Founding: Christensen brothers dancing with the San Francisco Ballet in 1947
Willam Christensen,
Harold Christensen, and
Lew Christensen made up the famed trio of brothers considered by many to have done more than anyone else to establish ballet in the United States. Born into an artistic and musical family, the three brothers studied
folk dance and ballet from early ages and went on to tour the famous vaudeville
Orpheum Circuit during the 1920s and 1930s, exposing many Americans to ballet for the first time with their act "The Christ Brothers". As vaudeville faded from American popular culture, Harold and Lew joined
George Balanchine's new company,
American Ballet, in 1935. In 1932, Willam formed a ballet school in Portland, Oregon; in 1937, he was engaged as principal male soloist by San Francisco Opera Ballet. He became the company's ballet master and choreographer in 1938. With his brother Harold, he purchased the company from the Opera in 1942, renaming it San Francisco Ballet. In 1951, Willam retired as director of SF Ballet and moved to Utah, where he started teaching ballet in the country's first university ballet department at the
University of Utah. With a group of his students, he founded the Utah Civic Ballet (now known as
Ballet West) in 1963; the company remained under Christensen's directorship until 1978. Under Balanchine's tutelage at American Ballet, Lew Christensen became the first American-born
danseur noble. In 1951, he joined his brother Willam as co-director of San Francisco Ballet. When Willam moved to Salt Lake City later that year, Lew took over as full director of SF Ballet; he held the position until 1976, when
Michael Smuin joined him as co-director. Lew Christensen remained SF Ballet co-director until 1984, the year of his death. In 1940, his brother Willam invited him to become director of the
San Francisco Ballet School, and in 1942 he and Willam purchased the SF Ballet. Harold continued to serve as the school's director until his retirement in 1975.
Emmy Award winning choreographer and dancer
James Starbuck was a principal dancer with the San Francisco Opera Ballet from 1935 to 1938; and left the company to become the first American man to dance with the
Ballet Russe de Monte-Carlo.
1938–1950 In 1938, the company's first major production was
Coppélia, choreographed by Willam Christensen. In 1940, it staged
Swan Lake, the first time that the ballet was produced in its entirety by an American company. On Christmas Eve 1944, the company staged
Nutcracker—the first complete production of
Tchaikovsky's most popular piece ever danced in the United States. In 1942, San Francisco Opera Ballet split into two independent companies, ballet and opera. The ballet half was sold to Willam and Harold Christensen. Willam became artistic director, while Harold took on the job of director of the San Francisco Ballet School.
1951–1972 The year 1951 marked a significant shift in administration of San Francisco Ballet. Lew Christensen—
premier danseur at the time—partnered with his brother Willam Christensen as co-directors. Then in 1952, Lew Christensen took over as sole director. Under his guidance, San Francisco Ballet began to travel and establish itself as a significant American ballet company. Until 1956, San Francisco Ballet had remained on the
West Coast, but Christensen took the company to the
Jacob's Pillow Dance Festival in
Massachusetts. In 1957, it was the first American ballet company to tour the Far East, performing in 11 Asian nations. Under his direction, the national and international profile of SF Ballet was raised significantly by the broad success of productions such as 1977's
Romeo and Juliet, which aired on the
PBS series
Great Performances: Dance in America in 1978. This televised performance marked the first time that a West Coast ballet company, and a full-length ballet, was shown on the PBS TV series. PBS televised three more of Smuin's SF Ballet productions, and his productions of
The Tempest and
A Song for Dead Warriors went on to win
Emmy Awards. Smuin led the company until 1985.
1985–present , 2013 Helgi Tomasson's 1985 arrival as artistic director marked the beginning of a new era for San Francisco Ballet. Under Tomasson's direction, San Francisco Ballet has been recognized as one of the most innovative ballet companies in the world due to its early and frequent commissioning of new works by aspiring choreographers around the globe, the breadth of its repertory—spanning
classical ballet,
neoclassical ballet, and
contemporary ballet—and the diversity of its company members. The
Financial Times noted in 2012, "Tomasson ... helped shatter the distinction between the US top companies and so-called 'regional companies. Over a span of more than 25 years, Tomasson has staged acclaimed full-length productions of classics including
Swan Lake (1988, 2009);
The Sleeping Beauty (1990);
Romeo and Juliet (1994);
Giselle (1999);
Don Quixote, co-staged with former principal dancer and current choreographer in residence Yuri Possokhov (2003); and
Nutcracker (2004). Tomasson's
Nutcracker, set in San Francisco during the 1915
Panama Pacific International Exposition, is notable for being the only uniquely San Francisco
Nutcracker. It features sets (including "a backdrop of San Francisco's Victorian houses known as 'painted ladies) and costumes created by, respectively, Michael Yeargan and Martin Pakledinaz, both repeat
Tony Award-winning designers. Upon its premiere,
The New York Times called Tomasson's
Nutcracker "striking, elegant and beautiful". The Gala Opening of San Francisco Ballet's 80th Season included
Tarantella pas de deux, ''L'Arlesienne
solo, Flower Festival at Genzano
pas de deux, In the Passerine's Clutch
, Raymonda
’s Act II solo, Trio
second movement, Don Quixote
grand pas de deux, Onegin
Act 1 pas de deux, Stars and Stripes
pas de deux, After the Rain
pas de deux, and excerpts from Suite en Blanc''. San Francisco Ballet's 2013 season included
Trio,
Ghost and
Borderlands as well as
Suite en blanc,
In the night,
Nijinsky,
The Rite of Spring,
Onegin,
Raymonda Act III and
Cinderella. The 2014 season included
Giselle, ''A Midsummer Night's Dream
, Tears
, Borderlands
, From Foreign Lands
, Firebird
, Ghosts
, The Kingdom of the Shades from La Bayadère
, Cinderella
, Shostakovich Trilogy
, Caprice
, Maelstrom
, The Rite of Spring
, Hummingbird
, The Fifth Season
, Suite en Blanc
, Agon
, Brahms-Schoenberg Quartet
, and Glass Pieces''. The 2015 season included
Serenade, RAkU, Lambarena, Giselle, The Vertiginous Thrill of Exactitude, Variations for Two Couples, Manifesto, The Kingdom of the Shades from La Bayadère, Act II, Dances at a Gathering, Hummingbird, Don Quixote, Shostakovich Trilogy, Caprice, Swimmer, and
Romeo & Juliet. The 2017 season included "Haffner Symphony," "Fragile Vessels," "
In the Countenance of Kings," "Seven Sonatas," "Optimistic Tragedy," "Pas/Parts 2016," "Frankenstein," "Stravinsky Violin Concerto," "Prodigal Son," "Diamonds," "Fusion," "Salome," "Fearful Symmetries," "Swan Lake," "Trio," "Ghost in the Machine," "Within the Golden Hour," and "Cinderella." In January 2021, Tomasson announced that he would retire from the company in 2022. In 2022,
Tamara Rojo succeeded Tomasson as artistic director. ==Programming==