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Posts Tagged ‘Sylvia Hurlburt’

   Skyy Lippo has been active on the ballet stage for most of her 18 years. (Photos courtesy Connie Lippo)

The early days of a dance queen.

The company and the dancer are both hitting milestones.

When Whidbey Island Dance Theatre stages its annual production of The Nutcracker in Dec., it’ll be the 25th anniversary for the holiday staple.

At the same time, Coupeville High School senior Skyy Lippo, who is dancing the lead role of the Faerie Queen, is capping her own 12-year run in the ballet.

Lippo, who has “danced pretty much since she could walk,” has spent her entire school life chasing her dream.

Over the years, she’s progressed from being a bumblebee buzzing around in the background to taking center stage.

Last year, the production shifted the Rat King role to being the Rat Queen for Lippo.

Now, in her final Nutcracker — at least as a high-schooler — she’s settling in to the lead performance, which in most previous years has gone to a pro dancer.

As Lippo has progressed from bit roles to starring parts, she’s also risen in the company and currently occupies a dance captain position.

After graduation, she plans to continue pursuing dance while attending college. Lippo is undecided on a career, but is entertaining thoughts of training to be an EMT or nurse.

The thought of her leaving Whidbey and not being in a future production of The Nutcracker is an idea which will take some getting used to for all involved.

“I don’t think we can let her graduate,” WIDT President Dierdre Sherman said with a laugh. “She really is the backbone of this company and I greatly appreciate all she brings as dance captain and as a dancer!”

It’s a feeling shared by many who have worked with Lippo during her days as a dancer.

“I don’t have enough positive ways to describe Skyy,” said Head Ballet Mistress Katelyn Lodell. “She’s hard working, mature beyond her years, and always brings light into the room.

“I’ll never forget watching her as a baby flower and her beaming smile,” she added. “So excited to watch her as faerie queen!”

When they look back at her career, Lippo’s former dance instructors do so with great pride.

Skyy has been a blessing beyond words to me personally as her teacher, choreographer and director,” Jamie Pitts said. “I’ve so appreciated her helpful and organized nature and her willingness to push herself herself physically and emotionally in everything we have worked on together.

“She is a poster child for current and future dancers and has been a gift to her company girls as their captain.”

Lippo was a student in the first modern dance class Amy Jo Lehman taught after returning home for college, making this an especially emotional performance for her former instructor.

“Baby Skyy is all grown up! She made it so easy for all of us,” Lehman said. “She’s the heart and soul of the studio and the company and she represents the epitome of hard work.

“I’m sure there were years where she didn’t get cast in the roles she was hoping, or got criticism in class that stung, but she pushed through and didn’t let it faze her, only motivate her,” she added. “Now look at her — she’s developed into such a beautiful, strong, confident, amazing dancer.”

The Nutcracker runs over two weekends, with performances Dec. 8, 9, 10, 15, 16 and 17.

For more info and to buy tickets, pop over to:

http://widtonline.org/

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   Your bookshelf isn’t complete without a copy. (Book cover photo by Sylvia Hurlburt)

A little more than three cents a page.

That’s all it costs to own a permanent piece of Coupeville Sports history.

As we head towards the five-year anniversary of this blog, I’m jumping the gun by two months by publishing “Bow Down to Cow Town: Small Town Sports, Big Time Stories.”

It’s 294 pages (in handy 5 x 8 standard paperback book form) of big wins, tough losses and (somewhat) introspective looks at the athletes and coaches who have called Cow Town home from 2012-2017.

All for the low, low price of $9.95 on Amazon (there’s a permanent link on the top right of this blog and another one at the end of this article).

I’m not going to list everyone who appears in the book by name, as it’s a ton.

But there are big appearances from everyone from Jae LeVine to Lathom Kelley, Bob Rea to Kacie Kiel, Willie Smith to Sylvia Arnold and just about everyone else you can think about.

Every word written by me on a computer powered by three hamsters on a treadmill while camped out on the shores of Penn Cove.

