Shirley MacLaine in a studio at the Washington School of Ballet today. Photograph by Carol Ross Joynt.
Less than a full day after being lauded in a packed Opera House as one of the Kennedy Center’s annual honorees, hometown girl Shirley MacLaine appeared Monday at a modest Northwest Washington dance studio where her path to fame began.
The Oscar-winning actress, singer, dancer, and author visited the Wisconsin Avenue home of The Washington School of Ballet, a warren of rehearsal halls she once attended daily, starting at age 11 as a young dancer from Arlington, where her father was the superintendent of schools.
For an attentive group of young dancers and staff, most of them half her age or younger, MacLaine, now 79, recalled her daily journey in an awesome display of memory that was as charming as it was uniquely DC.
“You know W&L High School, over there in Arlington?” she asked. “That’s where I went to school. I would get on the bus after school, really every day. The Lee Highway bus, or Wilson Boulevard if I went home first. Get on the bus, go to Roslyn, Clarendon, cross Key Bridge, into Georgetown—which was the ‘dope alley’ of the country at the time, really rough—and then get on the Wisconsin Avenue street car. There was a street car! I would come up Wisconsin Avenue and I’d get off at Porter—this is Porter?—and come here every day.”
The trip, she said, took about an hour and a half. After that it was rehearsal, and then home again. She said it was the early development of a work ethic that she’s never given up.
MacLaine’s visit to the school and Washington Ballet headquarters was something of a surprise, cooked up Sunday night at the gala honors event, and therefore many of the ballet dancers—who were having a day off—were not at the school. Word got out, though, and slowly they began to drift in through the glass doors of the building and into the lobby where MacLaine stood reminiscing about her teachers and mentors, Lisa Gardiner and Mary Day, who founded the school in 1944.
Back then she was Shirley Beaty, a name that was changed to MacLaine for Broadway, just as her younger brother, Warren, changed his last name to Beatty for his acting career. He won a Kennedy Center Honor in 2004.
As much as MacLaine wanted to talk about the past, she was eager to walk the hallways, climb up and down stairs, poke around the old building, even visit the still familiar dressing rooms and bathrooms. “I remember this,” was repeated as often as, “This is how it used to be.”
But she was impressed with the new, large dance studios (The facility has doubled in size since her day.) “This is better than New York,” she said.
Behind her, the crowd grew until eventually she was leading a parade of young dancers, who trained their cameras, cell phones and iPads on the living legend. She wanted to know where each dancer was from and as she heard their home addresses—Cuba, Puerto Rico, Baltimore—she said “incredible.” For each she had a handshake and a smile.
MacLaine told them it was at the Washington School of Ballet that her mentors told her she should pursue a career in acting rather than ballet. “They said, ‘You think too much, you should go into acting.’” She followed their advice, went to New York, got cast in the chorus of Rodgers and Hammerstein’s Oklahoma!, and was on her way to eventual global fame.
There was virtually no mention of her role in the British TV sensation, Downton Abbey, possibly because her small Monday audience was aware of what she’d said over the weekend at the Kennedy Center event: “My life as a professional was etched here in the Washington School of Ballet but now everyone wants to know about Downton Abbey, never mind the last 60 years.” So, they focused on the last 60 years.
Shirley MacLaine Makes a Surprise Visit to the Washington School of Ballet (Photos & Video)
The Oscar-winning actress says she got her start there in the 1940s.
Less than a full day after being lauded in a packed Opera House as one of the Kennedy Center’s annual honorees, hometown girl Shirley MacLaine appeared Monday at a modest Northwest Washington dance studio where her path to fame began.
The Oscar-winning actress, singer, dancer, and author visited the Wisconsin Avenue home of The Washington School of Ballet, a warren of rehearsal halls she once attended daily, starting at age 11 as a young dancer from Arlington, where her father was the superintendent of schools.
For an attentive group of young dancers and staff, most of them half her age or younger, MacLaine, now 79, recalled her daily journey in an awesome display of memory that was as charming as it was uniquely DC.
