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When he was 17, though, Hallberg's parents let him audition for the Paris Opera Ballet School. Two weeks after he sent in a video, a letter came in French, with an invitation. Hallberg spent a lonely year in Paris. He didn't know the language. Friends were hard to come by. He would send home miserable postcards. When he came home for Christmas, his parents told him it was OK; he didn't need to go back. "David was so offended," his mother says now. "He said, of COURSE I'm going back!' So I said,
'OK then, enough with the depressing postcards.'" ___ Things moved quickly after that. ABT offered Hallberg a spot in its junior troupe, then an apprentice job in the main company, then a place in the corps, where he spent three years. He was still, he acknowledges, a man in a hurry. "I wanted to be a principal from the beginning, and I wasn't shy about saying that," he says. "I had some humbling moments." McKenzie, his boss at ABT, knows what David is talking about. "I told him: I'm going to be your worst enemy," McKenzie says of those early years. "I'm going to hold you back. Because you're not ready." McKenzie explains: "He was so talented, and so intelligent. But if you do things before you're ready, then you'll just be one of those guys who had great potential." After a year as a soloist, Hallberg was promoted to principal in 2005. He quickly developed a following
-- and critical praise -- for his elegant, clean line; his light, buoyant jumps; his princely demeanor. He was perfect for classical roles such as Albrecht in "Giselle," or Prince Siegfried in "Swan Lake." He worked with various ballerinas, but many believe something special happened when Osipova arrived from the Bolshoi. "That just lit David up," McKenzie agrees. The small, dark-haired, astonishingly athletic and fiercely emotive ballerina seemed the ideal partner for Hallberg. They performed a memorable "Giselle," but still, no one was quite prepared for the wrenching "Romeo and Juliet" they performed in July of last year. It was the first Juliet that Osipova had ever performed. The ballet ends with the lovers splayed out in death: Juliet, stabbed, draped backward across a crypt slab, and Romeo, poisoned, on the floor. As they rose for the curtain call, the dancers seemed to be trembling and in tears. Stage makeup was running down their faces. "We were sobbing," Hallberg says now. "Devastated, haunted for two weeks afterward. Natalia is such an intense performer. We're opposites in a way
-- her fire, my lyrical softness." ___ Some nine months later, Hallberg was doing a guest stint in Moscow when he was taken to lunch one day by the Bolshoi's artistic director, Sergei Fillin. It was more than lunch: Fillin offered a job. "I was stunned," says Hallberg. "I just asked as many questions as I could." He consulted with McKenzie. Aside from pesky scheduling issues, his boss was all for it. "I thought, what better representative to have over there?" McKenzie says. "It's such a historic thing for the tide to be turning the other way. "It's not surprising for me that it happened to David," he adds. "What's more surprising is that the Bolshoi did it. The company is three or four years older than our country! And it's worked pretty well. So this is a very brave move on Fillin's part." Hallberg also called his parents and his teacher. "It very quickly became overwhelming," says his mother. "He struggled with the decision for months. We played out various scenarios." When the news finally broke, in late September, ballet had a welcome moment in the spotlight. Hallberg was besieged with interview requests. He was even booked on "The Colbert Report." ("I think I'm going to ask Colbert to dance with me," he quips; the show is scheduled for Dec. 7.) He realized he might need to change his regular Facebook page to a fan page.
___ Hallberg has an apartment in Moscow now, and he plans to learn Russian. "Russians are very discerning about ballet," he says. "They're very opinionated about what classical ballet is. So I'm very flattered. But I think what this shows is, ballet is ballet
-- wherever you come from. I came from South Dakota. I didn't go to a renowned school. But I had a supportive family and the greatest teacher ever. I had what I needed." That supportive family plans to visit him in Moscow later this month, to watch him dance "Sleeping Beauty." "What makes us happiest is that the person David has become is so solid, so grounded," his mother says. "We don't think this will change him as a person." And as for that teacher? Well, gushing isn't common in the ballet world. "In ballet we just kind of get on with it," Hallberg says. But Han will say this about his former pupil: "David is one of the special ones. I think he'll go a long way."
[Associated
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