The dancer aged 106 who bans the word 'old' (2024)

At 106, Eileen Kramer seems more productive than ever.

She writes a story a day from her Sydney aged-care facility, publishes books and has entered Australia's most prestigious painting competition.

After decades living abroad, Ms Kramer returned to her home city of Sydney aged 99. Since then, she's collaborated with artists to create several videos that showcase her primary talent and lifelong passion: dancing.

Ms Kramer still dances - graceful, dramatic movements mostly using the top half of her body. In more recent years, she has also choreographed.

"Since returning to Sydney I've been so busy - I've performed three big dance pieces at NIDA [the National Institute for Dramatic Art] and independent theatres.

"I've participated in two big dance festivals in Adelaide and Brisbane, I've been in a film, given many smaller performances, written three books, and today I'm having a free day talking to you!" she says from her home.

Something she often gets asked is where all her energy comes from - and whether there's a secret to dancing into old age.

Her response is that she banishes the words "old" and "age" from her vocabulary. She admonishes me for using them later in our chat.

"I say: I'm not old, I've just been here a long time and learnt a few things along the way.

"I don't feel how people say you should feel when you're old. My attitude to creating things is identical to when I was a child."

The dancer aged 106 who bans the word 'old' (1)The dancer aged 106 who bans the word 'old' (2)Sue Healey

Inspired by home

In recent years Ms Kramer has crowdfunded, choreographed and performed several dance works that draw from her life.

She was halfway through creating a new dance video when a lockdown in Sydney temporarily frustrated her plans. But not for long.

"I couldn't go out to the location of the video, so I wrote a book instead," she says, laughing. "It's a story about how we made the film."

The film's location is special to Ms Kramer. It takes place inside a giant Moreton Bay fig tree in the Sydney suburb of Glebe.

The smell of gum trees, the sight of the huge Moreton Bay figs and the sound of laughing kookaburras perched on them are the things that enticed Ms Kramer back to Sydney.

"The tree inspired my choreography," she says.

"Have you ever seen one up close? You feel as though you're in a haunted fairy tale palace. It took me back to my childhood."

The dancer aged 106 who bans the word 'old' (3)The dancer aged 106 who bans the word 'old' (4)Sue Healey

Ms Kramer has a few more shots to film, then it will be edited and set to music.

Meanwhile, as the head of her own publishing house, Basic Shapes, she'll release her book about the project later this year. Since entering her centenarian years, she has also published a short story collection: Elephants and Other Stories.

The Covid lockdowns left her thoroughly unfazed.

"I haven't minded Covid one bit," she says. "I haven't felt lonely or confined - when you write, that's your company."

Ms Kramer has become somewhat of a local celebrity in the inner city suburb of Elizabeth Bay, where she lives.

A party was put on by a team of performer friends outside her window for her 106th birthday in November.

"I was surprised, delighted - and very touched," she says. "They fixed a chair inside my bay window and gave me balloons to shake when there was a pause."

The dancer aged 106 who bans the word 'old' (5)The dancer aged 106 who bans the word 'old' (6)Sue Healey

A colourful life

From posing as a nude model to becoming the oldest ever entrant - aged 104 - in Australia's most prestigious portrait art prize, The Archibald Prize; creative flair and defiance of conformity have defined Ms Kramer's life.

Born in Sydney's Mosman Bay, Ms Kramer trained as a dancer then toured Australia with the Bodenwieser Ballet for a decade. She travelled to India, and later settled in Paris and then New York - where she lived until she was 99.

Her dance career spans four continents and one century, and it has always been her first love.

"Having been in the company of dancers most of my life, I haven't felt alone," she says.

"Unlike me, some married and had children or returned to Europe. I put up with the inconveniences of the dancer's life."

The dancer aged 106 who bans the word 'old' (7)The dancer aged 106 who bans the word 'old' (8)Bodenwieser Dance Company

Living in Paris for much of her earlier life, Ms Kramer says the only way to pay rent was to be an artist's model.

"It was slightly dangerous to pose, but I knew the customers and their manners," she says.

The nudity was "no big deal" because it was for the purpose of art: life drawing classes.

She fraternised with, and learnt from, famous Parisian artists. She was taught to do The Twist by Louis Armstrong at a casino in Dieppe, before moving to New York.

On returning to Australia, she was pleased some things hadn't changed - such as seeing people eat fish and chips - and delighted other things had - such as greater recognition of Aboriginal culture.

The best advice she ever received was from Madame Bodenwieser, founder of the Bodenwieser ballet, about temporary love affairs when touring dance shows.

"She said the woman on the spot gets the man - not those passing through," she says. "We left behind some broken hearts!"

Today, her collaborator, Sue Healey, describes working with Ms Kramer as "like experiencing a living history".

"She's a tangible connection to the early days of modern dance in Australia - and for me, as a choreographer, this is gold!" says Ms Healey, honorary fellow at the University of Melbourne's arts faculty.

