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On Point

Pointeworks is the new kid on the block in San Diego’s thriving dance scene. Founded by Sophie Williams, a dancer with Texas Ballet Theatre and a San Diego native who grew up training in Solana Beach, the company says it seeks to provide off-season work for dancers and highlight female choreographers. Having just returned from a New York City Center residency, Pointeworks is only embarking on its third season. If the crowd at the Conrad Prebys Theatre in La Jolla is an indicator, the company’s cocktail-attire professionalism creates an experience that will attract the parched balletomanes in the city.

Performance

Pointeworks: “Moving Forces” by Jacquelyn Long / “Transcendence” by Reka Gyulai / “Romeo and Juliet Pas de Deux” by Andrea Schermoly / “UnSaid” by Dani Rowe / “Spillover” by Keerati Jinakunphipat

Place

Conrad Prebys Theatre, San Diego, California, June 2026

Words

Robert Steven Mack

Heather Nichols, Rieko Hatato, and Kate Inoue in “Moving Forces” by Jacquelyn Long. Photograph by Hannah Cox

The first piece, “Moving Forces,” by Jacquelyn Long was an abstract ballet that purported to depict elements of fire, water, earth, and wind. Whatever the theme, the highlight was the dancing trio, clad in firey unitards, of Heather Nichols, Rieko Hatato, and Kate Inoue, whose precision and attack fed off of one another. The music by resident composer Katie Jenkins was performed by violinist Julia Choi in a sparkling dress and pianist Joshua Moon in a sparkling sleeveless top.

The walls shifted to create a seemingly flattened space for “Transcendence,” a piece by San Diego-based Hungarian dancer and choreographer Reka Gyulai. Unfortunately, last-minute injuries forced the ballet to be cut to only one movement. However, the sculptural contemporary pas de deux by Ballet Arizona’s Gabriel Wright and Isabella Seo, clad in earth-toned tights and leotard respectively, wetted appetites for more. 

Isabella Seo and Gabriel Wright in “Transcendence” by Reka Gyulai. Photograph by Hannah Cox

Isabella Seo and Gabriel Wright in “Transcendence” by Reka Gyulai. Photograph by Hannah Cox

The lights dimmed and the wood ceiling above the stage then became a cathedral, seemingly lit from inside the bark itself, for the Northern Hemisphere premiere of Andrea Schermoly’s “Romeo and Juliet Pas de Deux.” This new take on a familiar pas, to Sergei Prokofiev’s score that needs no introduction, was executed with compelling emotion and deft partnering by Isabella Seo and Angel Ramirez. The latter dancer is one of Cuban triplets, including Cesar and Marcus, all of whom dance. Marcus joins his brother Angel in the program. 

A near-perfect follow-up was “UnSaid” by Oregon Ballet Theatre director Dani Rowe to music by Ezio Bozzo. Staged by former San Francisco Ballet principal Sofiane Sylve, the pas de deux performed by Paige Nyman and Jorge Garcia opened with the couple in a corner, Nyman clutching her long blue dress. Yearningly, Garcia, his shirt open, moved, picked up and put Nyman down, her turned-out feet and legs following, in a heartbreakingly chiseled surrender. Someone in the audience afterwards remarked to me that “UnSaid” resembled the previous “Romeo and Juliet” pas de deux if the characters had lived, gotten married and were still together. Indeed, the piece in all its black and white melancholy hit harder after the exuberant balcony pas de deux. 

Rieko Hatato and Gabriel Wright in “Romeo and Juliet Pas de Deux” by Andrea Schermoly. Photograph by Hannah Cox

Rieko Hatato and Gabriel Wright in “Romeo and Juliet Pas de Deux” by Andrea Schermoly. Photograph by Hannah Cox

The final piece, “Spillover,” a world premiere by New York City-based choreographer Keerati Jinakunphipat was contrastingly filled with contemporary verve. The ensemble of dancers twisted and turned in their lightly shredded blue unitards to a soundscape titled “Spin, and I” by Katya Richardson. The plasticity and acumen by Los Angeles Ballet’s Kate Inoue and Marcus Ramirez and Atlanta Ballet’s Angel Ramirez set particular fire. 

There is something delightfully upscale about the venue, a chamber music venue with soft lightning and round wooden edges. The stage had no wings to speak of but the walls shift and shape and are lit in surprising ways that give renewed form to each work. That evening, Pointeworks succeeded in carving out the perceived intimacy of a chamber concert, followed by a wine toast in the outside atrium just after, where dancers and choreographers alike mingled with donors and the public. 

Robert Steven Mack


Robert Steven Mack has danced with Indianapolis Ballet and City Ballet of San Diego and is an award-winning filmmaker. His writing has appeared in The New Criterion, Law and Liberty, American Purpose, and Arts Fuse. Robert received his Master of Public Affairs from Indiana University, Bloomington, from which he also holds a BA in History and a BS in Ballet Performance from the Jacobs School of Music.

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