EILEEN KRAMER, OLDEST DANCER ALIVE
Eileen Kramer, a 100 years old Australian dancer, she is the oldest
dancer alive (previously the record was hold by the British ballet dancer
Frederick Franklin who was performing until his late 90s). She is an extraordinary
woman who has been a latecomer to the world of dance she started to dance at
the age of 24, and since then she hasn´t stopped. Here you can read about
Eileen Kramer:
"Eileen Kramer is set
to take the stage at Sydney's Independent Theatre next month with her latest
work, The Early Ones.
A latecomer to the
world of dance at the age of 24, Kramer clearly recalls the moment she became
hooked.
"It was the
opening of the Blue Danube Waltz... They opened like this and looked up,"
said Ms Kramer, describing the opening scene.
"So I fell for
it straight away."
She soon joined the
Bodenweiser Dance Company, Australia's first modern contemporary outfit and
toured around the world including South Africa and India.
After a 20-year stint
in the United States, Kramer decided to return home to Australia last year at
the age of 99.
"I wanted to
hear a kookaburra. I wanted to smell a gumtree," she said.
Since returning, Ms
Kramer has appeared in a video clip for musician Lacey Cole and has been
inspired to create The Early Ones after receiving sponsorship from the Arts
Health Institute and the Arthur Boyd Trust.
Fellow dancers Anya
McKee and Patrick Harding-Irmer said working with Kramer had been an amazing
experience.
"She's quite the
inspiration and she's also very well rooted in the history of modern dance in
this country," McKee said.
"She's such a
beautiful creative spirit and also a really physical body still at 100 years
old, so that idea that you need to stop dancing in your 30s - like I am - or
your 40s, and you have to get everything done before then, is just gone."
Harding-Irmer, who is
in his 60s, said there were no excuses or complaints in the studio when in
Kramer's company.
"I'm used to
sometimes being the oldest person in the studio but working with Eileen, she's
definitely the more mature person and I can bow to her experience," he
said.
Kramer has maintained
creative control over her work, which includes making the costumes.
She has even invented
a new form for herself after losing sight in one eye.
"I call it
minimal expressionism. Mostly I stand still and perform," she said.
A
Pozible fundraising campaign is also
underway to help produce the show as well as to support Kramer, who currently
lives in a hostel for people at risk of homelessness.
"At the moment I
live in a very nice place," she said.
"I'm an
independent renter but there is not much space."
And for those keen to
emulate her long and healthy life, Kramer has some simple advice.
"Try to do creative work,
because if you're dealing with creative work you're doing something new all the
time," she said.”
(ABC News, 2015)
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