Yayoi Ban

She/Her

Details

Place of Birth

Chiba, Japan

Joined the School

2024

Training

Rei Classical Ballet Institute under Reiko Togashi
Momoko Tani Ballet
RWB School Professional Division
RWB Anna McCowan-Johnson Aspirant Program

Artistic faculty

Bio

Yayoi Ban (née Ezawa) has been a Soloist in the Royal Winnipeg Ballet Company since 2014, after joining the Company as an Apprentice in 2005, and moving into the Corps de Ballet in 2006.

Yayoi’s notable roles include lead Russian Girl in George Balanchine’s Serenade, Giselle in Giselle, Nancy in Val Caniparoli’s A Cinderella Story, Odette/Odile in Swan Lake, Great Great Grandmother Irene in Twyla Tharp’s The Princess & The Goblin, Clara and Sugar Plum Fairy in Nutcracker, and Lilac Fairy in The Sleeping Beauty. She has also performed in Romeo and JulietDraculaSwan Lake, Jorden Morris’ Peter Pan, and The Vertiginous Thrill of Exactitude as well as contemporary works such as Mark Godden’s Angels in the Architecture and As Above, So Below, Itzik Galili’s Hikarizatto, Mauricio Wainrot’s The Messiah and Carmina Burana, and Balanchine’s Concerto Barocco.

For the role of Giselle, Yayoi was coached by former RWB Company Principal dancer, Evelyn Hart. She says Giselle was her dream role and Evelyn Hart was the reason she came all the way to Winnipeg from Japan to dance in the RWB. This was one of her most inspirational experiences to date. In addition to dancing with the RWB Company, in 2011, Yayoi performed Peter Quanz’s In Tandem at Jacob’s Pillow Dance Festival, and in 2012 she performed in Yosuke Mino’s Kevät as part of Q Dance.

Born in Chiba, Japan, Yayoi began her training at the age of nine at Rei Classical Ballet Institute, under Reiko Togashi, and Momoko Tani Ballet before joining the RWB School Professional Division in 2001. After graduating from the School’s Ballet Academic Program, Ms. Ban spent two years in the Anna McCowan-Johnson Aspirant Program before joining the Company as an Apprentice. During her training, she was the recipient of the Arnold Spohr Scholarship.

what people are saying

Ban brought natural grace to her role… embodying pure sweetness and beaming joy…

Holly Harris

Winnipeg Free Press, 2018