Nancy and Art Stone are two of the legends of the dance industry. They have been
involved in every important aspect that affects dance teachers and their
students.
Photos (left)
Nancy and Art when they
were just married.Art at the beginning of his
dance career (inset) |
Nancy Stone is from a small southern town where she ran a dance studio for over
forty years teaching children from pre-school to teenagers all the basic
rudiments of tap, ballet and jazz, as well as ballroom dancing to her older
students and some of their parents. She danced with the Scott Calligan Dancers
and was the assistant dance director of The Atlanta Children's Civic Theatre for
years.
From this small town and this growing studio came many students who went on to
become dancers who made their mark in the dance world. Two of her proudest
protégés are Robbie Mackey and Patricia Dickinson.
After getting her earliest training from Nancy, Patricia was given the
opportunity to study with Karen Conrad (founding member of the American Ballet,
later American Ballet Theatre) and her husband Pittman Corey at the Southern
Ballet Company in Atlanta. She received a BFA in dance, cum laude and joined the
Dallas Ballet and Dallas Opera Ballet. She became a faculty member for Dance
Olympus and toured the country giving master classes. She is currently the
Artistic Director of The New Mexico Ballet Company and owner of Dance Theatre
Southwest in Albuquerque, New Mexico.
After studying with Nancy, Robbie joined Dan & Company under the supervision of
Dan Youmans in Atlanta, Georgia. Robbie later began his professional career as a
World Dancer for the Disney Corp. in Orlando Florida. It did not take long for
the Disney Organization to see his talent both as a dancer and a choreographer
and now Robbie is a world wide choreographer for Disney. He also choreographed
the half time show for the Super Bowl as well as many other industrials. Robbie
now spends most of his time traveling to Europe and Asia to choreograph for some
of the biggest names in the entertainment business.
As a young studio owner, Nancy attended dance conventions where she met her
future husband Art. They made a great team and there was no stopping them from
that point on.
Art Stone came from a dancing mother and father who had already made their
imprint on the dance industry. Jules Stone was a vaudevillian who opened a
studio in New York and met his wife when she enrolled in his classes. They
became a dance team and danced all over the East Coast before becoming involved
in the fledgling dance convention phenomenon. Jules was at the beginning of most
of the young organizations such as Dance Educators of America (D.E.A.), Dance
Masters of America (D.M.A.), and the National Association of Dance and
Affiliated Artists (N.A.D.A.A.), and helped them grow into the respected
organizations they became.
Their son Art did not follow in their footsteps for the longest while. He was an
athletic child who hated dance from the beginning since in those days when he
said he couldn't come to practice because he had to go to his "dance lesson", he
had his share of daily bruises. When he went to college his whole vision
changed. Becoming involved in musicals and getting a job teaching children in a
local school piqued his interest, and in just a few months his dancing took on a
whole new dimension and he found his chosen profession. He danced in shows all
around the Northeast and finally opened a studio in Long Island, New York which
he ran for many years. When Jules Stone, Bob Kimble and Danny Hoctor started the
Dance Caravan, Art was one of the first teachers to join the selected few and
the industry made a sudden U-turn.
|

Art Stone (left, in white tap boots)
dancing
with Frank Hatchett (center) and
Ronald Matty (right) at 'Dance Caravan'
(before it became 'Dance Olympus')
|
Up until that time most of the big
conventions were held in just a few major cities such as New York, Chicago,
Boston, Dallas, and Los Angeles. Now the traveling convention of Dance Caravan
added other cities such as St. Louis, Kansas City, Cleveland, Detroit, New
Orleans and Atlanta, and then even a place called Las Vegas. This new upstart
was a major success and opened the door for so many dance teachers in so many
smaller venues to learn from the masters of Broadway. Years later, Jules and Art
branched out and started Dance Olympus which today is one of the largest and
most respected dance conventions in the country. Art started a costume
manufacturing company during that time and it became a major focus in his life.
Art Stone/ The Competitor is today one of the largest manufacturers of costumes
for dance studios and regional ballet companies in the United States.
When Nancy and Art met it really was a marriage made in heaven. They both loved
dance, each had run their own studios, knew the dance field backwards and
forward and were eager to do more in their chosen field. With the help of their
friend Richard DiSarno who joined their company they added a competition arm to
their growing company and called it Danceamerica. This new division grew rapidly
and immediately became a standard to which many other competitions strived to
emulate, Their main difference was that they felt a competition should be a
learning experience, so it was required that competitors who competed on
Saturday were required to take classes at the Dance Olympus convention that took
place on Sunday. To this day this is still their philosophy and they run their
organization based on these beliefs. A few years later they started the
International Dance Challenge (IDC) which was a competition for those teachers
and students who just wanted to compete, and this too has become a leading
competition company in the ever growing and crowded field of dance competitions.
Nancy Stone has gone even further. Today she is the National Honorary
Chairperson for National Dance Week, on the board of directors of the United
Dance Merchants of America (UDMA), she is on the advisory board of Dance Spirit
Magazine, the advisory board for Dancers Responding to Aids (DRA) and writes
articles for Goldrush Magazine.
With all this, Nancy Stone and Art Stone have found time to raise their daughter
Ashley and Art's son Erik, of whom they are justly proud. Ashley lives in
Washington D.C and is an editor for The Kaiser Report, a daily internet article
on HIV-AIDS and women's health issues. Erik lives in Colorado and is News and
Sports Director for KLMR-AM radio. No, they didn't follow in the footsteps of
their dancing parents.
There isn't much that these two energetic people haven't done that hasn't
impacted the dance industry in a powerful and positive way. When their peers
refer to them as "legends", it is a title that fits them perfectly.
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