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Brandon and Virginia Pilgrim Ramey Present “Cindy’s Big Day” — as in “Cinderella”

Virginia Pilgrim Ramey in ‘Cindy’s Big Day’



Brandon Ramey and his wife, Virginia Pilgrim Ramey, were set to star as Cinderella and Prince Charming in the Ballet Memphis production of the Sergei Prokofiev ballet, Cinderella, which was to be held April 18th and 19th at the Orpheum.

The coronavirus put a stop to that.

But you still can see Virginia as Cinderella in the couple’s latest Facebook video, Cindy’s Big Day, which was directed by Brandon, who collaborated with Virginia.

“Cindy,” of course, is Cinderella.

“This one is special because it would have been our big Cinderella weekend,” Virginia says. “And so it’s kind of a fun look at the idea of Cinderella or somebody getting ready for something big and then it’s canceled. And what you end up doing with your time.”

“The plot is that Cindy is a ballerina who is preparing for her big performance as Cinderella in the Ballet Memphis production of Cinderella,” Brandon says. “She was up. She’s so excited. She’s  getting ready for her day. Puts on her makeup, picks out pointe shoes, picks up her broom, and is headed toward the theater. And, immediately, comes face to face with a big poster of the show with the word ‘Cancelled’ written right across the front of it.”

The music stops. Everything goes silent. “It seems like the whole world stops spinning. She’s dejected. Totally depressed. And, just as we would imagine Cinderella doing if her ball is canceled, she starts cleaning with her broom. And cleaning turns into dancing. The cleaning leads to picking various activities around the house. All of a sudden she’s turned into a carpenter and she’s making this very nice silver chest. And then she grabs her saw and, the next thing, she’s exposing brick in the kitchen. It’s a project we’ve actually been working on, so she’s actually going at it.

“And then she’s all over the house finding ways to fill her time now that her show’s been canceled. The last scene is her flipping through the pages of the calendar and putting a new show date in the future when the show will go on. And she falls asleep with a big smile on her face. Dreaming about a new day and a new show.”

Virginia doesn’t dance in her Ballet Memphis Cinderella costume, Brandon says. “We don’t have the costumes. They belong to our wonderful costume department. In the video, we tried to emulate the idea of what the costume would look like. What a ballerina would look like doing all these chores.”

So, she wears “a leotard and a long skirt and pink tights and her shiny pointe shoes.”

His wife gives a solo performance in this video, Brandon says. “I am not in this one at all. And this one doesn’t have any choreography. She dances a little bit with the broom and is running with it. I said, ‘I’m going to videotape you dancing with a broom.’ Being the effusive creator she is, everything she did is gold.”

The Rameys began rehearsing for the Ballet Memphis production of Cinderella last February, Virginia says. “We closed our Winter Mix in mid-February. And soon after that, we started Cinderella rehearsals.”

Brandon remembered when they were told the ballet was canceled. “Steven McMahon, the artistic director, brought the whole company together and had a heart-to-heart with us and just explained how drastic the measures to keep everyone safe were going to have to be. And I think he was pretty early in the curve in this. He had the foresight to realize where this whole situation was headed. We were in the studio. We were all in a circle sitting on the ground. But even in that safe environment, it felt like the floor had dropped out from underneath us.”

This would have been the second time the Rameys would have appeared in a Ballet Memphis production of Cinderella. They appeared in the ballet in 2016.

It’s not an easy role, Brandon says. “It is just entirely exhausting. We started working on it maybe two months ago. And some of that was just to figure out the choreography, the steps. But, also, it’s training to get the stamina just to get through that three-act ballet.”

The role is “extremely difficult for the woman,” Virginia says. “She starts the ballet and she is barely off stage at all except maybe at the beginning of the ball before she arrives. So, it’s one of the more demanding roles I’ve ever done. For Brandon, Cinderella’s feet don’t touch the floor when she’s dancing with him. He has to hold her up the whole time.”

The Rameys continue to practice their craft at home. Ballet Memphis recently dropped off “big patches of Marley, the vinyl flooring we use” at their home, Brandon says. “It’s the right consistency. Not too sticky. They dropped that off at all our houses and apartments so we could keep taking classes at home. At least twice a week we have Zoom meetings where one of the artists is leading us in a ballet class for an hour and 15 minutes.”

