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Home Town Dance

Unlike its messy neighbor, Los Angeles, one would think that establishing a ballet company in the relatively serene Orange County would be welcomed. It has an educated populace, a high medium household income, and plenty of infrastructure to support the arts. However, similar to Los Angeles, indigenous ballet companies tend to struggle to gain a foothold.

 

Performance

Ballet OC: “Vivo: Live Music and Dance”

Place

Curtis Theatre, Brea Civic and Cultural Center, California, May 29, 2026

Words

Robert Steven Mack

Ballte OC in “WolfGang” by Mate Szentes. Photograph by Jack Hartin Photography

Most people forget that Orange County once had such a company: Ballet Pacifica, which was founded in 1962 by a former dancer with the Ballets Russes and performed a wide repertoire, including works by George Balanchine, at the cozy, well-lit Irvine Barclay Theatre at the University of California, Irvine. However, when Ballet Pacific shuttered in 2007, a noted teacher and former soloist with American Ballet Theatre, Charles Maple established a school, the Maple Conservatory of Dance, in its former studios and hired former dancers for his staff.  

Maple’s successful school shut down itself in 2020 in the wake of California’s crippling lockdowns during the Covid-19 pandemic. Amidst the turmoil, two of its young alumni, Ally and Emily Helman were jump-starting Ballet Project OC, with the help of many of their former classmates from Maple and the School of American Ballet, where they had both completed their training. Rehearsing in their dad’s IT office, they commissioned some 50 neoclassical and contemporary ballets from their network of colleagues, and even worked with the Balanchine Trust to stage some of his works, a rarity for a project-based group. Early this year, they rebranded to Ballet Orange County and announced plans to take the troupe from being an off-season gig for dancers to a full-time company. If they succeed, they will draw a direct line back to the barely remembered Ballet Pacifica and will be the first such organization to call Orange County home in 20 years.

No doubt attempting to create a company with real longevity will be challenging. Much like Los Angeles and its hegemonic Music Center, any local company has to compete with international companies that tour through the Segerstrom Center for the Arts in Costa Mesa, and with the imposing presence that American Ballet Theatre has established there. Yet Ballet Orange County continues to offer programming around other companies’ off-season with dancers from Los Angeles Ballet, American Contemporary Ballet, and Nevada Ballet Theatre. Reflecting Helman’s training with SAB and New York City Ballet, it is unabashedly neoclassical, i.e. “Balanchine.”

As a professional dancer, I first performed with Ballet OC beginning in their virtual “Nutcracker” in 2020. The Rat King—it was my first professional gig. Since then, I have alternately performed with the company many times and kept track of their progress from afar. Their latest program, Vivo: Live Music and Dance, which took place on May 29 at the intimate and out-of-the-way Brea Curtis Theatre, nonetheless shows a company to watch.

The opener, “Chronos,” by Christina Ghiardi of Nevada Ballet Theatre, is a high octane ballet, featuring a lead couple, in this case Robert Fulton and Camille Kellems, and Sara Ashley Chicola and Cleo Taneja in the corps. Fulton turns, swerves and pivots when he’s not partnering Kellems, who manages precision footwork despite the considerable speed. This reflects the Balanchine-inspired taste of BOC: speed, musicality, and neoclassical style. Like much of Ballet OC’s work, it's a “dancer’s ballet,” best appreciated by those who know what to look for when they watch ballet. For the dancers, Chronos is a sprint to the finish line. 

The second piece “Verve” by Thel Moore featured Ally Helman and Mark-David Bloodgood in the leads, and a corps of three women, Leah McCall, Madeline McMillan, and Sarah Hurty. It was a pleasant, light showpiece for Helman and Bloodgood, but the piece fell short of coming together into a full statement, ending too abruptly. 

Ballet OC, photograph by Jack Hartin Photography

Ballet OC, photograph by Jack Hartin Photography

Terro Roxa, created by former principal dancer of the National Ballet of Canada Skylar Campbell, was one of the standout pieces of the evening. The piece translates to “red earth” in Portuguese and began with dancers clad in back on the floor, rising slowly, dispersing and coming together to music by Federico Mompou, Robert Schumann, Franz Liszt, and Heitor Villa-Lobos. The movement was an earthy contrast to the relative classicism we had seen up until now, and the ensemble danced blacks and grays with breathless solidarity. Leah McCall, clad in red, took center stage as the lead, a dancer who pairs contemporary movement chops with sharp musicality. 

Another highlight of the evening, Mate Szentes’s piece “Wolfgang,” followed. Szentes, an emerging Hungarian choreographer and resident male principal with American Contemporary Ballet, creates contemporary works for the ballet scene in Los Angeles. True to his fluid style, the Mozart-inspired piece subverted its own classicism with intricate contemporary arms and torso undulations. A particularly winsome moment was the lead couple, Jonas Tutaj and Julianne Kinasiewicz, bobbing their heads and moving two and fro like sock puppets to Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s Queen of the Night aria from The Magic Flute.

The final piece was a premiere by director Ally Helman, “Falling, Full Circle,” with music by David K. Israel, performed live by Daniel Manoui on piano and Luke Santonastaso on violin. It was a return to classicism and a statement of the evening's theme of pairing live music and dance, the dancers returning again and again to the corner where the musicians were playing to acknowledge their Euterpean debt. 

The modest stage of the Brea Curtis Theatre is actually a conducive platform for this still growing company, which is still very much in the process of establishing its presence in Orange County. No doubt the theatre location is far from most cultural events compared to the Irvine Barclay Theatre and the ticket prices of $100 are steep considering the youth of the company. Nonetheless, Ballet OC is fine-tuning its presentation, employing well-edited videos before every piece, more professionally than some companies I have seen lately.  

More importantly, it is an incubator of emerging choreographic talent that leaves behind no evidence of trafficking in the usual tropes of contemporary works, moody, dark, and “shocking” faux innovations from twenty years ago. This is ballet for the art lover, not the social critic. Nonetheless, I suspect that in order to get people in seats, the company will eventually need to expand their brand beyond brightly-costumed abstract ballets. Story ballets and family friendly programming come to mind as ways to utilize local ballet students, entice families to support, and build a larger audience.

Long term, the company wishes to turn its dancer-run project into a full-time company. If they can find their niche, I have a feeling that dancers would flock to work for them. They are a company to root for. 

Robert Steven Mack


Robert Steven Mack is a company artist with City Ballet of San Diego and 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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