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Wendy Whelan: FACES of Louisville

Wendy Whelan is not your typical retiree. Having retired last fall from the New York City Ballet after a 30-year career there, she is now embarkingΒ on a second act in contemporary dance. Today, she'll inspire you with her energy-filled schedule, fantastically creative ideas and more.

Β· By Heidi Potter
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Wendy Whelan is a legend in the arts community. Retired since October 2014 from the New York City Ballet, this principal dancerΒ was there for more than 30Β years, which is an amazing feat in longevity. This Louisville, KY, nativeΒ began her career at the tender age of 3 years old, performing in β€œThe Nutcracker” and later attending the Louisville Ballet school. She left her Kentucky home at the fresh age of 15 to attend ballet school in New York. She then apprenticed and later joined the City Ballet, where she made her mark as a dancer, known for her vast rangeΒ and interminable energy. Now at age 47, she has blossomed again in a second career in contemporary dance. Recently, she returned to Louisville to perform in her firstΒ independent production, a modern dance entitled β€œRestless Creature” at the Kentucky Center. While she was home, she also showcased anotherΒ artistic endeavorβ€”photographyβ€”with an exhibition of her photographs at the Louisville Visual Art gallery entitled β€œVantage Point.” Suffice it to say, Wendy Whelan is not your typical retiree, and today, we’re thrilled to feature her as our FACES of the South.

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Wendy at her β€œVantage Point” photography exhibition at the Louisville Visual Art gallery in May | Image credit: Alix Mattingly/The Kentucky Center

You are a KentuckyΒ native. Do you still have family in Louisville? How often do you get to seeΒ them?

My whole family still lives in Louisville. I try to come home at least twice a year.

When you return to Louisville, what are your favorite things to do?

I love to hang out and play with my niece and nephew. They are a lot of fun to be with. I also like toΒ visit meaningful places from my past from when I was a kid, like the parks, schools andΒ neighborhoods, whereΒ I used to spend my time as a youngster.

Where did you grow up? And we have to ask, where did you go to school?

I grew up on Crescent Hill, and I went to school at Holy Spirit School and one year of high school atΒ The Brown School.

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Wendy with her proud parents at the Louisville Visual Art gallery. Image credit: Alix Mattingly/The Kentucky Center

How did you start in ballet? Did you love it from the beginning?

I started in ballet as a 3-year-old, as an outlet for my restless energy, and I think I did love it fromΒ the start. I kinda just always danced, around the house, in my frontΒ yard and pretty much everywhere.

What was it like living in New York on your own at such a young age?

Luckily, I was extremely focused and really just concentrated on my dancing and my schoolwork. IΒ was 15, and I had three roommates whoΒ I lived with, ages 15, 17 and 18, and they were like my sisters,Β keeping tabs on me. I developed some very close friends right away, and we stuck together for ourΒ first five or more years living in NYC, through the time when we all began our professional careers.

What is the secret to your longevity in your career?

I think staying happy is really the thing. The combination ofΒ feeling confident to explore, freedom toΒ grow and safety within my surroundings. That, and most definitely having a great basicΒ understanding of physicality and ballet technique, which kept me injury-free. I learned that from theΒ teachers I had in Louisville when I was a kid.

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Performing β€œRestless Creature” in Louisville inΒ May at The Kentucky Center | Image credit: Stephen J. Cohen

Tell us about your current tour of β€œRestless Creature.”

Well, the tour actually just ended on May 31. We ended on a really high note, with a very successfulΒ weeklong run in New York City. We sold out every show; we even had to add a show becauseΒ tickets were in such high demand. My choreographers and I have now each moved on to our otherΒ projects. I am preparing another show called β€œWhelan/Watson, Other Stories,” which has its premiereΒ this summer in London. It’s an evening of five new works, by five different choreographers, that I willΒ perform with the great dancer Edward Watson of the Royal Ballet. I am getting very excited for it. I amΒ working with Ed each day on that project now. It’s very different from β€œRestless Creature,” as I am onlyΒ performing with him in that show. We will dance three duets together and a solo each.

Since your retirement last fall, it doesn’t seem as though you have slowed down. You seemΒ liberated actually. Is that a valid statement?

In one word … A definitive YES!

What are some things you are looking to do in your β€œretirement” (using that term loosely, of course)?

Ha ha!! So far, I am really doing so much of what I have wanted to do in my retirement, which isΒ to basically learn and explore and become fearless. I am creating opportunities to be in charge ofΒ what I want to do. I am steering myself toward working with people who have ideas that I find exciting andΒ interesting, for the place I am at in my life right now, which feels like a really strong place to be as aΒ creative woman. I am finding so much more within myself and am feeling really excited and inspiredΒ by all my new collaborators.

