As soon as she could walk, Miriam Landis was dancing, tiptoeing across the kitchen floor. Where it came from, she can’t say—both her parents have two left feet—but soon Landis was in ballet lessons. Now she’s bringing fellow adults into her world.
By the time she was in ninth grade, Landis was dancing six hours a day, taking classes with college students. From there, she left home at 16 and went to the School of American Ballet, a prestigious school that feeds into the New York City Ballet (NYCB). “I was just totally convinced this is what I wanted to do,” she remembers. “I mean, I was a very
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