How did Virginia feel during the two days when the Ballet Memphis Cinderella was supposed to have taken place? “It’s hard to imagine,” she says. “We’ve been self-quarantined so long now that I just can’t believe we would have even been doing Cinderella at the Orpheum [last] weekend. It almost seems like another life right now.”

No Prokofiev music is heard in Cindy’s Big Day. The video opens with the Johann Strauss II waltz, “The Beautiful Blue Danube” and, after Cindy sees the “Cancelled” sign, Roy Orbison’s “Dreams” begins. The last scene ends with Orbison holding the word “dream” with his beautiful voice, Brandon says. “And you see Ginny tucking herself into bed at night. And dreaming of a future where we can gather to put on shows again.”

Click here to watch the video: https://www.facebook.com/brandon.j.ramey.9/videos/10156739042347084/

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Couch Potatoes – a New Video from Brandon and Virginia Pilgrim Ramey

Brandon and Virginia Pilgrim Ramey in their new quarantine video, ‘Couch Potatoes.’

Ballet Memphis dancers Brandon Ramey and his wife, Virginia Pilgrim Ramey, are back in a new quarantine dance video: Couch Potatoes.

“The story with this one is we’re just really settling into our quarantine and our social distancing life,” Brandon says. “I’ve been binging through episodes of This is Us faster than I’ve ever watched a TV show in my life.”

Their video, which relays what can happen when there’s only one potato chip left for two people, strikes a chord. “Other people have similar experiences. They’re out of work at home. Just trying to pass the time.”

Brandon and Virginia were set to play the lead roles in the Ballet Memphis production of “Cinderella” before COVID-19 brought the production to a halt. “Look at us. We’re just a bunch of elite dancers, elite artists, in one fell swoop to become a couple of spuds on the couch.”

Brandon describes the video as “a little fighting and dancing. It’s based on a true story. I would say the movie is pretty historically accurate. We just embellished the choreography a little bit.

“The true story is as simple as that. Sometimes Ginny and I will be passing a bag of chips back and forth and I will get the last one. And we’ll make eyes at each other as to who actually deserves to eat the last chip.”

Brandon and Virginia Pilgrim Ramey fight over a potato chip in their new quarantine video, ‘Couch Potatoes.’

Couch Potatoes is “definitely collaboration,” he says. “I would say I’m the choreographer and Ginny is my editor. She’s not shy about telling me something is not working.”

Couch Potatoes is a “little more lighthearted” than their previous dance video, Stay at Home, Virginia says. “I think the response has been even quicker and more enthusiastic about this one,” she says. “It’s something people can relate to: ‘I don’t believe you people really eat potato chips.’ We do.”

They danced in a small area in the video, but, Virginia says, “He’s just super creative in his movements. So, it’s not super balletic. It’s what we can accomplish on our little love seat in our den.”

Brandon and Virginia Pilgrim Ramey in their new quarantine video, ‘Couch Potatoes.’

Virginia wears “just kind of lounge wear. Sweatpants and a T-shirt and a cardigan.”

Brandon, she says, wears “pajama pants, a T-shirt, and a hoodie.”

They’re not wearing conventional dance slippers. Instead, they’re dancing in their socks. “We just kind of wear socks around the house.”

“No ballet slippers,” Brandon says. “Just my cozy house socks.”

Brandon and Virginia Pilgrim Ramey in their new quarantine video, ‘Couch Potatoes.’

The couple work on their videos just about every evening. “The choreography starts a few days before we do any actual filming,” he says. “We’ll put Ellie (their daughter) to bed at 6:30. We’ll eat a quick dinner. And we’ll just figure out what the moves are going to be from 7 until 10 when we go to bed.”

Making videos “gives us something to do,” Brandon says. “And I just love hearing from people. The responses. How they put a smile on their faces and brightens their day.”

He heard from a cousin, now a professional cellist in Canada, who he hadn’t seen since he was four years old. The videos “expand our sphere of interactions.”

He and his wife give themselves a dance class to “keep in shape,” Brandon says.

But they also are working on two more videos. “We’re working on a short film about Cinderella going to the ball, but the ball is cancelled because of coronavirus,” Brandon says.

“The other one is about the toilet paper shortage. And we’re using ‘Ode to Joy.’” But we’re calling the piece, ‘Commode to Joy.’”

