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    Home»Prayers»Misty Copeland takes another final turn at her 25-year career
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    Misty Copeland takes another final turn at her 25-year career

    adminBy adminMarch 20, 2026No Comments10 Mins Read0 Views
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    Misty Copeland takes another final turn at her 25-year career
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    Welcome to En Pointe, a quarterly series that takes a deep dive into the intersection of beauty and dance through the eyes of emerging, multidisciplinary dance talents. Expect an intimate look at the daily lives, dreams, and essentials of dance-bag beauty from the industry’s best young artists.

    It’s been over a decade since I last stepped into my light-filled ballet studio, smelling faintly of resin, wood and super-strength hair spray, but I still find myself slipping easily into the dance variations I had memorized like a prayer… Tombe, Pas de Boury, Glissade, Jetté. Those four steps, among others, are how I habitually move myself from room to room in my home, now that I’ve traded in my Freed of London pointe shoes for the comfort of shearling slippers. While my tea is sipping I find myself pulling myself up against the back of my sofa as a makeshift ballet bar to help me balance, and I always feel better when my hair is pulled away from my face into a bun at the top of my head.

    Sure, I no longer spend my Friday evenings after a week of classes and rehearsals icing my sore muscles or sewing ribbons on my pointe shoes as if my life depended on it, but I don’t believe that a ballerina ever really stops being a ballerina. As soon as you fall in love with art, it becomes ingrained in your DNA and stays with you even after you step out of the spotlight for the last time. I consider myself fortunate to have dedicated several years to training in it and to have done so at the same time with Misty Copeland, American Ballet Theatre’s first black principal dancer. Copeland was the first dancer I really remember seeing myself in and she has been one of my biggest inspirations as an artist. I caught up with Copeland to learn more about her career’s most defining moments, next steps, and beauty rituals.

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    Meet Misty Copeland: Former Principal Dancer at American Ballet Theater and Author

    In the 25 years she has spent with American Ballet Theatre, she has not only given us some of the most stunning productions we have ever known (her heartbreakingly beautiful take on the innocent and naive Juliet Capulet remains rent-free in my mind) but has paved the way for other brown ballerinas like me to do the same. Although she is the definition of a “ballet genius”, Copeland did not begin dancing until the age of 13, but her meteoric rise in the dance world defied centuries of convention designed to limit her success as a Black dancer. Her pioneering career inspired the reexamination of many norms that were once accepted by the community, from pointe-shoe shades to reframing the largely European narrative of the ballet body.

    On October 22, 2025, she retired with a spectacular final performance of Sergei Prokofiev’s Romeo and Juliet Balcony pas de deux with Calvin Royal III, Twyla Tharp Sinatra Suite with Herman Cornejo, and wreka stoA modern work by Kyle Abraham at Lincoln Center. Thousands of people watched the event in person and online. Two months later, she quietly underwent hip-replacement surgery. However, most recently, Copeland made a surprise appearance in the 98th Academy Awards as part of Ryan Coogler’s musical presentation sinners. She also appeared as the cover star for The Strength Issue – a collaborative platform of Aveeno and TogetherXR alongside athletes Sophia Wilson, Cameron Brink, and Ali Truwitt.

    walt disney studios "The Nutcracker and the Four Realms" Misty Copeland in the studio as a student, on stage; On the makeup chair, and on the red carpet

    (Image credits: Kevin Mazur/Getty Images; Laurie Sparham/Walt Disney Studio Motion Pictures/Courtesy Everett Collection; Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images @mistyonepoint)

    For me, this was more than just an opportunity to prove myself. It was about the Black community coming and being able to see themselves represented on this stage at Lincoln Center (Metropolitan Opera House), where you don’t get a chance to see us leading a ballet.

    That said, Copeland didn’t initially dream of becoming a ballerina, but self-expression through any movement was like another language to an introverted person like her. He was brought up in a household where communication through speech was not the focus, but musicality and lyricism were exalted. As a high school student, Copeland became captain of the drill team and caught the eye of her coach, who later encouraged her to hone her natural ability with training. Copeland’s ballet journey began on the basketball court of the Boys & Girls Club as part of a free program. Copeland says, “It wasn’t until I stepped into a ballet studio that I finally felt like I was seen and like I had a voice that worked for me. I loved performing, which made no sense to me, but for some reason, the technique of ballet gave me a new language.” On stage, she felt free, in control, powerful and strong and she already knew that as long as she could dance, she would never look back.

    Although there are probably many defining moments in any dancer’s career when they feel as if they discovered their true potential, there is usually one moment they can remember that also changed the direction of their career. For Copland, this was when he was offered the opportunity to play the lead role in Igor Stravinsky’s The Firebird. As a soloist, she was the first black woman to hold this role in her own company. She explains, “For me, it was more than just a chance to prove myself. It was about the black community coming and being able to see ourselves represented on this stage at Lincoln Center (Metropolitan Opera House), where you can’t see us leading a ballet.”