Karen Alexandria Kain, dancer, ballet director (born at Hamilton, Ont 28 Mar 1951). Karen Kain is one of Canada's finest and most internationally renowned dancers and a respected public figure. She continued working with the NATIONAL BALLET OF CANADA (NBC) beyond her retirement as a ballerina, eventually becoming the company's artistic director in 2005.

Karen Kain trained at the NATIONAL BALLET SCHOOL from 1962 and graduated into the NBC in 1969. In January 1971 she made her debut in the challenging role of the Swan Queen in Swan Lake and was promoted to principal rank the same year. In 1973 she won the women's silver medal and, with Frank AUGUSTYN, the prize for the best pas de deux at the Moscow International Ballet competition. Rudolf Nureyev, the great Soviet-trained dancer who had staged The Sleeping Beauty for the company in 1972, took a special interest in Kain and Augustyn and helped accelerate their rapid ascent to fame as Canada's favourite dance partnership, "the gold-dust twins." Kain also appeared frequently with Nureyev in guest engagements around the world.

Her strong technique, breadth of movement, sensitive musicality, daring attack and versatile dramatic ability were shown to advantage in both classical and contemporary works. During her 28 years dancing with the National Ballet, Karen Kain accumulated an exceptionally large repertoire that included all the major full-length ballerina roles and an extraordinarily varied range of leading roles in shorter works. She infused such traditional roles as Aurora in The Sleeping Beauty, the Swan Queen and the title role in Giselle with personal distinctiveness. She brought heartbreaking intensity to John Cranko's Romeo and Juliet and a vivid sense of romantic comedy to Frederick Ashton's La Fille mal gardée. From early in her career, choreographers were eager to create roles for her, including the celebrated Frenchman Roland Petit, with whose Ballet National de Marseille Kain performed as a guest artist for almost a decade from 1974. Her loyalties, however, were firmly entrenched in Canada and the National Ballet, facts that helped endear her to the public and made Kain a household name.

With her home company, she created a steady stream of roles in ballets such as Ann Ditchburn's Mad Shadows; Constantin PATSALAS's Rite of Spring, Sinfonia and Oiseaux exotiques; Glen Tetley's Alice, La Ronde and Tagore; John ALLEYNE's Time Out with Lola; Christopher HOUSE's Café Dances; John Neumeier's Now and Then; and Dominique Dumais's Tides of Mind. She forged a particularly strong creative relationship with James KUDELKA, originating roles in Rape of Lucrece, Musings, The Miraculous Mandarin, Spring Awakening and The Actress.

Karen Kain's performing career lasted well beyond the norm for ballerinas, and although she relinquished major roles to which she felt herself no longer suited, her dancing beyond age 40 blossomed into new dimensions of creativity, dramatic complexity and emotional depth. Nevertheless, in 1996 Kain announced her intention to retire as a full-time principal dancer with the company, prompting the impresario Garth DRABINSKY to celebrate her accomplishments by producing a cross-Canada farewell tour in the summer and early fall of 1997. Kain continued to dance for another year, frequently with the senior company of Nederlands Dans Theater, NDT3, and in a variety of galas. She then accepted artistic director James Kudelka's invitation to rejoin the National Ballet in 1998 with the title artist-in-residence, amended to artistic associate in 2000. Although she did reappear on stage as Lady Capulet in Romeo and Juliet, Kain focused her efforts on coaching the dancers, staging select works from the repertoire, fundraising and contributing generally as a member of the senior executive management team. When Kudelka abruptly resigned in May 2005, Kain, amidst general approbation, was soon named as his successor.

Kain's celebrity has been reinforced by frequent television specials and other appearances. She starred in Norman CAMPBELL's TV productions of Giselle, La Fille mal gardée, The Merry Widow, La Ronde and Alice. She has been the subject of several documentaries, most recently Anthony Azzopardi's Making Ballet, based on The Actress, and David Langer's CBC Life and Times documentary, also based on The Actress. She was also featured in Veronica TENNANT's Karen Kain: Dancing in the Moment for CBC television, which won an International Emmy Award in 1999.

Since 1979 she has received honorary degrees from numerous universities, including York, McMaster, Trent, UBC, Brock and the University of Toronto. In 1976 she was named Officer of the ORDER OF CANADA (promoted to Companion of the Order in 1991), and in 1996 she became the first Canadian to receive the Cartier Lifetime Achievement Award. In 2000 the French government named her Officier de L'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres. She received the GOVERNOR GENERAL'S PERFORMING ARTS AWARD in 2002. In 2011, she received the Distinguished Artist Award from the International Society for the Performing Arts.

Throughout her career Kain has worked in a voluntary capacity for a variety of charitable organizations and public institutions, among them the Kidney Foundation, the Toronto Humane Society and Foster Parents Plan Canada. Notably she was founding president of the Dancer Transition Resource Centre, which assists dancers to plan for and accomplish a smooth transition from stage performance to a new career. Karen Kain acted as chair of the board of the Canada Council for the Arts from 2004-08. The Karen Kain School of the Arts, so named by Toronto elementary school children to honour her career-long contributions to the arts, opened in 2008.

Karen Kain's book. The Nutcracker, based on NBC's production of the same name, was published in 2005.

See also BALLET.


Karen Kain in Giselle
Karen Kain performs in the National Ballet of Canada's production of Giselle, choreography by Peter White, broadcast as part of the CBC series Musicamera on 10 November 1976. Frank Augustyn can be seen in the background (courtesy CBC-TV/National Ballet of Canada).
Bluebird Pas de Deux
Bluebird Pas de Deux
Karen Kain and Frank Augustyn perform the Bluebird pas de deux from The Sleeping Beauty , 1975 (photo by Anthony Crickmay, courtesy National Ballet of Canada Archives).
Karen Kain
Karen Kain
Karen Kain is one of Canada's most internationally renowned dancers and a respected public figure (photo by Martin Lipman, courtesy Canada Council for the Arts).

Author PENELOPE REED DOOB Rev: MICHAEL CRABB


Suggested Reading
J. Fraser, Kain and Augustyn (1977); D. Street, Karen Kain, Lady of Dance (1978); K. Kain, S. Godfrey, and P. Reed Doob, Movement Never Lies: An Autobiography (1994).


Links to Other Sites
National Ballet of Canada
The website for the National Ballet of Canada. Features a performance calendar and profiles of the principal members of the company. Check out the extensive multimedia educational resources about ballet.

Karen Kain
A rather dated profile of dancer Karen Kain. From Library and Archives Canada.

Canadian Women in Theatre and Dance
This Library and Archives Canada site features biographies of prominent women in Canadian theatre and dance. Also offers teaching guides and reference sources.

Dance
An extensive multimedia website devoted to the rich and varied world of dance. Features biographies of prominent dance artists, video clips of interviews and dance performances, the "Virtual Dance Studio" where you can create original choreography on your computer, and much more. From ArtsAlive.ca, a National Arts Centre website.

A life in dance: Karen Kain at 60
This news story features highlights of Karen Kain's multifaceted ballet career. With an online photo gallery. From thestar.com

ArtsAlive.ca: Interviews
View video clips of interviews with some of Canadas leading dancers. Also, check out the link to interview transcripts. From the ArtsAlive.ca website.

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