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       The summer in the “Salento during the evenings of august” offers a very suggestive sight, which can be appreciated with eyes and soul in the country, far from lights and noise of citiy. It’s enough to lift the eyes to the sky and plunge in to the deepnes of the universe full of stars. Peace! Trascendence! 
 During one of these evenings of August (13/08/02) we met Pompea Santoro, a “comet” that every summer keeps on coming back since 1980, to light the sky of San Michele Salentino countries, in the south of Puglia. We love to call her this way, comet, even if it will be more appropriate to define her a “star” of the contemporary dance in the international scenery. This star was born in San Vito dei Normanni, but grew up in a little town nearby, San Michele Salentino, her father Michele´s family origins. We met her and her children Alma, 3 years old, and Alex, 1 year old, in her country – house in the district “Cutura”. She has a warm and firm look, quiet voice like the summer evening getting closer. 
 Her words are now dancing, the music, the suffused chirping of crickets, the rhythm of the rocking – chair in which she is sitting. Her words are chasing her memories of childhood spent here in San Michele: she thinks of her cousins with whom she played during the warm summer afternoons, when everybody else had a rest. In “De Gasperi” street in the grandmother’s kitchen garden, where they met to play song-competition and dance school. She
      says that the games children played in the past were very different, made
      with what was found , like little stones (“li pitrud”)
      high-heel shoes ,obtained with little tins of tomatoes etc.. Then she
      thought of her aunt that made her peel almonds (“scurciuleje la menel”),
      taste of broad bean with peppers or onion, and all other wild vegetables
      which grow in our countries: “sckattapetr,
      cicuredd e zangun”. Pompea
      was 6 years old when she left for Turin with her father Michele.
      Afterwards they were  joined
      by her brother, 1 year  old,
      and her mother. The idea was to stay there until the operatation of her
      brother’s hernia was over and then return to San Michele. But sometimes, 
      life,  goes in
      different directions. Her father found a job where her uncles worked and soon they decided to stay in Turin. Pompea started the primary school and her mother took her also to a dancing school to realize her own dream and passion: her daughter as dancer. Anita Carrino, the first dance–teacher that Pompea remembers with love, realised that the little girl had talent and adviced her mother to take her to a more serious dance school, and suggested the one directed by Jusa Sabatini. Despite the economical sacrifice she followed the advice. 
      
         JUSA
      SABATINI 
 
 In 1978 she was  16
      and decided to go to Sweden and join the Cullberg Ballett, only for a year
      of work. Pompea, for the first time, experienced a different style of
      dancing, the unknown contemporary dance. Trying to explain the difference
      between classical and modern dancing she says that the first one is based
      on fixed rules, just like reading and playing music, but with different
      methods, you need very good technical skills to be able to enjoy it. On the other hand modern dance is free from rules, even if a
      good classical tecnique is still fundamental. You have a different
      artistic freedom and every choreographer may discover a new style and way
      of moving . She really liked the style of Mats Ek, son of Birgit Cullberg- 
      creator of the Cullberg Ballet of Stockholm. She 
      worked with Mats Ek for 24 years, and had the possibility of
      working with very important choreographers like Jiri Kylian, Ohad Naharin,
      Carolyn Carlsson and Nacho Duato, and dancing on the world ´s most
      important stages. The company came to Italy almost every year, but in 1980
      the choreographer Sebastiano Coppa invited her to the Teatro alla Scala of
      Milan for the festival “Nervi, my dear” where she danced for the first
      time as guest. The second time was in 
      1989 in Positano, where she got the “Positano danza” award
      given to her by Alberto Testa, the man that discovered her.   During the
      years she danced and knew nearly all the choreographies of Mats, who was
      getting more and more important in the dance world and very demanded in
      different theaters. So, Pompea accepted to collaborate with the
      preparation and teaching of his ballets 
      across Europe; work that kept her busy for 5/6 years during her
      summer vacation and her free time. The first teaching job was in Munich in
      1996 where she staged “Giselle”. She is more satisfied  teaching
      the choreographies of Mats Ek than to  dance herself. In 1997 the double duty of teaching and
      dancing  was successfull 
      in the Scala of Milan. Elisabetta Terabust invited her to stage,
      and dance “Giselle” of Mats with Massimo Murru. Pompea says that it
      was a wonderful experience, also because she had the possibility, for the
      first time, to dance with live music performed by the orchestra of Scala.
      Nowadays she traines every morning accompanied by her brother Cosimo,
      teacher of music in the Teatro Nuovo Torino. 
      She has also staged “Giselle” at the Paris Opera and at the 
      Gothenbourg Opera in Sweden. 
   
