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Dance> Taylor-Corbett
Lynne Taylor-Corbett
- the-vu from
the top of the castle
An Interview
with SWING Choreographer/Director, Lynne
Taylor-Corbett
By Kim Knode
Los Angeles, July 2000
Published December 2000
Seated among the rows of celebrity caricature
portraits at the renowned Sardis Restaurant
in New York City, two-time Tony nominated,
SWING Choreographer/Director, Lynne
Taylor-Corbett explains, "like a baseball
player getting out of the ghetto, dance
was my way out." She began her
journey to Broadway with jetes and
plies in a neighborhood ballet school
and "dreamed that I would be here someday."
With a smile of contentment she continues,
"As a screenwriter friend of mine said
to me, 'You've stepped into a small room
at the top of the castle.'"
Talking to Taylor-Corbett, I see that the
climb up the castle stairwell was not always
easy. But there were signposts along the
way signaling a close approach to a chamber
reserved only for entrance by the royal,
privileged and extremely talented.
One such indication came with acceptance
into the Alvin Ailey Dance Company as the
only Caucasian in the troupe. Taylor-Corbett
says of her experience, "I learned
so much about movement and about honesty
and acting."
I comment that her love of dance is very
apparent. "I have a tremendous sense
of texture of movement. My heart came from
dance. I was a dancer first."
Then why did she trade in roses from the
audience to receiving flowers from the cast?
The renowned choreographer chuckles as she
recalls that, "I was at the School
of the American Ballet for one summer with
the heir apparent, Colleen Neary, of the
New York City Ballet, I wanted terribly
much to be a ballet dancer and was not suited."
The solstice of that summer awakened Taylor-Corbett
to the startling fact that, "I was
not New York City Ballet material!
I figured I could see myself on either side
of her (Neary.) And that I can (still)
make a contribution to this form."
She lifts her white china coffee cup off
the starched Sardi's linen and takes a sip,
and then says, "Later on, at the Pacific
Northwest Ballet, Colleen was in a ballet
of mine. I had the pleasure of telling
her that story."
The choreographer continues, "You know,
I've worked with some very well known dancers.
These folks are just amazing."
Along with directing the elite of the dance
world - American Ballet Theater and New
York City Ballet - Taylor-Corbett's resume
boasts of creating choreography for super
stars in the music scene like Natalie Cole
and George Michael. Her choice of
profession has also allowed her to "travel
the world" from Asia (with jazz maestro,
Pat Methany) to Africa (with the Alvin Ailey
Company.)
Thanks to the reputation Taylor-Corbett
has established for herself over the years,
telephone calls come in from coast to coast,
asking for her dance expertise for Broadway
musicals and Hollywood movies. Her credits
from the Great White Way include SWING,
TITANIC and CHESS. Films made
by the masters of tinsel town such as
FOOTLOOSE and BLUE HEAVEN crown
her with the title of choreographer.
Taylor-Corbett looks down for a moment into
her coffee cup and confesses that there
are, "stresses" in each of the
mediums "that wear you down after a
while." The choreographer/director
sites the "huge economic pressures
of Broadway." She continues,
"Choreographers have no royalties.
Sometimes it's so thankless because we don't
have a union
My colleagues who created
FOOTLOOSE are very wealthy from that
movie."
So is choreography still her great joy and
passion? "I think my great joy
has morphed. Dancing was my great
joy. And then being a choreographer
was my great joy. And now creating
projects like SWING - sort of total
use of body and mind as it were - is my
great joy and the next place to go
My
father was a writer. And I think that for
me to work with the song and the dance and
the music and the acting at the same time
is just wonderful."
Taylor-Corbett's dramaturgical skills are
evident in SWING. For example,
"Boogie Woogie Country" spotlights
the West Coast Swing champions in her cast.
"I took chunks of their four-minute
competition routine. And I built a
context for their number since it is a Broadway
show and people need threads of stories
and characters-Robert (Royston) arrives
overdressed like urban cowboy, feels self-conscious,
and puts on this magic hat, which then enables
him to be this boffo dancer!"