"She tackles life with elegance and creative gusto. She's completely in control and constantly making something new."

Ms Kramer says she has "never been interested in being sick like some are", adding: "I don't take any pills except some doctor-ordered vitamins."

And with that there's a knock at the door, interrupting our conversation - it's for a Covid vaccination.

"I'm dreading it!" she says. "But it'll continue to prevent me from getting sick."

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Dance

The dancer aged 106 who bans the word 'old' (2024)

FAQs

Where is the Little Dancer statue now? ›

The original wax figure produced in the studio here, 19, Rue Pierre Fontaine, is now in the National Gallery of Art, Washington. Bronze copies of the work, cast in the 1920s after Degas' death, can be seen in various museums including the Orsay Museum in Paris.

Why was the little dancer aged fourteen controversial? ›

Art critic Elie de Mont was flabbergasted: “I don't ask that art should always be elegant, but I don't believe that its role is to champion the cause of ugliness.” The diminutive figure, the only sculpture Degas exhibited publicly, was described variously as “repulsive,” “vicious,” and “a threat to society.” Modeled in ...

What is the meaning of little dancer aged fourteen? ›

Young, pretty, and poor, the ballet students also were potential targets of male "protectors." Degas understood the predicament of the Little Dancer—what the contemporary reviewer Joris–Karl Huysmans called her "terrible reality." The Little Dancer is a very poignant, deeply felt work of art in which a little girl of ...

Who made the 14 year old dancer? ›

Edgar Degas | The Little Fourteen-Year-Old Dancer | French, Paris | The Metropolitan Museum of Art.

What did the original Little Dancer look like? ›

Degas's original sculpture (above, left) was made of unorthodox materials: tinted beeswax skin, a human-hair wig, a cotton bodice, linen ballet slippers, and tarlatan tutu. The only sculpture he exhibited during his lifetime, it was both hailed and criticized for its uncanny realism.

How many little dancer statues are there? ›

The 28 bronze repetitions that appear in museums and galleries around the world today were cast after Degas' death.

What is a petit rat in ballet? ›

Affectionate term by which children of the Paris Opera Ballet School are known. From: petit* rats in The Oxford Dictionary of Dance » Subjects: Performing arts — Dance.

Why did Isadora Duncan not like ballet? ›

Duncan rejected everything about ballet. She felt the technique of turning out the legs was unnatural, along with arms and legs in forced positions. Duncan thought the human body was beautiful, and she wanted to show that beauty to others.

Who invented ballet? ›

Ballet traces its origins to the Italian Renaissance, when it was developed as a court entertainment. During the 15th and 16th centuries the dance technique became formalized. The epicentre of the art moved to France following the marriage of the Italian-born aristocrat Catherine de Médicis to Henry II of France.

What age do dancers stop dancing? ›

A career in dance, as with any professional sport and its physical demands, often comes with a timeline. In fact, most dance performance careers end by the age of 35. “The dancer is clear from the beginning that we're going to retire and have a second career at some point,” says Katherine Horrigan.

Is 14 too old to dance? ›

The answer is simply never! Dance is universal and ageless. It can provide benefits to dancers of all ages and levels. Let's take a look at just a few dancers that did not start their journey until their teens and after.

What happened to Marie van Goethem? ›

Van Goethem, disappeared shortly after Degas's sculpture was finished. She was dismissed from the Paris Opera Ballet in 1882 for being late to a rehearsal, and poof—c'est fini. Offsetting Marie's untraceable later life, the new musical depicts a Van Goethem that is part fact, part fiction.

Who was the first girl dancer? ›

Mademoiselle De Lafontaine, also known as La Fontaine (1655–1738), was a French ballerina and is regarded as the first female professional ballet dancer. Her first name is unknown.

How old can you be a dancer? ›

Success Knows No Age

There are a number of other unconventional success stories that demonstrate that you're never too old to start dancing. Dance magazine pointed to David Zurak, a member of the Martha Graham Dance Company, who didn't find his passion for dance until he was 23!

Who was the ballerina who started at 13? ›

Copeland's natural ability was quickly recognized by Bradley, and, though age 13 was a late start for a serious dance career, Copeland began taking classes with Bradley at the San Pedro Ballet School.

Where is the little 14-year-old dancer now in Edgar? ›

Where is the bird girl statue now? ›

Made famous thanks in part to the cover of the novel, Bonaventure Cemetery was the original home of the Bird Girl statue. Now relocated to the Telfair Academy Museum, this hauntingly beautiful statue is now on display for all to see.

Where is the Little Mermaid statue located? ›

The sculpture is displayed on a rock by the waterside at the Langelinie promenade in Copenhagen, Denmark. It is 1.25 metres (4.1 ft) tall and weighs 175 kilograms (385 lb).

Where is the little girl statue? ›

The Fearless Girl currently stands facing the New York Stock Exchange building on Broad Street, between Wall Street and Exchange Place.

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