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More from β€œRestless Creature,” performed in May at The Kentucky Center | Image credit: Stephen J. Cohen

If you could have any career besides your current one, what would it be?

I can’t imagine another career, honestly. I feel so lucky and happy to do what I do. I might love toΒ have some kind of a career with caring forΒ animals though. I find that IΒ am becoming more and moreΒ a sucker for living things covered with fur.

Give us a peek at your agenda. What’s a typical day or week like for you?

Working on this new project, at this point, with its premiere coming up so quickly, I take classΒ Monday through Saturday in the morning fromΒ 10 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. I usually start rehearsing around noon or 1 p.m. This week, it’s beenΒ for three hoursΒ of rehearsal each day (for my solo with the choreographer Annie-B Parson). ThenΒ I willΒ be rehearsing at least one or two of my new duets with Ed and the choreographer Daniele Desnoyers,Β plus my solo. We will probably work for up to five or six hours a day. Very often each day, I move toΒ different studios in different parts of town, but luckily I am booked in the same venue each day all nextΒ week. On Tuesdays, if I am not rehearsing or touring, I teach the most advanced level girls classΒ atΒ Ballet Academy East on the Upper East Side. It’s a wonderful school with a huge pool of talent.

Sometimes before myΒ 10 a.m. class, I squeeze in a press interview for one of my different projects orΒ fit in a meeting with one of my project commissioners or producers to discuss the differentΒ components of the different projects. We often discuss scheduling, fundraising, design elements,Β production or live music issues. Twice a week, I try to schedule an appointment with my physicalΒ therapist to keep my body safe and sound. Sometimes at night after my rehearsal day, I head acrossΒ the street from my apartment to a wonderful place called Chinese Bodyworks, where I can see myΒ favorite masseuse for an hour-long massage. Lucky for me, they are open late untilΒ 10 p.m.

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Image credit: Alix Mattingly/The Kentucky Center

Who are your mentors, and what advice do you treasure?

I have a lot of mentors from my past in ballet and some more present-day mentors, like RisaΒ Steinberg and my teacher, Zvi Gotheiner, who now give me guidance as I move forward in thisΒ different style of more contemporary and modern dance. Mostly what I hear from them is to breathe and keep my body soft and supple, more open and free. I try to stay calm, be myself and always keepΒ my sense of humor. I treasure all this advice.

Fill in the blank. You’ll never see me without my:________.

Lipstick

What’s your bucket list travel destination?

Hawaii! I’ve never been. It’s my next vacation destination.

Night owl or early bird? What do you do during that quiet time?

Early bird I guess, though I love to go to bed early and wake up late.

I usually have quality time in the morning with my cat, Charleyrose. I feed her, I play with her. I makeΒ myself tea and eggs. I like to take a hot bath, and Charleyrose always hangs out with me, right by myΒ side, all morning long. My husband is a real night owl, so he is always asleep when I have my morningΒ bonding time with Charleyrose.

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Image credit: Stephen J. Cohen

Tell us some of your favorite LouisvilleΒ restaurants.

Seviche is SO amazing. I also love Proof on Main and Decca. There are so many new placesΒ though that I look forward to trying!

What’s on your personal reading list right now?

I was just reading a book called Brain MakerΒ by David Perlmutter andΒ Kristin Loberg. Now, I am mostly focusing on listening to the musicΒ for my β€œOther Stories” project. It’s like learning the lines to a play. I am trying to lay down the rhythmsΒ and groundwork into my brain and body, so I can be ready each day for rehearsals. I am listening a lotΒ to the music for my solo. It’s all drums, and it’s really crazy and fast, and theΒ choreography is really richΒ with detail and changes of direction, so I need to be super ready. I decided today that this solo isΒ probably a bit like performing a Beckett play.

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Image credit: Alix Mattingly/The Kentucky Center

Lightning round! Give us your:

  • Candy or junk food splurge: Doritos
  • Guilty pleasure song: These days it’s old Rihanna … β€œWe Found Love” or β€œDon’t Stop The Music”
  • Tearjerker movie pick:Β Terms Of Endearment or Thelma & Louise
  • Standby nail polish color: Β Hi Maintenance by Essie
  • Favorite cocktail: Lychee martini or elderflower royale
  • Cartoon alter-ego: That’s hard. There are a lot of them! I think if Peppermint Patty andΒ Woodstock could have a β€œlove child,” that would be me!

Thank you to Wendy Whelan for taking time out of a grueling schedule to answer our questions. Good luck to you in β€œretirement.”

Photos by:Β Alix Mattingly and Stephen J. CohenΒ 

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