Along with the thrills of riding the roller
coaster on the Great White Way, Taylor-Corbett
admits that at times SWING proved
to be a "rocky ride because the
show was so complex in terms of the human
dynamics. In trying to amalgam people
from different, disparate backgrounds into
a family I learned a lot about leadership
and endurance." Despite the difficulties
of staging a show with many specialty numbers,
the choreographer/director describes
SWING as a "Giant party with a
wonderful plethora of styles and joy including
a bungee number with Swing in the air!"
I ask her about the road tour of SWING.
Taylor-Corbett grimaces and says, "Well,
that is indeed the problem I'm grappling
with right now. I can't cannibalize
the Broadway Company. So I look for
extraordinarily diverse dancers because
the right kind of trained dancer can assimilate
the style with the right teachers."
She admits that, "It is a four week
learning curve and then another four weeks
to become really comfortable in its style."
However, Taylor-Corbett remains optimistic.
"We'll be just fine," she says.
"Rod McCune (SWINGs Dance
Captain) has literally assimilated all the
styles and can teach them." She
also credits the champions who have shared
their secrets of executing their specialties
with fellow cast members.
Now that two Tony nominations are attached
to her name for directing and choreographing
SWING, I ask Taylor-Corbett if she has
forsaken her traditional ballet training
and converted to the ways of Swing? She
laughs a hearty laugh and replies, "I'm
going to tell a funny story because Ryan
Francois (U.S. Open Swing Champion, Assistant
Choreographer to the film, SWING KIDS)
is in the room. When I was in London,
I wanted to meet Ryan and (his wife and
dance partner) Jenny Thomas. I'd never
seen them in person, only on film.
So we went out to a club and Ryan invited
me to dance." Taylor-Corbett
laughs again at the memory and recalls,
"I'm sure I was just the funniest thing
that anyone ever saw. I'm sure it
was just like an apache." She sobers
up and earnestly states, "To do a real
lead-follow is a great art form that I respect
very much but cannot personally do."
She pauses and grins again. "But
that was really, quite a wild five minutes.
And very exhilarating, I must say."
Anxious to stomp their feet on the boards
of Broadway, aspiring choreographers often
approach Taylor-Corbett for advice.
"I say I will tell you what I did,
but I will promise you it's a different
world than the one that you are competing
in
I always encourage people to diversify.
I really made it my business to learn about
the whole industry. When I was a young
choreographer because I could do commercials
and I could do concert work, I was able
to hang in there." Taylor-Corbett falls
silent for a moment and then continues.
"I think everything teaches you.
A hamburger commercial teaches you something
about the way a shot is set-up or an effective
way to make something go across the screen,"
When Manhattan investors were not banking
on Taylor-Corbett for their Broadway success,
she turned to television. Commercials with
the likes of Dana Carvey advertising American
Express cards and Ray Charles singing the
praises of Suntory beverages feature Taylor-Corbett's
fancy footwork. Even SESAME STREET
has been honored by a visit and routine
worked out especially for the resident Muppets
by Taylor-Corbett.
With the exception of jobs like hatcheck
girl for a Mafia club ("they were very
nice to me") as a newcomer to New York,
Taylor-Corbett has never had to escape the
clutches of corporate life like one of the
characters in SWING who runs around
trying to discard his briefcase for a little
dance fun. Her dance card is always penciled
in with choreography and directing work.
In a field that promotes a Darwinian survival
of the fittest, Taylor-Corbett sites her
greatest accomplishment (besides rearing
her International Relations Honor student
son) as creative continuity. "Working
in the field all these years
I can't
think of one moment on an opera house stage
that I could say exceeded the knowledge
that I was going to be able to be what I
wanted to be in this field."
I thank Lynne Taylor-Corbett for her time
and she rises to go to her next appointment
- an audition for dancers for the road show
of SWING. With her dancer's
posture accentuated by a deep burgundy tunic
that reaches to the ground, the wonderful
choreographer/director makes a regal exit
from Sardis. As I watch her go through the
door, I scribble in my notes: Lynne Taylor-Corbett
really has danced her way to a very special
room at the top of the castle.
All Rights Reserved Copyright Kim
Knode July 2000
| Kim
Knode's interview articles focusing
on artists, celebrities and dance champions
have been published in various print
and on-line publications. |
 |
| See
more of Kim's work at www.kimknode.com |
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