with the ballet master himself alongside a broad range of friends, relatives, and collaborators from throughout his long career, including his ex-wife, Alicia, a famous ballerina in her own right.
Under Alonso's loving guidance, Cuban ballet has become the most revered art form in the country--and a powerful presence in the international dance arena.