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Lucia Chase
Lucia Chase
from Wikipedia

Lucia Hosmer Chase (March 24, 1897[3] – January 9, 1986) was an American dancer, actress, ballet director and also the co-founder of the American Ballet Theatre.[2]

Key Information

Life and career

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Chase was born in Waterbury, Connecticut, the daughter of Elizabeth Hosmer (Kellogg) and Irving Hall Chase.[4] She attended St. Margaret's School and later Bryn Mawr College.[5]

After deciding to focus on theater, she studied drama at New York's Theater Guild School where she also took ballet lessons. Though her first love was the theatre, after she decided that dance was to be her life, she studied seriously with, among others, Mikhail Mordkin, Michel Fokine, Antony Tudor, and Bronislava Nijinska. She performed with the Mordkin Ballet from 1937 to 1939, where she danced the title roles in The Sleeping Beauty and Giselle.

In 1940, she and Richard Pleasant founded Ballet Theatre (later American Ballet Theatre), with Lucia Chase as principal dancer (and prime financial backer), although she concentrated on the more dramatic and comedic roles.

She created the Eldest Sister in Tudor's Pillar of Fire (1942) and the Greedy One in Agnes de Mille's Three Virgins and a Devil (1941). In 1945 she and Oliver Smith jointly took over direction of American Ballet Theatre.

She retired from the stage in 1960, and retired as company director in 1980, when she was succeeded by Mikhail Baryshnikov.

She devoted her energy and a large part of her personal fortune over four decades to ensure the company's survival. She brought Tudor and Baryshnikov to American Ballet Theatre and encouraged US choreographers such as Jerome Robbins, Glen Tetley and Twyla Tharp. She was awarded the US Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1980.

Chase was married to Thomas Ewing, with whom she had two sons. She died in New York City.

Chase was inducted into the National Museum of Dance's Mr. & Mrs. Cornelius Vanderbilt Whitney Hall of Fame in 1988.

In 2009, the book, Bravura!: Lucia Chase and the American Ballet Theatre, written by her son Alex C. Ewing, was released.

Filmography

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Year Film Role Notes
1976 Live from Lincoln Center (Swan Lake) Queen Mother 1 episode
1957 Omnibus (Lizzie Borden) Stepmother 1 episode
1973 American Ballet Theatre: A Close-Up in Time Herself

References

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Lucia Chase is an American ballet dancer and director known for co-founding American Ballet Theatre and serving as its co-director for 35 years, during which she provided crucial financial support and artistic vision that helped establish the company as one of the world's leading ballet organizations. Born on March 24, 1897, in Waterbury, Connecticut, into a prominent family, Chase initially pursued acting and social life in New York City after attending Bryn Mawr College and leaving without graduating. Following the death of her husband in 1933, she began classical ballet training at age 38 with Mikhail Mordkin, rapidly advancing to principal dancer status and earning acclaim for her expressive character and mime roles. She performed leading parts early on, including in the first full-length American production of Sleeping Beauty in 1936. Chase became the principal financial backer of the Mordkin Ballet in the late 1930s and played a central role in its evolution into Ballet Theatre in 1940, which she co-founded with Richard Pleasant. After taking on co-directorship with scenic designer Oliver Smith in 1945, she guided the company—renamed American Ballet Theatre in 1957—through extensive international tours, landmark premieres including Antony Tudor's psychological ballets, and commissions for emerging American choreographers such as Jerome Robbins and Michael Kidd. She continued performing character roles well into her 70s while personally covering major deficits to sustain the company's eclectic repertory and American identity. Her long leadership helped ABT survive financial and artistic challenges, perform in the Soviet Union in 1960 as the first American ballet company to do so, and gain recognition as a cultural ambassador. Chase received numerous honors, including the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1980 and the Dance Magazine Award in 1957. She retired from her directorship in 1980 and died on January 9, 1986, in New York City.

