‘Sacred Journey’ leads home

‘Sacred Journey’ leads home

Diné dancer to debut new ballet with Robert Mirabal this weekend

WINDOW ROCK

Courtesy photo
Diné ballet dancer Jock Soto will dance to a spoken-word piece by Taos Pueblo musician Robert Mirabal this weekend in Albuquerque. Soto is a former lead dancer with the New York City Ballet.

Jock Soto keeps trying to retire. But New Mexico won’t let him.

In 2005, at 40, he retired from the New York City Ballet. Ten years later, he retired from the School of American Ballet, where he was teaching. A year later, he and his husband, chef Luis Fuentes, retired from New York, moving to the tiny community of Eagle Nest, New Mexico, where Soto had built a home for his parents. “It’s 298 people,” Soto laughed, “and I think I and my husband were Number 297 and 298. And maybe my dog.”

Other than an Indigenous dance festival Soto had been helping out with for years every August in Banff, the former male lead hand-picked by George Ballanchine figured he was more or less done with dance. He was in his 50s, which is ancient for a ballet dancer, and was ready to succumb to Fuentes’ great cooking, look out the window at the lake, and put on a few pounds.

But even in minuscule Eagle Nest, people kept finding him. “People know how to find people,” shrugged Soto, who is Tó’aheedíinii born for Puerto Rican. “It’s amazing.”

The local ballet schools and companies were anxious for Soto’s expertise. Decades ago, when he went to New York by himself as a 13-year-old, people had taken him under their wing. He had a debt to pay. “So I’ve been teaching and choreographing,” he said. “Even dancing. Can you imagine? Dancing at my age!” Well, yes, actually. Soto is still fit and striking at 52. And this weekend, if you’re willing to make a trip to Albuquerque, you won’t have to imagine. Soto is performing a three-minute piece he wrote as part of “Sacred Journeys,” which New Mexico Festival Ballet director and choreographer Patricia Dickinson Wells bills as “a reflection of our New Mexican cultures and storytelling through dance, music and the spoken word.”


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About The Author

Cindy Yurth

Cindy Yurth was the Tséyi' Bureau reporter, covering the Central Agency of the Navajo Nation, until her retirement on May 31, 2021. Her other beats included agriculture and Arizona state politics. She holds a bachelor’s degree in technical journalism from Colorado State University with a cognate in geology. She has been in the news business since 1980 and with the Navajo Times since 2005, and is the author of “Exploring the Navajo Nation Chapter by Chapter.”

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