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  1. 1 de mar. de 2011 · Jacques d’Amboise was a principal dancer with the New York City Ballet for more than thirty-three years. In 1976, he founded the National Dance Institute, and is the author of Teaching the Magic of Dance (1983). He has been the recipient of numerous honors and awards, among them the Kennedy Center Honor, the National Medal of Arts, and fellowships from the Academy of Arts and Sciences and ...

  2. 2 de feb. de 2018 · Feb. 2, 2018. Jacques d’Amboise, the great American ballet dancer, is in possession of laughing eyes and a crop of white hair, and he knows how to turn an interview into a show. Wandering ...

  3. 4 de may. de 2021 · When the dancer Jacques d’Amboise was in his early 20s, he was approached to write a book. At the time, he wrote years later, his reaction was, “Ridiculous! I haven’t lived yet.”

  4. Début 16e, l’abbé de Cluny Jacques d’Amboise ordonne la construction d’un palais et fait orner les deux tourelles côté parc d’un somptueux parement en albâtre. Un choix très esthétique, l’albâtre s’apparente au marbre des palais italiens en vogue à l’époque, mais aussi pratique puisqu’on en trouve en quantité dans les ...

  5. 14 de may. de 2021 · D'Amboise, who died May 2, began dancing at 7 and joined the New York City Ballet at 15. He later founded the National Dance Institute, which teaches dance to children. Originally broadcast in 1989.

  6. Jacques d'Amboise. Actor: Seven Brides for Seven Brothers. Jacques D'Amboise was trained in the School of American Ballet before joining the New York City Ballet in 1950. He soon went on to become a principal dancer. For over 3 decades, he danced with NYCB. During that time, he also choreographed several ballets. In 1976, D'Amboise founded the National Dance Institute in New York City ...

  7. 2 de may. de 2018 · Watch on. Today, we’re throwing it back to the 1956 film version, which features an earlier NYCB star: longtime principal Jacques d’Amboise. He plays the Starlight Carnival barker alongside Susan Luckey’s Louise in the musical’s famous ballet. (The choreography is based on Agnes DeMille’s, from the original Broadway production.)