Watch the video here.

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A Quarantine Dance from Ballet Memphis’ Brandon and Virginia Pilgrim Ramey

Virginia Pilgrim Ramey — a dancer in quarantine — from Brandon Ramey’s video, ‘Stay Inside’


All you see of dancer Brandon Ramey in his Stay Inside video, are his feet. But he’s not wearing ballet slippers; he’s wearing a pair of Saucony sneakers.

His wife, Virginia Pilgrim Ramey, does the dancing. The Rameys are veteran members of Ballet Memphis.

Describing the video, Brandon says, “It’s just an idea of what happens to a dancer when they’re stuck in quarantine. Everyone else gets to telecommute, work from home, do their jobs. But, obviously, a ballet dancer — that’s not an option.”

They don’t have an enormous home studio, where they can practice their dancing. The question, Brandon says, is “What happens to a ballet dancer when you’re stuck in rooms that are 12 feet by 12 feet?”

Which is exactly what he and Virginia and their 20-month-old daughter, Louellen, currently are doing.

They’ve been stuck at home since Ballet Memphis closed because of COVID-19 precautions. “Our last day of work was March 16th.”

Brandon didn’t waste any time making the short dance video, which he posted on Facebook and Instagram. “Our last day was on a Monday, and I started it on Tuesday, March 17th.”

He made the video “just out of frustration of the fact that the rest of our season was cancelled and Cinderella wasn’t going to happen.”

They both had the title roles. “She was going to be Cinderella and I was going to be her Prince Charming.

Brandon and Virginia Pilgrm Ramey in a 2016 Ballet Memphis production of “Cinderella.”

“The last day of work we weren’t preparing for the show. We were recording everything, to bring it back maybe next season. We were all feeling glum about not going to perform.”

Brandon wanted to figure out a way to make their art form “relevant and helpful in this current situation.”

The video lasts two minutes. “It starts with me walking down the street. You see my sneakers on the sidewalk. I’m walking by our house. It’s a dark night. Everyone is inside, but the lights are on. I walk up to the house just to see what’s going on and — boom! — Ginny appears and starts doing a dance about, basically, being locked in for the foreseeable future.”

He shot the video through the large glass window set in their front door. “It frames the shot perfectly. It emphasizes there’s this separation of the inside world without obstructing the view of the dance choreography.”

Virginia dances to the song “Stay Inside” by Raleigh Ritchie. “It really sinks up well to the times and the idea of being in quarantine.”

The video begins with Virginia dancing in clothes she would wear to go out someplace. It ends with her in pajamas. “The choreography is mine. I did the editing, but she’s my muse.”

Describing her outfits, Virginia says, “Basically the equivalent of skinny jeans and a nice blouse and a jacket and sneakers. Not like a fancy outfit. Still something I could move in. Obviously, I’m dancing in it. Kind of stretchy pants. We wanted it to have the look of ‘I’ve been out in public.’ But by the end of the video I’m just in a big, fuzzy, pink robe and a shower cap with a look of having been in the house or planning to be in the house for a good, long time. Kind of resigned to not caring at all.”

She and Brandon viewed the video as humorous, Virginia says, “But responses we’ve gotten from people are, ‘Oh, it’s so sad.’ People are feeling the depth of it. Everyone is like, ‘That’s exactly how I feel.’ It’s reaching people in a deeper way than I think we originally expected it to. Dance can always touch the heart of a subject quicker than words can. That’s my opinion being a dancer. I think Brandon really captured the way people were feeling in a way neither of us expected in two minutes.”

As for real life, the Rameys have created their own dance “studio” in their home.

“We have kind of moved some furniture around in our front room,” Virginia says. “We have a little area rug. We pulled that up. And so now we have just the hardwood. And we had a daybed in that room. So, we flipped it around so the headboard could be like a ballet barre. We’re really working with a makeshift studio.”

The Rameys — Virginia Pilgrim Ramey, Louellen, and Brandon Ramey — at home.

But, she says, “With the two of us side by side we kick each other or the window. Not to mention we have a toddler running around at our feet. Which we don’t normally have at our feet.”

The Rameys continue to be disciplined about their dancing. “Every morning at 9 we just do what we’d do if we’re going to work,” Brandon says. “Go in our little dance studio and give us a class up until we run out of room. We don’t know how long this quarantine is going to stretch on, but we want to come out of it keeping our instruments in the condition we need them to be for our professional dancing careers.”

