- Born
- Birth nameIris Margo Cohen
- Nickname
- Rubber Orchid
- Height5′ 7″ (1.70 m)
- Allegra Kent was born on August 11, 1937 in Santa Monica, California, USA. She is an actress, known for The Addams Family (1991), Playhouse 90 (1956) and A Midsummer Night's Dream (1967). She was previously married to Bert Stern.
- SpouseBert Stern(February 14, 1959 - 1975) (divorced, 3 children)
- ParentsHarry Herschel CohenShirley Weissman
- RelativesWendy Drew(Half Sibling)Gary Michael Cohen(Sibling)
- Prima ballerina with the New York City Ballet.
- Balanchine reportedly said of Kent when he first laid eyes upon her, "I have never seen such raw talent".
- She was teaching private home ballroom dancing at night, mostly to Japanese men.
- She is remarkably close with her colleague from the New York City Ballet Edward Villella. Together they danced the original roles of "Bugaku" and the image of them doing the pas de deux is a famous one.
- She had an unnaturally long career performing in the tradition of Margot Fonteyn. Although there were many ailment that personally took a toll by so much as 1983, she endured. Although she developed arthritis in her hip, she struggled and continued dancing. She finally did retire in 1989.
- In real life, I was a sleepwalker-dance my only light.
- For thirty years after this, I struggled with depression and my inability to handle it, I'd fall into the same trap over and over again. Raspberries, whipped cream, ice cream. Exercise would end. I would be embarrassed about my weight, so I'd stop going to class. Sleeping would become a problem....
- "Dancing well is the best revenge".
- Because of mother's belief in Christian Science, we didn't go to doctors. But when I was eight, she took me to one in Miami Beach. I was terrified. He looked at my feet and made footprints. I had absolutely flat feet. He said that I needed a little arch support and we put some in my shoes. The wedges bent my feet in an unusual way and it hurt, but it was necessary. In one month, my arches had lifted. My feet took on a brand-new shape. Something like a banana, with five grapes on top. Coincidentally, I took my first ballet class.
- When a dancer walks into a rehearsal room, wall-to-wall mirrors are nearly always present and can serve as an immediate reference point as to one's appearance. In effect, the mirror acts like a second self, obligingly answering questions. "Do I look alright?" "Yes." In the famous fairy tale Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, the evil queen questions her mirror and it answers honestly. During class or a practice session, a dancer might ask, "Mirror, mirror on the wall, Am I dancing well at all?" "Are you accusing me, or am I accusing myself?" "Am I too enveloped in your appraisal?" Yes, dancers yearn to be perfect, and mirrors are seductive. But when the curtain goes up, the classroom melts away. Dancers must go through the looking glass to give an ecstatic, fully realized performance.
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