Kitty Lunn
Kitty Lunn is a ballet dancer, actress, disability activist, and founder of Infinity Dance Theater, a company that features performers with disabilities.
Early life
As an eight-year-old watching ballerina Moira Shearer in the film The Red Shoes, Kitty Lunn was inspired to become a dancer. She left her hometown of New Orleans to study at the Washington School of Ballet, and in her teens would go on to dance principal roles with the National Ballet. When Lunn was a 16-year old ballet student in Washington, D.C., she asked the dancer and teacher Agnes de Mille if a medical intervention could help her reach six feet tall on pointe; de Mille's answer would become a mantra for the rest of Lunn's career. "Kitty," de Mille said, "you have to learn to dance with the body you have."Career
Dance
Kitty Lunn moved to New York to in 1967. In 1987, during rehearsals for her Broadway debut, Lunn broke her back after slipping on ice and falling down a flight of stairs. The resulting spinal cord injury left her paraplegic. After five spinal surgeries and three years of recovery, she began to attend ballet classes again, now in her wheelchair. Although she was not taken seriously or given much encouragement by teachers and fellow students, Lunn was committed to finding a way to continue dancing.In 1995 Lunn founded Infinity Dance Theater, a mixed-ability ensemble of dancers with and without disabilities, including performers in wheelchairs. Lunn's style is founded in classical ballet, and incorporates jazz and modern dance techniques which she modifies to suit the abilities of her dancers. Lunn has described the transposition of gestures from standing to seated dancers as "doing the same thing, differently." Her technique frequently shifts the majority of expressivity from the legs to the arms and upper body.
Infinity Dance Theater tours internationally as well as within the U.S., including performances at the [John F. John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts|Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts|Kennedy Center] in Washington, D.C and the 1996 Cultural Paralympiad in Atlanta. The company has performed pieces by choreographers Peter Pucci, Heidi Latsky, Carla Vannucchi, Gabriela Poler, Marc Brew, and Robert Koval, as well as works by Lunn herself.
She performs using a specialized lightweight wheelchair designed by her husband, actor Andrew MacMillan, which allows her to move with speed and precision. Lunn views her wheelchair as a symbol of freedom and opportunity, as opposed to an obstacle or a limitation. She compares her company members' wheelchairs to ballet shoes: each must be specially engineered for the body and style of that individual dancer.