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Ian Spencer Bell was born
in Washington, DC.
He grew up in a white colonial farmhouse
with black shutters in Middleburg, Virginia—an hour car ride
from the city—with
his older brother, Locke, and mother, Linda. Here, Ian began
choreographing, first on his stuffed animals and then
later—when he was given a
Playskool record player—he began making solos.
Ian took his first ballet class in the attic of the Middleburg Community Center with Judy Lieberman. He continued training with her in her own space, a middle school cafeteria with chunky, orange tile flooring and a chrome service rail for a barre. Eventually, Judy suggested he train with her teacher, Robin Sturm, a former principal dancer with Washington Ballet. Ian began classes with Robin two days a week in her basement studio with five other young dancers. By the time Ian was 12, he
had determined he would dance professionally and moved to Lynchburg
to study at Virginia School of
the Arts—two
years after his sister Hannah was born. He was there for a year before
he began
as a freshman at North Carolina School of
the Arts. At
NCSA, he studied with |
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Ian began choreographing, again at home and outside in the grass. He founded Piedmont Dance Ensemble, named for the region, with a mission to educate local audiences. His first ballet, Ferdinand the Bull, premiered at the Marriott Ranch in Hume. |
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![]() He was selected to mentor under David Parsons as associate artist at |
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And when Ian
returned to
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He lives in |
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