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Center Stage (2000) - movie notes

Center Stage (2000)

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Directed by
Nicholas Hytner

Written by
Carol Heikkinen

Cast
Amanda Schull, Zoe Saldana, Susan May Pratt, Peter Gallagher, Donna Murphy [more]


Release Date
• USA: May 12, 2000
DVD Release Date
• R1: Oct 24, 2000

Budget $18,000,000

Official Website:
Center Stage Website

MPAA Rating
Rated PG-13 for language and some sensuality.

Running Time
1 hour, 55 minutes

Country USA

Studio Columbia Pictures

More info on IMDb.com

Other Titles
• Center Stage
• City Ballet (1999)
• The Dance Movie (1999)
• Centre Stage (2000)



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 Behind the Scenes

     About The Production
     The Casting
     The Locations

About The Production

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Several years ago, Columbia Pictures Chairman Amy Pascal became intent on making a movie about dance. Committed to developing the idea, Pascal signed screenwriter Carol Heikkinen to write an original screenplay that would focus on promising young dancers pursuing their dreams in the face of challenges and triumphs.

While Heikkinen's credits include "The Thing Called Love" and "Empire Records," two films about young people on the fringes of the pop music scene, her screenplay for "Center Stage" takes a look at a different group of young people, highly gifted students enrolled in the country's best ballet academy competing for a place in one of the world's top ballet companies.

Pascal passed the screenplay along to producer Laurence Mark, suggesting he become actively involved in the project. Mark responded enthusiastically to the idea.

"The point was to make a movie that would be true to the ballet world and yet also have broad audience appeal. We wanted to make dancing extremely accessible," says Mark. "It was a solid idea, and Nicholas Hytner was the ideal person to bring this project to the screen, if only we could convince him to do it."

Nick's films show extraordinary breadth, from the witty, intriguing "The Madness of King George," set in late 18th-century England; to "The Crucible," his trenchant rendering of the Arthur Miller play ostensibly about the Salem witch hunts in the 1600s; to "The Object of My Affection," a new-style and very contemporary romantic comedy set in New York City. With "Center Stage," Nick would again be in present-day New York but would now be asked to call upon his musical theatre background, he directed "Miss Saigon" and "Carousel," in creating a movie in which dance and music figure so prominently.

M ark sent Hytner the screenplay, wondering if he'd be interested in directing it, Hytner was enthusiastic about the prospect of such a movie.

"I've worked with dancers throughout my career in the theatre," Hytner says, "and going to the ballet has been one of my greatest pleasures, particularly since collaborating, eight years ago, with the great British choreographer Kenneth MacMillan. I hoped that the script I was sent might prove the basis for an authentic and truthful entertainment about the dance world, a movie which might communicate the joy and excitement I feel whenever I see top quality dance of any kind classical or contemporary, jazz or ballet."

"I' ve always loved backstage movies," adds Hytner, "and here was an opportunity to set one in a world I know very well. I know how a repertory theatre works; I know how big not-for-profit companies are run; I' ve been to countless jazz and ballet classes; I've directed plays at Lincoln Center. It seemed like something I should do."

With everyone at the studio behind Hytner and Mark, the project began to move ahead.

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