A cygnet no more
Young Chang
The circle began when Catherine Sebring saw a newspaper photo of the
Sugar Plum Fairy wearing a tiara and standing en pointe. She was 3 then.
She told her mother she wanted to be a ballerina.
The circle continued with ballet classes, years of training at New
York’s School of American Ballet and a slew of competitions including the
Disneyland Creativity Challenge.
Sebring’s life now comes full circle as the 20-year-old ballerina
returns to the Orange County Performing Arts Center -- where she first
danced 11 years ago as a Party Girl in “The Nutcracker” -- as part of the
swan corps for American Ballet Theatre’s production of “Swan Lake,” to be
staged Tuesday through Feb. 17.
“We’re very excited for her to come back as a professional after
dancing there as a child,” said mother Donna Marie Sebring of Newport
Beach. “It’s a major accomplishment.”
Though she is not dancing a principal role like Julie Kent or Paloma
Herrera, the 20-year-old Sebring’s role in the show’s corps is a personal
spotlight because family and friends will be watching.
“We have family coming from all the way around the U.S. -- Chicago,
West Virginia and Colorado,” Donna Marie Sebring said.
Catherine Sebring’s apprenticeship with the American Ballet Theatre is
one bit of proof that she is living her dream. The fact that she gets
more scared now than she did as a child going on stage shows she knows
more, therefore can fear more.
And the simple fact that she’s never satisfied with her skills
signifies that Sebring has become a professional.
“You constantly need to be improving,” the Newport Beach native said.
“There’s always something more you can improve on. It’s kinda like you’re
never really perfect. But you’re always striving to be.”
Sebring remembers being younger and picturing the life of a
professional ballerina. It was all glamour and beauty, she thought.
“That was, of course, being on the outside looking in,” she said.
She’s since learned it’s a lot of work, a lot of diligence, and for a
while was a lot of juggling between school and rehearsals, filled with
long walks to get from one place to the next in wintry New York.
Sebring left her Corona del Mar home, where her first pair of pink
pointe shoes are framed in her room, when she was 16. She studied at the
School of American Ballet and attended a professional children’s high
school in New York at the same time.
“It was a little scary,” Sebring said of life on her own. “Very fast,
very busy, very cold. But it was what I wanted to do. It was the best
ballet training I could’ve gotten at the time.”
When life got upsetting or sad, she’d call her mom and vent.
“As an adult, you know all the things she’s gonna miss,” Donna Marie
Sebring said. “You try to warn them and they don’t care. They just want
to dance.”
Catherine Sebring’s unwavering ambition will pay off this week as she
performs in what she calls one of her favorite ballets.
Another favorite is “Romeo and Juliet.”
“I want to dance Juliet,” the dancer said. “It’s very sweet and
innocent. I just love the music and it’s probably one of my dream roles.”
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