Want to help keep me, and Coupeville Sports, going?

Buy a book, heck, buy a couple books.

One for yourself, one for grandma, one for the relatives in Pennsylvania, maybe even one to put under that wobbly table leg to get it to stay steady.

Most important thing? Buy it.

Cause every time you buy a copy, a cow gets its wings … and it’s a little easier for me to pay rent. So, there’s that, too.

To buy my book, pop over to:

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Lauren and Lauren (Sylvia Hurlburt photos)

   When a Lauren (Rose), on left, meets a Lauren (Grove) in the paint. (Sylvia Hurlburt photos)

Tiffany Briscoe

Senior co-captain Tiffany Briscoe (second from right) and family.

sign

Grove gets a shout-out from her rabid fan club.

Kaela Hollrigel

  Senior cheer captain Kaela Hollrigel (left) hangs out with mom and lil’ sis Natalie.

Kailey

Kailey Kellner gets mobbed.

sign

One of the hand-crafted signs which welcomed fans to the gym Saturday night.

Lauren Grove

   Lauren Grove with (most of) her family. Younger brother Mason was on the road with the CHS boys’ hoops squad.

Skyler Lawrence

Skyler Lawrence (left) caps a 4-year CHS hoops career alongside her sister.

First came the sniffles and photos, then another win.

The Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad thumped Port Townsend Saturday, meaning all four players honored on Senior Night will graduate having never lost a varsity league game.

As Lauren Grove, Kailey Kellner, Tiffany Briscoe and Skyler Lawrence (plus senior cheer captain Kaela Hollrigel) received their tributes, living legend/former CHS cheer captain/school track record holder Sylvia Hurlburt clicked away.

The photos above are courtesy her.

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Sylvia Hurlburt

   Sylvia Hurlburt takes selfies while Larry Hurlburt (left) and Jacob Smith rest between runs. (Sylvia Hurlburt photos)

support

The artfully-crafted support vehicle.

Branded!

Branded!

Bitting

Hurlburt is joined by CMS track coach (and fellow runner) Elizabeth Bitting.

Well, sleeping in was apparently not an option.

With another Ragnar Relay Series run barreling right past my front porch, bringing with it early morning whooping and yelling the likes of which haven’t been heard since a Pokemon Go-addled idiot ran across an interstate highway in pursuit of Mewtwo, I’m up.

So, I’ll use my time well, which basically means poaching pics from Sylvia Hurlburt.

It’s kind of our thing.

So, thanks to the ever-industrious Miss Hurlburt, I present a smattering of Ragnar pics for your perusal.

Now, to the rest of you, shut up and get off my lawn.

But maybe don’t go play in traffic like the Pokezombies.

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Wolf stars Wiley Hesselgrave and Sylvia Hurlburt nab college money. (Kristin Hurlburt photos)

   Wolf seniors Wiley Hesselgrave and Sylvia Hurlburt nab some final high school awards. (Kristin Hurlburt photos)

Best Throwback Thursday photo ... ever? Possibly.

Best Throwback Thursday photo … ever? Possibly.

We’re back, to throw it back.

After a fairly long absence, today sees the return (at least for the moment) of Throwback Thursday, thanks to a great photo courtesy of Kristin Hurlburt.

With Coupeville High School’s Class of 2016 having graduated this past Friday, moms were busy posting photos, new and old, all over the social media landscape.

None was as note-perfect as the second photo up top, however.

Capturing future Wolf stars Wiley Hesselgrave and Sylvia Hurlburt back in their younger days, it’s worthy of a shout-out.

Sylvia would go on to grow up into a state meet medal-winning track sensation, a cheer captain and a dancer supreme.

Wiley would get a little bit taller and a little bit tougher and eventually be named the CHS Male Athlete of the Year for his work on the gridiron and the hard-wood.

But their personalities were already in place when our throwback photo was snapped.

Of that, there’s no doubt.

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