The dance of their lives
Jessica Garrison
COSTA MESA -- Sentences flowing back and forth between them, one starting
the idea, the other taking it over, Ben and Wendy Harber tell the story
of how they became dancers.
“I started when I was 3 years old. I went to a dance class at the Costa
Mesa community center,” Wendy, 15, said. “Ben came to watch --”
“And I was like, I could do this,” said Ben, 17. “I didn’t want to watch.
I wanted to dance, too.”
“As soon as I could decide what I wanted to do, dancing is what I have
wanted to do,” said Wendy.
So brother and sister danced.
They danced their way through classes at the local recreation center and
through seven years of classes at a studio in Huntington Beach.
And when their teacher said there was nothing more she could do for them,
that they needed a more serious studio, they went together to the
Newport-Mesa Ballet and started dancing under Stela Viorica, a former
principal dancer for the National Ballet of Romania.
For the last five years, the two have partnered each other in recitals,
anticipating each other’s movements much as they finish each other’s
sentences.
There on the wall of the Newport-Mesa Ballet is evidence of their
success: beautiful, ethereal photographs of the brother and sister, their
faces transformed by makeup and the wonder of dancing.
Because Ben and Wendy are not from a rich family, their dance training
has been funded by scholarships.
Tonight, they will perform during a benefit function at the Village Crean
to raise money for those scholarships, and for scholarships to support
other students who, like them, love to dance but cannot possibly afford
to pay for the lessons.
But Ben and Wendy are excited about their dance tonight, in which they
will perform a pas de deux from “Don Quixote,” for another reason: after
12 years of dancing together, the curtain is about to set on their shared
life as dance students.
Ben, who has already been offered a job with a professional company,
plans to join the company next spring after he earns his associate of
arts degree from Orange Coast College.
Wendy, two years younger and, as a woman, facing much fiercer competition
for a spot in a professional company, will stay in Costa Mesa and train.
“It’s exciting and scary,” Ben said of the prospect of leaving.
The two are closer than many siblings because, for the last 10 years,
they have been each other’s constant companion.
“We stay up until like 4 in the morning, having philosophical
discussions,” said Wendy.
Their mother, dismayed at the number of children in their public school
classrooms and the slow speed of the lessons, pulled the children out of
their Costa Mesa elementary school when Ben was in second grade and Wendy
in kindergarten.
She has been home-schooling them ever since.
Now, having earned their high school diplomas, both are full-time
students at Orange Coast College.
Hours and hours each day are spent at the studio, however, where Viorica
and the other teachers fuss over them like surrogate mothers.
Viorica has tried to instill in the two a dedication to the demanding
Russian technique, as well as the sense of decorum and mystery she feels
are essential to dancers.
“Oh, how shiny you look,” Viorica exclaimed to Ben. “How can you be shiny
when you’re going to have your picture taken,” she said, in reference to
a photographer who had turned up to take the siblings’ pictures.
“I’m serious. I am going to powder him,” she said to Wendy, diving into
her bag and coming up with a handful of face powder.
Dancers, she explained, “are special,” and must keep up the mystique of
themselves as aesthetic objects, even as they sweat and strain to keep
their bodies in shape.
Ben and Wendy took this fussing in stride, lifting their faces to accept
powder, but not breaking off their conversation.
An education defined by home-schooling and dance has disciplined and
matured the siblings, Ben said.
Viorica credits the discipline of ballet with shaping their character.
“A child having a passion is important,” she declared. “That’s what’s
missing for American children. No passion. But look at them. They know
what they want. They know how to organize their time. It works not just
for ballet, but for life itself. And they can appreciate music and
beauty.”
Many American fathers, Viorica bemoaned in her accented English, don’t
allow their sons to dance because they don’t think it’s masculine.
Viorica said she loves to take Ben into schools, which the company does
as part of its outreach to teach Orange County children about dance, and
show “how masculine he is.”
At the ripe old age of 17, Ben has already decided what he wants -- to be
a dancer -- and has come up with a contingency plan if that does not work
out.
“The career of a dancer is short,” he said. “Especially in America, it’s
hard to make a living as a dancer. ... and if I break my leg ...”
He has his pilot’s license, is an accomplished guitarist and is almost
finished with a degree in drafting and mathematics.
“I am very impressed with my children. I am amazed that they have grown
up the way they have,” said Linda Harber, the siblings’ mother.
Nevertheless, the life of a dancer is not an easy one -- especially for
Wendy, she said.
Ben, because he is a man -- and a tall one at that -- will probably have
no trouble finding a spot in the corps de ballet somewhere.
For Wendy, becoming a dancer will be “an uphill battle.”
“When we put Wendy into dance when she was 3, there was never anything in
my mind that said she’ll be a professional dancer ... and now Wendy has
put off almost everything in life to dance,” her mother added. “It’s very
scary. She’s not a little stick person, and so she’ll never work for the
New York City ballet. But she’s very strong about it. She says, you know,
‘I like the way I am and I love what I do, and I love to dance, and
hopefully there’s a company out there that will want me because I love to
dance so much.”’
Wendy explained it herself, and, on this important subject, her brother
was silent, letting her speak her mind.
“I love being onstage. I get a rush onstage,” she said. “Some people get
nervous before going onstage. I just wish I could be there longer.”
FYI
WHAT: An evening of ballet and music under the stars, as well as a silent
auction, buffet and no-host bar.
WHEN: Tonight, from 6 to 10 p.m. at the Village Crean, 2300 Mesa Drive,
Newport Beach.
WHY: A benefit for The Ballet Monmartre’s Community Outreach and
Scholarship Program
HOW MUCH: $65 per adult; $30 per child; $100 per couple; $480 per table.
INFORMATION: Call (714) 241-7424. If you’re not able to attend tonight’s
event, but would like to contribute to Newport-Mesa Ballet’s scholarship
fund, send tax-deductible contributions to: Newport-Mesa Ballet, 2790
Harbor Blvd., Suite 210, Costa Mesa 92626.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.