Tuesday, December 15, 2009

A Dream World


Backstage in the Park View High School auditorium, Tullia Johnston, 16, stands motionless with her head tilted toward the floor, waiting for her cue to take the stage.

The hot-lights that bathe the stage leak in between the long black curtains, falling on her pink tutu and the crown that sits perfectly balanced on her head.


In the audience, Louisa Ireland, 17 and Allison Perhach, 16, watch patiently as the Loudoun Ballet Company’s dress rehearsal of the 20th annual Nutcracker moves forward.


Unlike other members of the audience, Ireland and Perhach have a special understanding of the thoughts moving through Johnston’s mind, moments before she dances from corner to corner of the stage as the Sugar Plum Fairy.


When the first few notes of Tchaikovsky’s Dance of the Sugar-Plum Fairy began, the dress rehearsal audience, which was made up of parents and other support staff, clapped and then became silent in anticipation of the ballerina’s performance.


The Sugar Plum Fairy is a special role within the ballet. The magnetism of her performance locks everyone’s attention. Eyes are following her from the moment she leaves the dressing room. Not every role in the Nutcracker calls for such scrutiny. “Everyone is really watching, it is a really big deal” Johnston said.


The common bond that unites these young women is their shared role as the Sugar Plum Fairy. The three dancers will rotate in the role throughout the ballet companies’ six performances of the Nutcracker.


With the pressure involved with this role, having other dancers with the same responsibilities helps the ballerinas as they prepare for their parts. Having two other dancers learning the same choreography and sharing some of the same concerns “helps me be a better Sugar Plum” Perhach said.


The dancers say that there is no competition between them and that they are very supportive of each other as they try to perform the role to the best of their ability.


The Sugar Plum Fairy is the “spice of the second act” according to Loudoun Ballet company creative director Maureen Miller. The character is the Queen of the Land of Sweets and she performs a dance for Clara and the Prince, who are the main characters of Nutcracker.

The road to this role as a Sugar Plum Fairy began for the young ladies when they were very young. It is a role that Johnston has been waiting to play since she was 6-years-old. “I remember loving it and looking at the Sugar Plum Fairy and thinking I want to do that one day,” she said.


For years, the young women have been developing the skills to play the advance roles in the Nutcracker. With each character they played the dancers moved a step closer to the role of the Sugar Plum Fairy.


“Everyone has that dream role” Perhach said, “each year you have to push to complete not only that role, but then prove that you can perform the role that you really want next year.”


Solid technique, stage presence and intelligence are all attributes that Miller believes a dancer needs in order to succeed as the Sugar Plum Fairy. She also points to the importance of the dancers having a deeper connection and understanding of themselves.

Each dancer has a different way of coping with the nervousness associated with performing such an important role. Ireland, a Sugar Plum Fairy veteran, finds comfort in the music.


“I don’t really like talking. If I had to do a speech in front of people that would scare me so much more, but in dancing you are just moving and the music tells you what to do and it calms you down,” she said.

Backstage, smiling faces illuminated by the stray hot-lights peak from out the shadows as Johnston dances. In that moment, she is oblivious to the attention that her role commands. Her mind is focused on the task at hand.


Johnston said, “When I hear the music come on that is really what sets me off. Before, it is all nerves, but when the music comes on you relax and you get in holiday spirit and you just dance.”


Click here for slideshow.

Monday, November 16, 2009

Muddy Shoes and Flashlights











I got to run around in the dark with a bunch of boy scouts during Relief of Mafeking campout in Fauquier County last weekend.

Click here for the sound slide show.

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

Election Night


Marybeth Greason, center, is recognized by her husband Tag Greason for her role in his victory during a speech at the Dock at Lansdowne. Greason defeated democratic incumbent David Poisson for the 32nd Virginia House of Delegates seat.

Sunday, November 1, 2009

Halloween Parade



On Saturday, I photographed the Leesburg Halloween Parade. This year was the first time in awhile that I dressed up for Halloween. I was Neo from the Matrix. It was pretty hard to shoot at night with with dark sunglasses on. But, I had a good time.

Thursday, October 29, 2009

On the Campaign Trail

Candidate for governor Creigh Deeds jokes with supporters outside the Loudoun Campus of Northern Virginia Community College after a campaign stop on Oct 28.

Thursday, October 22, 2009

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

Walk in the Park




I went for a walk near the Appalachian Trail in northern Loudoun County. The trees were really singing.

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Arlington Moment

Sheryl M. McIlvaine touches the headstone of her husband James McIlvaine during a visit to Arlington National Cemetery on October 19, 2009. James McIlvaine was killed in Iraq on April 30, 2009.

I made this photograph while waiting for another burial to begin during an assignment at Arlington National Cemetery. A group of press photographers, including myself, were all standing in a cordoned off area about one hundred feet from the grave site. I'm sure we all made this picture with varying degrees of composition.

This image represents another way in which the war in Iraq and Afghanistan has come home for me in the past couple of weeks. It was very sad to watch.

Monday, October 12, 2009

Fallen Hero: Stephan Mace











Last Sunday, I was assigned to photograph the arrival of the body of Stephan Mace, 21, who was killed on Oct. 3 during combat in Afghanistan. His body was flown into Leesburg Executive Airport and then he received a police escort back to his home town in Purcellville, VA.

The following day, I photographed his funeral at Purcellville Baptist Church. It was a very quiet and sad event. My camera often acts as an shield against the emotions of an event that I'm witnessing. It was not until later when editing my final selection for the paper that I realized the importance and the sadness of the day.

His death seems to coincide with an increase in focus on the war in Afghanistan, which begun 8 years ago. When this war began Mace would have been 13-years-old. That fact deeply resonates with me.

It was a honor to be able to document these events because my images will become a part of the public record that will memorialize Mace's sacrifice and the sacrifices of all the soldiers that have died fighting in Afghanistan and Iraq.

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Tears of Joy

Last Saturday, I shot a huge cheerleading meet at Park View High School in Loudoun County, Virginia. Usually at these events there is an over abundance of happy cheerleaders. After all the awards had been handed out and the realization of winning hit one of the happy cheer leaders, she start to cry with joy.