“You know W&L High School, over there in Arlington?” she asked. “That’s where I went to school. I would get on the bus after school, really every day. The Lee Highway bus, or Wilson Boulevard if I went home first. Get on the bus, go to Roslyn, Clarendon, cross Key Bridge, into Georgetown—which was the ‘dope alley’ of the country at the time, really rough—and then get on the Wisconsin Avenue street car. There was a street car! I would come up Wisconsin Avenue and I’d get off at Porter—this is Porter?—and come here every day.”
The trip, she said, took about an hour and a half. After that it was rehearsal, and then home again. She said it was the early development of a work ethic that she’s never given up.
MacLaine’s visit to the school and Washington Ballet headquarters was something of a surprise, cooked up Sunday night at the gala honors event, and therefore many of the ballet dancers—who were having a day off—were not at the school. Word got out, though, and slowly they began to drift in through the glass doors of the building and into the lobby where MacLaine stood reminiscing about her teachers and mentors, Lisa Gardiner and Mary Day, who founded the school in 1944.
Back then she was Shirley Beaty, a name that was changed to MacLaine for Broadway, just as her younger brother, Warren, changed his last name to Beatty for his acting career. He won a Kennedy Center Honor in 2004.
As much as MacLaine wanted to talk about the past, she was eager to walk the hallways, climb up and down stairs, poke around the old building, even visit the still familiar dressing rooms and bathrooms. “I remember this,” was repeated as often as, “This is how it used to be.”
But she was impressed with the new, large dance studios (The facility has doubled in size since her day.) “This is better than New York,” she said.
Behind her, the crowd grew until eventually she was leading a parade of young dancers, who trained their cameras, cell phones and iPads on the living legend. She wanted to know where each dancer was from and as she heard their home addresses—Cuba, Puerto Rico, Baltimore—she said “incredible.” For each she had a handshake and a smile.
MacLaine told them it was at the Washington School of Ballet that her mentors told her she should pursue a career in acting rather than ballet. “They said, ‘You think too much, you should go into acting.’” She followed their advice, went to New York, got cast in the chorus of Rodgers and Hammerstein’s Oklahoma!, and was on her way to eventual global fame.
There was virtually no mention of her role in the British TV sensation, Downton Abbey, possibly because her small Monday audience was aware of what she’d said over the weekend at the Kennedy Center event: “My life as a professional was etched here in the Washington School of Ballet but now everyone wants to know about Downton Abbey, never mind the last 60 years.” So, they focused on the last 60 years.
Most Popular in News & Politics
See a Spotted Lanternfly? Here’s What to Do.
Meet DC’s 2025 Tech Titans
What Happens After We Die? These UVA Researchers Are Investigating It.
GOP Candidate Quits Virginia Race After Losing Federal Contracting Job, Trump Plans Crackdown on Left Following Kirk’s Death, and Theatre Week Starts Thursday
USDA Spent $16,400 on Banners to Honor Trump and Lincoln
Washingtonian Magazine
September Issue: Style Setters
View IssueSubscribe
Follow Us on Social
Follow Us on Social
Related
Why Can You Swim in the Seine but Not the Potomac River?
This DC Woman Might Owe You Money
Why a Lost DC Novel Is Getting New Attention
These Confusing Bands Aren’t Actually From DC
More from News & Politics
How to Pick a Good Title-and-Settlement Company in the DC Area
Weird Press Conference Ends Trump’s Vacation From Offering Medical Advice, Kimmel Goes Back to Work Tonight, and DC Man Arrested for Shining Laser Pointer at Marine One
Why Can You Swim in the Seine but Not the Potomac River?
Nominations Are Now Open for 500 Most Influential People List
Trump and Musk Reunite, Administration Will Claim Link Between Tylenol and Autism, and Foo Fighters Play Surprise Show in DC
This DC Woman Might Owe You Money
A New Exhibition Near the White House Takes a High-Tech Approach to a Fundamental Question: What Is the American Dream?
Want to See What Could Be Ovechkin’s Last Game in DC? It’s Going to Cost You.