Early Life

Family Background and Childhood

Lucia Hosmer Chase was born on March 24, 1897, in Waterbury, Connecticut, to a prominent local family. She was the daughter of Irving Hall Chase, who served as secretary and later president of the Waterbury Clock Company, and Elizabeth Hosmer Kellogg Chase, the daughter of a state representative. Chase grew up as the middle of five daughters, with older sisters Marjorie and Eleanor, and younger sisters Elizabeth and Dorothy. The family lived at Rose Hill, their home on Prospect Street in Waterbury. Her father's leadership role in a major industrial firm provided the family with substantial wealth derived from Connecticut's manufacturing sector. Despite this affluence, her parents emphasized frugality, teaching her the value of the dollar while maintaining a non-strict approach to parenting that encouraged independence and refrained from interference in others' pursuits.

Education and Early Interests

Lucia Chase attended St. Margaret’s School in Waterbury, Connecticut, where she was actively involved in stage plays and musical reviews as a student. Her classmates noted her theatrical promise in the 1910 yearbook, predicting that she would excel if she pursued the stage professionally. She graduated from high school in 1913 at the age of 16. She enrolled at Bryn Mawr College, an all-women’s institution in Pennsylvania, and enjoyed her coursework while maintaining an active social life that included frequent weekend visits to Yale University and attendance at six Yale senior proms. During the fall of her junior year, she contracted diphtheria, and upon returning in the spring, she found her interest in academics had waned, leading her to leave the college. Chase then moved to New York City to pursue acting, her primary early interest. She studied drama at the Theater Guild School, along with dance classes, voice lessons, and performances that formed a whirlwind of training in the performing arts. Initial ballet lessons taken alongside her drama studies marked her earliest exposure to dance. In New York, she became a popular socialite whose clothing and activities drew frequent mentions in society news columns.

Personal Life

Marriage, Widowhood, and Family

Lucia Chase married Thomas Ewing, a polo player and heir to the Alexander Smith & Sons carpeting fortune, on December 28, 1926, after a brief courtship that began in June of that year and lasted three months. Ewing supported her theatrical ambitions and promised not to interfere with her professional pursuits. The couple had two sons: Thomas Jr., born in February 1929, and Alexander Cochran “Sandy” Ewing, born in February 1931. In February 1933, Thomas Ewing died of pneumonia at the age of 35 after contracting the illness while standing hatless in the rain at a family funeral. His death left Chase a widow and devastated her. On November 10, 1963, her eldest son Thomas Jr. died in a boating accident off the coast of Rhode Island. In response to this loss, Chase stepped back from her responsibilities with American Ballet Theatre for over a year during 1963–1964 to privately publish her son’s journal and to build a house in Narragansett, Rhode Island, which would serve as a way-station for friends and family while preserving his memory.

Entry into Dance

Transition to Ballet and Mordkin Period

After the death of her husband in 1933, Lucia Chase, seeking solace from her grief, began studying classical ballet with Russian dancer and teacher Mikhail Mordkin at the age of 38. Mordkin, known for his rigorous training style, became her instructor, and she advanced rapidly despite starting later than most dancers. In 1936, Chase financed and performed the title role in Mordkin's first full-length production of The Sleeping Beauty in the United States, staged as a semi-professional presentation at the Woman's Club of Waterbury, Connecticut, her hometown. This marked her early professional involvement in ballet performance and production support. She emerged as the principal financier and a leading dancer of the Mordkin Ballet, formed in 1937, supporting its productions for two years through 1939 while performing principal roles. During this period, she danced the title roles in The Sleeping Beauty and Giselle. Funding for the company ceased after two years on the advice of her lawyer. Her association with Mordkin's manager, Richard Pleasant, during this time contributed to discussions that later shaped new ballet initiatives.

Ballet Theatre

Co-Founding and Early Years

Lucia Chase co-founded Ballet Theatre with Richard Pleasant in 1940, serving as both a principal dancer and the primary financial backer with an initial commitment of $25,000. The company launched with sixty dancers, eleven choreographers including Michel Fokine, Agnes de Mille, and Eugene Loring, and eighteen ballets in its repertoire. Chase performed as a principal dancer during the early seasons while guiding the company's artistic and financial direction. The early years brought artistic acclaim, with critics hailing the company as marking a new page in the history of ballet in America, but they were financially disastrous, resulting in mounting debts that Chase personally covered. Richard Pleasant stepped down amid these challenges, and management shifted to Sol Hurok, who secured regular engagements at the Metropolitan Opera House and a full touring schedule. In 1942, despite opposition from Hurok who favored Russian-style works, Chase insisted on including Antony Tudor's Pillar of Fire in the Metropolitan Opera House season. The ballet premiered on April 8, 1942, and after an initial stunned silence received a standing ovation and twenty-seven curtain calls. This triumph generated record-breaking box office receipts, though ongoing deficits persisted and continued to be met by Chase's personal funding. By October 1944, Chase issued an ultimatum limiting further personal support, agreeing to fund the new Tudor ballet Undertow and an additional $25,000 but no more. The resulting standoff with the board persisted until the termination of the Hurok contract in 1946, enabling the company to achieve greater independence.

