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- Damian Woetzel is known for The Nutcracker (1993), The 35th Annual Kennedy Center Honors (2012) and Great Performances: Dance in America (1976). He has been married to Heather Watts since 1999.
- SpouseHeather Watts(1999 - present)
- Retired from dancing in 2008.
- Along with Sarah Jessica Parker, he hosted Ovation's 2010 "Battle of the Nutcrackers" on cable television.
- He and his wife Heather Watts were in attendance at the world premiere of "An American In Paris".
- He taught courses on performing arts and the law at Harvard (while sometimes costumed in jeans and a retro corduroy jacket with imagined elbow patches).
- He was named President of the Julliard School, replacing Joseph W. Polisi in May 2017.
- [on his new arrival at the School of Julliard]: "In one place, you have the most extraordinary students and faculty, and opportunities of music, dance and drama to answer that question of, 'What can we do together that we can't do by ourselves?' It's the art of the possible."
- It is a tremendous honor to have been selected as the next president of The Juilliard School. Building on collaboration has been a defining principle of my life in the arts, and I can think of no greater privilege than to help shape the future of this extraordinary institution of music, dance, and drama. I'd like to extend my thanks to Bruce Kovner, Juilliard's board of trustees, and President Polisi for this tremendous opportunity to join in the tradition of excellence that Juilliard embodies, and I am inspired to work alongside them to foster new generations of emboldened citizen artists for the twenty-first century.
- In schools giving students a full education, not to create great artists but about the right to have full expression and imagination and creativity, along with an acknowledgment that everybody learns differently. You try and you fail and you try again. All those skills are useful in the workplace, too.
- I like that feeling of letting loose, of not planning every step. The best performances are the ones that you just let happen.
- [on the very first moment he entered his dance studio AND the School of American Ballet]: "It was on the third floor. I was 15, and it really was already clear to me that this was some enormous creative hub. There were people doing so many different types of art ... you know, I came here to become the best dancer I could, to what I considered the center of the universe. It was everything I could have hoped for ... and now there's even more history, more has happened, so there's only more fuel in the engine."
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