Sabrina Matthews
Sabrina Matthews is a Canadian ballet choreographer. She has created pieces for some of the most prestigious ballet companies in the world, including multiple pieces for the renowned Stuttgart Ballet. This in-demand choreographer has premiered works on three continents in over a dozen cities from Beijing, to New York, to London. She was recognized as one of Canada's Amazing Women to Watch, alongside Oscar nominees. Sabrina Matthews has received commissions from Stuttgart Ballet, Royal Swedish Ballet, Boston Ballet, England's Royal Academy of Dance's Genee International Ballet Competition, and the National Ballet of Canada. Her works have been performed by major international ballet companies in Canada, the United States, Spain, Sweden, Germany, Italy and the Netherlands.
Biography
Sabrina Matthews is a Toronto native and a graduate of the National Ballet School of Canada, attending from 1987 to 1995. From 1995 to 2005, she was a leading soloist and aspiring choreographer with Alberta Ballet under artistic directors Mikko Nissinen and Jean Grand-Maitre. Sabrina Matthews danced on four different continents, including several tours all throughout China. Her choreography and dance films have been recognized with several national and international awards, including: the 2008 PACE Award from the Government of Canada as an Outstanding Alumnus of the Banff Centre; a 2006 Ballet VIP Honorable Mention from Pointe Magazine; the 1995 Peter Dwyer award for excellence in dance; the 2005 Clifford E. Lee Choreography Award from the Banff Centre; and a nomination for a 2003 dance film award from the Alberta Motion Picture Industries Association for “Dance to This” 2002, a Bravo!FACT Film.After creating five pieces for Alberta Ballet and a piece for The New York Choreographic Institute on the School of American Ballet. Stuttgart Ballet Artistic Director Reid Anderson invited Sabrina Matthews to attend the Noverre Society in 2006. While there, she created soles, which earned rave reviews among the German critics. It was included as part of Stuttgart Ballet's repertoire and was reprised during Stuttgart's December Gala. Her “triumph in Europe” led to commissions from some of the world's most pre-eminent ballet companies. Shortly thereafter, she ended her dance career early and pursued choreography full-time.
Since that time, she has created three pieces for the National Ballet of Canada and a second piece for Stuttgart Ballet, all of which have been reprised. In 2008, Sabrina Matthews created a piece for England's Royal Academy of Dance's 2008 Genee International Ballet Competition. She also created a new piece, quondam in 2008 for the Royal Swedish Ballet, which has since been reprised in 2009 and 2010. Sabrina Matthews made her U.S. debut in March 2008 with ein von viel at Boston Ballet to high critical praise. To date, ein von viel has been performed by three different companies for a total of eight reprisals in four different countries and eleven different cities.
In addition to working with major international ballet companies, Sabrina Matthews continues to work closely with her alma mater, Canada's National Ballet School, has choreographed a figure skating solo for four-time world figure-skating champion Kurt Browning, and works for television in North America and Europe, including choreography for the television dance competition So You Think You Can Dance Canada.
Choreographed work
For the Stuttgart Ballet
- soles
- ''veil''
For the Royal Swedish Ballet
- ''quondam''
For the Boston Ballet
- ''ein von viel''
For the National Ballet of Canada
- clearing
- veer
- DEXTRIS
- ''In Peril''
For the National Ballet School (Canada)
- ''Sequentia''
For the Alberta Ballet
- delude
- ein von viel
- transience
- unbound
- fallen arm
- ''losing ground''
For competitions and festivals
- Dance to This
- unbound
- Rodin
- veer
- clearing
- ''monas''
Awards
- 1994 Peter Dwyer Award
- 2003 Alberta Motion Picture Industries Association
- 2005 Clifford E. Lee Award
- 2008 Alberta Provincial Awards Celebrating Excellence - Outstanding Alumnus Award regarding her tenure at the Banff Centre)
Reviews
- Reid Anderson, artistic director of the Stuttgart Ballet, May 2006:
- Karen Campbell, in the Boston Globe, March 8, 2008:
- Gabriele Müller, in Stuttgarter Zeitung, May 22, 2006:
- Denise Sum, Ballet Dance Magazine, August, 2007:
- Bob Clark, in the Calgary Herald, July 15, 2005:
Massively framed by set designer Scott Reid’s evocation of vertical steel plates and dramatically lit by lighting designer Harry Frehner, losing ground’s eight characters seem to be in a state of alert as they try to connect and re-connect – bodies bending then arching back, arms spreading in both supplicating and questioning gestures – to find their way back from loneliness and isolation. The powerful work was performed beautifully by the dancers, led by Tara Williamson and Daniel Marshalsay. The standing ovation from the large crowd was richly deserved by all concerned.".
- Salena McDougall in SEE Magazine, April 3, 2003
Not only is this ballerina's career on a roll, she's well on her way to making a name for herself as a dance-maker. Just last February, Matthews was in the Big Apple, invited by the New York Choreographic Institute to workshop her own choreography on dancers from the School of American Ballet. And she recently added video star to her resume with Dance to This, a short Bravo! film of her own creation.
- Jean Grand-Maître, artistic director of the Alberta Ballet, May 2006: