Sally Rousse is not your typical ballerina. Sure, she rocks a tutu and loves to perform classical ballet works, but you're just as likely to find the influential 20-year veteran of the Twin Cities dance scene on stage at the scrappy Bryant-Lake Bowl as the grand Cowles Center.
The co-founder of James Sewell Ballet has soared in her own aerial works and explores improvised movement, wearing her pointe shoes throughout. The word that comes up most often to describe Rousse is "adventurous."
Her dance career reflects her daring spirit. The Vermont native performed with large and small ballet companies both nationally and abroad before partnering with Sewell in 1990. Along the way Rousse (pronounced "roose") discovered an interest in a wide variety of dance forms.
"I had a different kind of curiosity, a different hunger, different interests, and some of those I could bring into the company," she said. Rousse's varied dance interests will be on display Sunday at the Cowles in a 50th-birthday celebratory performance that also will mark her 24-year legacy with the Sewell Ballet.
A dance scene superheroine
Watching Rousse demonstrate technique in the living room of her Minneapolis home during a recent interview, it's clear she understands movement from the inside out. Rousse enjoys breaking down the physical mechanics while explaining a trick that involves bending the knee to create an illusion of height.
"You have to have an imagination to keep dancing this long," she said.
And a brain. "I was really surprised when I saw movies like 'The Turning Point' that depicted all dancers as stupid," she said. "All the dancers I know are incredibly intelligent, their way of problem-solving is really unique. Just because they're not talking a lot doesn't mean they're not intelligent."
Of course, the body plays the pivotal role in dance. Rousse measures in at 5 feet 1, but adds another seven inches while on pointe, thanks to "really long toes." Longtime friend, poet Heid Erdrich, said Rousse "has crazy arms. Her arms are as long as her whole body. She has elastic arms, that's the fun thing about her being a dancer. In my mind, she's 6 feet tall."