Johan Renvall

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Born
Bengt Erik Johan Renvall

September 22, 1959
Stockholm, Sweden
DiedAugust 24, 2015(2015-08-24) (aged 55)
Manhattan, New York, USA
OccupationPrincipal dancer at American Ballet Theatre/teacher/choreographer/actor
Johan Renvall
Renvall performing a tango in 1982
Born
Bengt Erik Johan Renvall

September 22, 1959
Stockholm, Sweden
DiedAugust 24, 2015(2015-08-24) (aged 55)
Manhattan, New York, USA
OccupationPrincipal dancer at American Ballet Theatre/teacher/choreographer/actor

Bengt Erik Johan Renvall (September 22, 1959 – August 24, 2015) was a Swedish dancer and choreographer active in the United States from 1978. He was known for "soaring leaps of astounding power and soft landing", of a mixture of extraordinary bravura and lyric nuances through his performances.[1] His career, as "one of only a small group of elite dancers the world has known",[2] began in 1972 when he was admitted to the Royal Swedish Ballet School. He then became a member of the Royal Swedish Ballet in 1977 and of American Ballet Theatre in 1978 where he later became principal dancer.

Renvall started as a figure skater at the age of 8, winning several championships and the free skating competition in the Scandinavian Junior Championship in Helsinki at the age of 11. In order to bring more softness to his skating he started taking private classes in classic dance for ballet mistress Nina Koslovski, who directly brought him to the Royal Opera Ballet School 1971, where he studied for six years. Here he received his training in classic dance, Bournonville, modern, jazz and character dance studying with notable dancers like Olga Lepeshinskaya, Konstantin Damianov, Frank Schaufuss and Fredbjorn Bjornsson.

During his first year as a member of the Swedish Royal Ballet he danced the title role in Prodigal Son by Swedish choreographer and ballet director Ivo Cramér, Superboy by Australian Walter Burke and the Jester in Kenneth MacMillan's Romeo and Juliet. He highly praised for his strong classical technique, soaring, delayed leaps and stage presence.

American Ballet Theatre 1978–1996

Choreography

References

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