Kilian O'Callaghan

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Kilian O'Callaghan
Born1963 (age 57–58)
Monkstown, Co. Cork, Ireland
NationalityIrish
CitizenshipIrish
EducationSt. Francis College Rochestown, Moriarty School of Dance, Royal Ballet School
Occupationballet choreographer, ballet dancer, education administrator
Years active1975 (CBC) - present
Current groupIrish National Youth Ballet
Former groupsCork Ballet Company, Irish National Ballet, Royal Ballet School, The Scottish Ballet, West Australian Ballet, Royal New Zealand Ballet, Ballet Ireland

Kilian O'Callaghan (born 1963) is a male ballet dancer, choreographer and education administrator from Monkstown, County Cork, Ireland.[1] One of the few Irish male students of the Royal Ballet School, he is a former member of the Scottish Ballet, and a former Principal Dancer with the Royal New Zealand Ballet. He teaches and choreographs, notably with the Irish National Youth Ballet, and works as a course and quality officer for the National College of Art and Design in Dublin.

Early life[]

O'Callaghan, son of Connie and Margaret (née McCormack) grew up in Monkstown, a village near the city of Cork, Ireland,[1] and studied at St. Francis College Rochestown. He started to study Irish dancing at age 4, and ballet at about age 7.[2]

Studies and career[]

Early stages and the Royal Ballet School[]

O'Callaghan studied ballet with the Moriarty School of Dance, founded by Joan Denise Moriarty. Starting as a young dancer, he also performed with the Cork Ballet Company from around 12 years of age, in Coppélia, The Sleeping Beauty, La Sylphide, Petrouchka, and other productions, and with members of the Irish National Ballet Company.[1][3] At the age of 17 he successfully auditioned for a place at the Royal Ballet School, the first of as few as five Irish male dancers to so qualify as of 2018.[3][1] He won a bursary from the Arts Council of Ireland to support his first and second year at the RBS,[4] the second such bursary after Katherine Lewis in 1978, and a grant from Tony O'Reilly's Fitzwilton Trust towards his second year,[2] while Pfizer Chemical Corporation in Ringaskiddy also sponsored him, paying one third of his tuition fees for two years.[citation needed]

Professional ballet companies[]

In 1982 O'Callaghan joined the Scottish Ballet, touring the UK and continental Europe, Turkey, Hong Kong, Western Australia,[3] and South Carolina, and performing in a range of classic ballets, including Peter Darrell's Carmen, Cinderella, The Nutcracker, Tales of Hoffmann and Giselle, and in Cranko's Romeo and Juliet, and Bournonville's La Sylphide, as well as La Ventana (Pas de trois), and Napoli (Pas de six, Ballabile).[1] He moved to the West Australian Ballet in 1986, and then in 1988 to the Royal New Zealand Ballet as Principal Dancer.[3] Touring New Zealand, Australia, the USA and Europe, he performed in a wide range of roles, including Hamlet (choreography by Jonathan Taylor) in the title role, Mozart in Wolfgang Amadeus (Gray Veredon), the Prince in The Nutcracker and in Cinderella (Jack Carter), as Albrecht in Giselle, as James and Gurn in La Sylphide (Bournonville), and as Tybalt in Romeo and Juliet (Malcolm Burn).[1] He also performed leading roles in Pineapple Poll (Cranko), The Four Temperaments (Balanchine), Troy Game (Robert North), Les Sylphides (Fokine), Oscar Wilde in The Season of Sorrow (Garth Welch), and as Silvio in A Servant of Two Masters (Gray Veredon).[3] He also appeared in a leading role in the 1990 television production of the newly-written three-act ballet Jean about Jean Batten.[5]

O'Callaghan choreographed two musicals for Stagecraft Theatre in Wellington NZ, and La Traviata for the New Zealand Opera.[6] Throughout this period he also taught ballet around New Zealand, and choreographed Telegraph Road for Royal New Zealand Ballet.[citation needed]

Career shift[]

Retiring from full-time dancing, O'Callaghan worked 1995-1996 as a real estate sales consultant in Wellington NZ. From 1997-1998 he was classical tutor at the New Zealand School of Dance, and was Hon. Secretary of the New Zealand Association of Dance Teachers for several years.

