Her Legacy

    Alicia Alonso breaks multiple barriers as a ballerina. First, as a Latina woman. Second, as a handicapped woman. Her international recognition breaks ideas of who a true ballerina is and what a true ballerina looks like. Along with many women of color, Alonso has given ballet a new definition. From the early sexualization of ballerinas to the modern mockery of ballet being girly and weak, Alonso has proved ballet to be a noble craft that requires resilience, discipline, and passion. Alonso could have very well given up when she learned that she would not have peripheral vision and succumbed to the idea that she would never be a great ballerina because of her disability. Every day, blind and on her back, Alonso trained her hands and feet to carry her body through the dances. She had one of the biggest excuses to give up, but she did not. She refused to allow her disability to define whether she would be a powerhouse of a ballerina or a sad story of a prodigy’s tragedy. When compiling obstacle upon obstacle, Alicia Alonso continued to dance and prove to everyone, and maybe even herself, that there was a place for her on stage.

Alicia Alonso as Odette from "Swan Lake"
Photo Credits: The New York Public Library Digital Collections


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