American Ballet Theatre Leadership

Co-Directorship and Tenure

In April 1945, following board changes and her financial ultimatum after the resignation of the Board Chair, Lucia Chase was named administrative co-director of Ballet Theatre alongside scenic designer Oliver Smith. They held this position for 35 years until August 30, 1980, when they relinquished their roles and were succeeded by Mikhail Baryshnikov. As co-director, Chase selected the company's personnel and repertory while providing major ongoing financial support that sustained its operations. She oversaw the official name change to American Ballet Theatre in 1957. Under their leadership, the company toured extensively, reaching 48 U.S. states by 1954 and becoming the first American ballet company to perform in the Soviet Union in 1960 as part of a broader pattern of international engagements that included Europe and other regions. The company endured significant challenges during these tours, including civil unrest that forced the cancellation of performances in Buenos Aires and a 1958 truck fire in Cannes, France, that destroyed most scenery, costumes, and personal possessions. Chase also encouraged the development of American choreography through commissions to emerging talents.

Artistic Decisions and Milestones

Lucia Chase's artistic leadership at American Ballet Theatre emphasized an eclectic and theatrical repertoire that blended classical traditions with bold new creations, establishing the company as a leading American ballet institution. She championed dramatic psychological works by introducing British choreographer Antony Tudor to American audiences, insisting on the inclusion of his ballet Pillar of Fire for its world premiere on April 8, 1942, at the Metropolitan Opera House, where it garnered a standing ovation and 27 curtain calls after initial stunned silence, and personally funding the production of his Undertow amid board resistance in 1944-1945. Chase commissioned the first ballets by American choreographers Jerome Robbins and Michael Kidd, fostering Americana themes and contributing to the emergence of a distinctive national ballet voice. She continued to support innovative choreographers such as Glen Tetley and Twyla Tharp, whose works further diversified the company's programming with contemporary approaches. Under her co-directorship, ABT attracted international stars, including overseeing Mikhail Baryshnikov's engagement as principal dancer in 1974, who later succeeded her as artistic director in 1980. Her personal financial contributions sustained the company through recurring deficits, making possible these ambitious artistic initiatives. Key milestones during her tenure included ABT becoming the first American ballet company to tour the Soviet Union in 1960 and performing in thirty-three European countries across various tours, reinforcing its position as a global cultural ambassador.

Performing Career

Notable Roles and Character Work

Lucia Chase distinguished herself as a performer through her mastery of dramatic and comedic character roles, favoring expressive mime and acting over traditional classical ballet technique. She excelled in portraying complex personalities with wit, pathos, and psychological depth, contributing significantly to the development of narrative ballet in America. Among her most notable contributions were the roles she originated during American Ballet Theatre's early years. Chase created the role of the Greedy One in Agnes de Mille's Three Virgins and a Devil (1941), a satirical character defined by avarice and comic exaggeration. She also originated the Eldest Sister in Antony Tudor's Pillar of Fire (1942), a brooding, repressive figure central to the ballet's exploration of sexual repression and family dynamics. Chase retired from principal dancing in 1960 at the age of 63 but continued performing mime and character roles for another two decades until 1980. Her late-career appearances included the Prince’s mother in Swan Lake, where she brought regal authority and emotional nuance to supporting parts. She also made several appearances in dance-related television programs, including the role of the Stepmother in the Omnibus production of Lizzie Borden (1957), the Queen Mother in Swan Lake on Live from Lincoln Center (1976), and in a 1973 documentary on American Ballet Theatre. Chase maintained a youthful stage presence throughout her career, often perceived as a decade younger than her actual age due to her disciplined secrecy about her birth year.

Retirement and Death

Awards and Honors

Legacy

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