He commenced study in February 1997 at Massey University at Wellington, graduating with a B.Ed. in 2000.[1]

In 2001, he was engaged by Ballet Ireland as Ballet Master for a tour of UK and Ireland with The Nutcracker,[1] in which he also performed as the father.[7] Also in 2001, he staged excerpts from Swan Lake with Wakatu Dance Theatre, followed by Sleeping Beauty in 2003.[6]

From 2000-2004, O'Callaghan worked as a curriculum developer for Nelson Marlborough Institute of Technology, then from 2004 as course approval and accreditation advisor with the New Zealand Qualifications Authority, becoming national Course Approvals Manager, for over 900 private colleges, in 2006.[1][3]

Return to Ireland[]

He returned to Ireland in 2008. He initially worked in quality assurance and then programme management with the Institute of Banking, a recognised college of University College Dublin (UCD),[1] then moved to start 2017 at another recognised college of UCD, the National College of Art and Design, in the Office of Academic Affairs, looking at course accreditation and quality and other aspects of academic and campus life.[3]

O'Callaghan continues to choreograph and teach,[8] notably with the Irish National Youth Ballet,[6] but also with Youth Ballet West, and to choreograph productions, including excerpts from Sleeping Beauty and The Nutcracker, and a piece for the memorial tribute event, at Cork Opera House, for Aloys Fleischmann, and works to music of Saint Saens (Danse Macabre), Tchaikovsky (Serenade for Strings), Rogers & Hammerstein (South Pacific), Josef Suk, Wassenauer, and Janacek.[citation needed]

A ballet he choreographed in 2015, Moving On, remains in production also as of 2019.[3] In 2015, he produced a full length edition of The Nutcracker for the Irish National Youth Ballet, which performed to sellout houses in Pavilion Theatre, Dun Laoghaire that year, and in 2016-2017 and 2017-2018,[3][9] and in 2018 he choreographed and produced a new production of Cinderella for the company. In 2019, O'Callaghan's Nutcracker will be performed in Dun Laoghaire.[citation needed]

He is a member of Dance Ireland, and was on the Board of Ballet Ireland from 2010[1] to 2016.

Ballet companies[]

Ballet Company Years Active Country Role
Ballet Ireland 2010-2016 Ireland Company director
Irish National Youth Ballet 2009-present Dublin Guest teacher and choreographer
Royal New Zealand Ballet 1988-1994 New Zealand and touring Principal Dancer
West Australian Ballet 1986-1988 Perth and West Australia, and touring Dancer
Scottish Ballet 1982-1986 Glasgow and Scotland, and touring Dancer
Royal Ballet School 1980-1982 London Student dancer
Cork Ballet Company 1975-1980 Cork Youth dancer

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i j k "Kilian O'Callaghan (Board member profile)". Ballet Ireland. Retrieved 31 October 2018.
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b Dublin, Ireland: The Irish Times (The Irish Times Trust), 3 January 1981, p. 6, "Awards for young ballet dancers and musicians"
  3. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i "NCAD - Staff Directory - Academic Affairs". NCAD. Dublin, Ireland: National College of Art and Design. Retrieved 6 November 2019.
  4. ^ Dublin: The Evening Herald, Sept. 20, 1980, (no byline), "Fairy godmother needed"
  5. ^ Worldcat - Jean: the ballet of Jean Batten. Worldcat (unified academic library catalogues). OCLC 153591244. Retrieved 6 November 2019.
  6. ^ Jump up to: a b c "Staff profiles - Kilian O'Callaghan (expanded)". Irish National Youth Ballet. Retrieved 31 October 2018.
  7. ^ "The Nutcracker". The Irish Times. The Irish Times Trust. 30 October 2001. Retrieved 11 December 2019. Killian O'Callaghan, formerly with the Irish Ballet Company, made a welcome return as her father. ... Programme repeated in Cookstown today, Tallaght (tomorrow), Cork, Athlone, Kilkenny, Tipperary, Limerick and Blanchardstown.
  8. ^ "Dance Classes - Ballet, Intermediate". CoisCeim Dance Theatre, Dublin. Retrieved 31 October 2018.
  9. ^ Seaver, Christie (5 January 2018). "This 'Nutcracker' is an enthralling Christmas cracker". The Irish Times. The Irish Times Trust. Retrieved 11 December 2019. Choreographer Kilian O’Callaghan nails the difficulty level in his version of the classic by ...
Retrieved from ""