 
 After dancing at la Scala in 1997  Pompea
      felt that she had reached an important goal in her carreer, so she decided
      to stop for a period with the thought and  big wish to have a child. She fell in love in 1986 with Veli
      Pekka Peltokallio (dancer in Cullberg Ballet) and their love story lasted
      many years. When they decided to have a child, she wanted  to marry as a real southern italian women, for 
      Veli who was used to another culture it was not very important : he
      is the perfect husband and they have been happy together, so far. They
      married in june  1998 with a
      civil cerimony at 9.00 a.m. One hour later they went to the theatre to
      work and  informed 
      all their friends and collegues who celebrated the married couple.
      The party carried on in Finland with Veli’s relatives and in San Michele
      Salentino in “Cutura” with Pompea’s relatives. In 1999 Alma was born.
      Pompea didn’t feel a strong need to dance and decided to teach Mats’s
      choreographies  with bigger
      and bigger satisfaction and amusement, a job that brought her around the
      world, in these years, with little Alma. In 2001 Alex was born and Pompea
      found back her original fit, which stimulated her to dance again.   FUTURE
      PROJECTS At the same time she will continue the cooperation with Mats Ek as his assistant. In March 2002 she was engaged in London at the Coven Garden to stage “Carmen” with Sylvie Guillem (one of the greatest dancers of our time). There are other projects, that Pompea prefers not to speak about. She assures us that she will inform us when these projects will be concrete, so that we can inform the public through our web site, in which we hope to talk also about her two children Alma and Alex.   Pompea tells us stories from her career. In particular, she
      remembers with pleasure the meeting with the big russian dancer Rudolf
      Nureyev,  in the beginning of
      ’80, when he was invited to dance with the Cullberg Ballet in a
      production of “Miss Julie” of Birgit Cullberg .Pompea had a small role
      , but she danced with Rudolf Nureyev for some minutes.  When this production finished, Pompea and the russian dancer
      were in the same plane to Paris: Pompea in economy class, and Nureyev in
      first class naturally. With surprise, the young Pompea was invited by
      Nureyev for a glas of champagne by his side. She remembers that it was
      very amusing and at the same time she was honoured by that welcome: after
      all Pompea was  a nobody, but
      a very important friendship had  started
      in only 3 weeks time! She says “a 
      very extraordinary person that has left in me some unforgettable
      things”. 
   Me
      and my friend Pino Calò, who had organized this meeting with Pompea,
      proposed two questions to finish this interesting and exciting talk. What
      do people express with dance? And in particular, what does Pompea express? “It
      is not an easy and clear matter! 
      I think this is one of the reasons for being what I am , at least
      people say so! Then who watches me judges if i am a 
      true artist and have the so called “charisma”. When a true
      artist gets on the stage, he lightens and he transmits all kinds of
      feelings. The Art of dance is not appreciated by all, so it is essential 
      that also people who are not specialist are reached. It’s
      something that can not be tought, but I believe one can help a young
      dancer to understand how to get in touch with his or her own feelins, by
      giving them the right opportunies. I had the fortune to have a natural
      talent and physical abilities, but the most important has been that I have
      had very significant people around me like Mats himself and Lena Wennegren
      that have followed me during the years helping 
      me to become what I am today. 
      Then there are different methods to approach a role. There is the
      artist that 
      reads and studies carefully a certain character or situation. I
      follow my instinct, I listen to the music and I watch carefully my
      choreographer trying to understand what he is looking for. I think that
      following too much your intellect ,you limit your instinct and spontaneity.
      I have always trusted my heart. Another
      thing that I have learned and that I try to teach 
      young dancers is 
      to  use
      their mind to mesure the energy while composing the movement, 
      and to dance with the heart, in other words, 
      to be able to find freedom within control and presicion”. But
      Pompea, who is she? And what is the role she liked to interpret?  “All
      the roles i have danced and dance today have a bit of me. In contemporary
      dance it is easier to find roles and characters that are real . This is
      also one big difference between classical -and contemporary dance: in
      classical dance characters and situations are normally unreal, in
      contemporary dance situations and characters are often real, the
      choreographer gets inspired by his own experience or every day 
      life.  An
      example can be “ Giselle” of Mats Ek: in the 
      original version (classical) Giselle dies of a heart – break for
      a not returned love and becomes a ghost; in Mats’s version  
      (contemporary) the protagonist becomes mad and instead, 
      goes to a mental hospital.  This
      version is real,it 
      happens to many women to be abandoned and left with many problems. This
      ballet has become famous all over the world. I have danced it 
      many many times, swapping this role with Mats’ wife, Ana Laguna,
      a dancer that has tougth me a lot and I have learned 
      just by watching her. Another
      example can be the contemporary version of “Sleeping beauty”, where
      Aurora`s, the protagonist`s sleep is due to using 
      drugs".   It’s
      late. Alma and Alex have fallen asleep near their mother Pompea, the three
      of them on the swing which slowly stops it`s rhythm. Amazed to see so much
      tenderness and love, we realise that the role of mother is her best.
      Pompea agrees with us. We leave, but we are able to make her say a
      greeting in dialect of our town 
      which we send to all of you that read these pages: “staten
      bbuen”.  | 
    
       
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
                 
           
          
           
         
        
                
          
       
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
       
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