Rosita Baltazar

Rosita Baltazar
Born Rosa Rosita Baltazar
(1960-08-16)16 August 1960
Livingston, Guatemala
Died 6 July 2015(2015-07-06) (aged 54)
Ladyville, Belize
Nationality Guatemalan/naturalized Belizean
Occupation dancer, choreographer and dance instructor
Years active 1980–2015
Known for co-founder of the Belize National Dance Company

Rosita Baltazar (16 August 1960 – 6 July 2015) was a Belizean choreographer, dancer, dance instructor and founding assistant director of the Belize National Dance Company. In 2004, she was awarded the Lord Rhaburn Music Award as a dance ambassador and in 2009 she received the Chatoyer Recognition Award from the National Garifuna Council of Belize for her efforts at preserving Garifuna culture.

Biography

Baltazar was born on 16 August 1960[1] in Livingston, Guatemala[2] to Enes and Merejilda Baltazar[1] and was raised in Punta Gorda, Belize,[3] attending St. Peter Claver Primary School. She continued her education at St. Peter Claver College, which is now the Toledo Community College. As a teenager, she moved to Belize City, Belize.[3] From an early age she determined to become a dancer[1][2] and at the beginning of the 1980s she started her professional career with the Leo Mar Dance Group.[3] She was discovered by an American dance instructor and offered a scholarship to train at the Sarasota Ballet Arts School in Sarasota, Florida.[3] The 6-month seminar[4] was attended by four Belizean dancers and when they returned to Belize, they continued to practice together. This group would be the core of dancers[5] who in 1990 co-founded the Belize National Dance Company, for which Baltazar served as assistant artistic director.[3][6] In her various capacities with the National Dance Company, Baltazar not only appeared in hundreds of shows, but also choreographed routines, created concepts, and planned and organized performances.[3]

Baltazar later studied at the National Dance Theatre Company of Jamaica. Continuing her education, she trained at the Canterbury College of Theatrical Arts in London, England and the Ballet Folklórico de México.[2] Initially, her style focused on the Afro-Caribbean dances, such as punta, hungu hungu, gunjei, paranda, and punta, but her training gave her a basis in classical, folk and modern dance styles, which she was later able to incorporate into both her choreography and teaching.[4]

Baltazar served as the director and developer of the junior dance companies[7] which operate as branches of the National Dance Company. In 1998, she established the San Pedro Dance Company [5] followed two years later by The Caye Caulker Dance Company. The Caye Caulker school was founded by Baltazar and Cuban dancer Mariela Rodriguez to teach dance to island children.[8] In addition to her work with the National Dance Company, Baltazar was a traveling teacher, providing dance instruction both privately and at public schools such as Grace Primary School, Holy Redeemer Primary School, St. Ignatius School, St. Joseph's School in Belize City and Pan Cotto School in Sandhill.[4] In 2004, Baltazar, along with fellow founder of the National Dance Company, Althea Sealy, was awarded the Lord Rhaburn Music Award as dance ambassadors.[9]

In 1997, Baltazar choreographed the dance for Costa Maya Festival contestants of the Reina de la Costa Maya Pageant,[5] which led to her continued involvement in choreographing the event.[10][11] Baltazar was invited in 2001 to serve as a facilitator for a Garifuna Heritage Summer Camp held on St. Vincent as part of a heritage reclamation project.[12] Becoming one of the founders of the Garifuna Heritage Foundation in St. Vincent, she taught both language and dance to Garinagu descendants on the island.[1] She taught both modern and Garifuna folk dancing on St. Vincent for many years and in 2009 was awarded the Chatoyer Recognition Award by the National Garifuna Council of Belize for her endeavors to preserve and protect Garifuna culture.[13]

Throughout her career, Baltazar traveled abroad widely, including a trip with Andy Palacio to Malaysia in 2002;[14] and performances throughout the Caribbean, in Costa Rica, Cuba,[15] France,[16] Mexico,[15] Spain[16] and the United States.[15] While touring in Spain in September 2012, Baltazar was diagnosed with breast cancer and sought treatment in England.[3] Members of the Company performed in benefits to assist in raising funds for Baltazar's treatment and her cancer went into remission. Refusing to stop working, Baltazar continued to perform and teach. Her last solo performance occurred on 6 April 2015 in a dance entitled “Our Father”[3] and a few months prior to her death, she had opened a dance studio in Ladyville.[17]

Baltazar died on 6 July 2015 at her home in the Los Lagos neighborhood of Ladyville.[3] Posthumously, she was honored with the Belizean Meritorious Service Award during the September Celebrations in 2015.[18]

References

Sources

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/7/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.