Rolando Sarabia Explained

Rolando Sarabia
Birth Name:Rolando Sarabia Oquendo
Birth Date:18 August 1982
Nationality:Cuban
Occupation:Ballet dancer

Rolando Sarabia Oquendo (born 18 August 1982) is a Cuban-born American ballet dancer.[1] He was an acclaimed Principal Dancer for The Washington Ballet under artistic director Julie Kent and former artistic director Septime Webre. He has danced with many companies including the Cuban National Ballet, the Houston Ballet, Miami City Ballet, and American Ballet Theatre as a guest artist in 2011.[2] Erika Kinetz of The New York Times called him the "Cuban Nijinsky" and compared him to the young Mikhail Baryshnikov.[3] In 2021 he was named the artistic director of Roanoke Ballet Theatre.

Life and career

Sarabia was born in Havana, Cuba, on 18 August 1982. His father was a ballet dancer with the Cuban National Ballet. Rolando grew up, among ballet dancers and was performing with the Cuban National Ballet since the age of 5.

In 1990, he was admitted as a student at the Alejo Carpentier Elementary Ballet School in Havana, Cuba. Was trained by Rolando Sarabia (his father), Alicia Alonso, Lázaro Carreño and Magaly Suarez, at the National Ballet School in Havana.[4] Early in his career, Sarabia's explosive performance style garnered comparisons to Nijinsky and Baryshnikov. Sarabita was so famous among young people in Cuba,[5] that according to Sarah Kaufman of The Washington Post his fans "glued him the suffix of endearment, -ita, onto his name like a kiss."[6]

Hailed by The New York Times as the 'Cuban Nijinsky'. Rolando defected from Cuba in 2005, a year after his brother Daniel Sarabia, also a former dancer with Cuban National Ballet, entered the United States via Mexico. Sarabia left Cuba, after Prima Ballerina Alicia Alonso refused to allow him to join the Boston Ballet where his younger brother Daniel Sarabia was dancing as a corps member.[7]

He has performed with renowned dancers as Maya Plisetskaya, Patrick Dupont, Farouk Ruzimatov, Alicia Alonso, Tamara Rojo, among many others.

In July 2021, Sarabia announced his retirement from The Washington Ballet. He is now the artistic director of Roanoke Ballet Theatre.

Awards

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: The 'Cuban Nijinsky' Seeks Asylum and Stardom. Kinetz. Erika. 2005-08-31. The New York Times. 2019-11-17. en-US. 0362-4331.
  2. Web site: Cast Changes Announced For First Two Weeks of American Ballet Theatre’s 2011 Spring Season at Metropolitan Opera House . Ballet Theatre Foundation . . May 12, 2011 . March 31, 2012.
  3. News: 'Cuban Nijinsky' is latest defection. Kinetz, Erika. September 1, 2005. The New York Times. March 31, 2012. The New York Times Company.
  4. Web site: Rolando Sarabia . Benois Centre . Benois de la Danse . April 1, 2012.
  5. News: In Havana, Ballet Earns a Solid 'Si!' . https://archive.today/20130131161226/http://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/washingtonpost/access/67726592.html?FMT=ABS&FMTS=ABS:FT&date=Feb+4,+2001&author=Sarah+Kaufman&pub=The+Washington+Post&edition=&startpage=G.01&desc=In+Havana,+Ballet+Earns+a+Solid+'Si!' . dead . January 31, 2013 . . February 4, 2001 . April 1, 2012 . Kaufman, Sarah . Sarah Kaufman (critic) . Washington, D.C..
  6. News: Castro's Cuba Is an Unlikely Island of Superb Classical Ballet . . February 15, 2001 . April 1, 2012 . Kaufman, Sarah . Havana . Sarah Kaufman (critic) . 1.
  7. Rolando Sarabia . Wozny, Nancy . . November 2006 . April 1, 2012.
  8. Web site: Medalists 1998. 2012-03-09. USA International Ballet Competition. web.archive.org. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20120309003118/http://www.usaibc.com/compete/medalists/medalists-1998. 2012-03-09. 2019-11-18.