Brandon also is filming ballet classes “and putting them on the internet so ballet students can stay in touch with us.”

They’re also working on other video projects. “We’re actually working on a short video now about turning into couch potatoes,” Brandon says.

To watch Brandon’s video, click on this link.

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Cinderella

It was strange to watch Disney’s new, live-action Cinderella so soon after seeing Into the Woods. In Stephen Sondheim’s fairy tale musical mashup, Cinderella, who was played in last year’s film adaption by the extraordinarily talented Anna Kendrick, is a flighty, witty presence who toys with the Prince because she can’t seem to make up her mind about much of anything. But the new Disney Cinderella played by Downton Abbey‘s Lily James is none of those things, which is why Sondheim’s take on the character is labeled “revisionist.” For better or worse, this Cinderella is as familiar and unthreatening as Disney’s branding department needs her to be.

The director Disney chose to revamp the intellectual property Walt appropriated from the cultural commons of fairy tale land is Kenneth Branagh. A prolific Irish stage actor who was hailed as the second coming of Sir Lawrence Olivier, Branagh is no stranger to screen adaptations, having began his film career in 1989 the same way Oliver did in 1944, with a re-imagining of Shakespeare’s Henry V. And while he has done yeoman’s work adopting the Bard over the years (Much Ado About Nothing, Love’s Labour’s Lost, Hamlet), lately, he’s found success adopting Marvel heroes (Thor) and Tom Clancy novels (Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit).

Even working within the Disney corporate environment, Branagh’s hand is evident in Cinderella. He approaches this adaptation in the same classy way he approaches Shakespeare. But here’s the thing: It’s not the Grimm version of the tale he’s adopting, like Sondheim did in Into the Woods. Nor is it the 17th-century French version of the tale Cendrillon, which introduced the Fairy Godmother and the glass slippers. Branagh’s bailiwick is to adopt Disney’s 1950 animated musical Cinderella into a live-action, non-musical version.

I’m still pondering why anyone thought this would be a good idea. Cinderella is extremely important to Disney. It’s widely credited as being the film that saved the studio, reversing Walt’s sliding fortunes after a decade of war and bad luck had pushed him to the brink of bankruptcy. After all, Disneyland’s centerpiece is Cinderella’s Castle. It’s built right into their corporate logo. And no one has been more successful with musicals in the 21st century than Disney, as hordes of parents who can’t get “Let It Go” from Frozen out of their heads will be the first to tell you. So why strip out the music from the corporate flagship, dooming it from the very beginning to be a tinny echo of the original?

Branagh does his best, as he always does, and over all, the production benefits from his taste and style. Cinderella reads Pepys to her melancholy father (Ben Chaplin) after her mother (Hayley Atwell of Agent Carter fame) dies. The diction is much higher than with most movies aimed primarily at preteen girls, with narrator and Fairy God Mother Helena Bonham Carter opining about how “economies were taken” when Cinderella’s father dies offscreen, leaving her stepmother (Cate Blanchett, who steals every scene she’s in) and stepsisters Drisella (Sophie McShera) and Anastasia (Holliday Grainger) without any means of support. James’ Cinderella and the Prince (Richard Madden from Game of Thrones) actually have good chemistry, and they appropriately share some of the film’s best scenes together, such as when Branagh has them circle each other on horseback when they first meet in the forest, and when they steal away during the ball so he can show her his “secret garden.” Visually, the director takes frequent inspiration from the animated version, from the color coding of the wicked stepsisters to the way Cinderella’s pumpkin coach dissolves when the Fairy Godmother’s spell wears off.

Branagh’s swooping camera and sumptuous CGI palaces look good enough, but they can’t replace the classic, hand-drawn animation of the old-school Cinderella. And even without the songs, this version is almost 50 minutes longer than the classic. Most of the extra running time comes in the beginning, when Branagh spends time exploring more of the family’s backstory, although he wisely gives Blanchett’s Wicked Stepmother as much screen time as possible. Cinderella‘s not a bad movie, per se, it’s just turgid, overly long, and desperate for a reason to exist beyond the boffo box office numbers it put up last weekend. But we all know that, for the House of Mouse, $132 million is reason enough.