New York magazine called York "the finest [dancer] by far" to have belonged to the
Paul Taylor Dance Company. She joined the company in 1973 where she created numerous roles in many of
Paul Taylor's works. Her first piece at the dance company was
Esplanade; the first piece Taylor choreographed after retiring as a dancer. York called the piece "one of his most important works". She created the piece in memory of two colleagues,
Clark Tippett and
Christopher Gillis, who died from
AIDS complications during the
80s AIDS epidemic.
Rapture is set to excerpts from
Sergei Prokofiev's
No. 3 and
No. 5 piano concertos and was widely critically acclaimed.
Bruce Marks, the director of
Boston Ballet, was at the premiere performance and said, "I was just knocked out. I was struck by her ability to bring out the quality of each dancer, and the energy and originality in music I knew very well. I went because Lila was staging Taylor's Company B for us, and then I was on my feet with everyone else." An excerpt from the piece previewed during halftime at a
Boston Celtics basketball game in November 1996. It was remounted and performed at the
National Arts Centre in
Ottawa in 2015 for the 30th anniversary of the novel. Holly Harris from the
Winnipeg Free Press said "York's vision breathes new life into a venerable Canadian classic while literally embodying the story's dark forces, with its sobering message as timely -- and relevant -- as ever." York has expressed that she is "interested in ballet taking on story ballets that speak to our time and our issues". Tobi Tobias from
New York magazine said, "her choreographic technique is wonderfully able" and that "York knows how to calibrate her movement vocabulary, how to keep her stage picture compelling, how to work solo or paired figures against large, spontaneous-looking ensemble formations, how to establish mood without lapsing into portentousness or sentimentality." ==Personal life==