PROVO — A Provo native is helping to highlight Ukrainians’ fight for freedom through a documentary about ballet dancers who are preserving art and culture during war.
“Ballet, and art in general, isn’t just a way to show joy and hope during this war; it is a way to fight back, directly,” said director Jonathan Maricle.
In the fall of 2022, the National Ballet of Ukraine performed “Nadiya Ukraine,” a celebration of Ukrainian culture and resilience, during a benefit concert in Orlando to raise funds for the Russia-Ukraine war.
The company Adrenaline Films was asked to record that performance on video. Then, producer Julie Meyer met with the dancers, who began telling their stories of rehearsing and performing during war.
“He (the stage director) was showing her photos of himself and one of the other ballerinas in fatigues, and being like, ‘This is my reality now.’ And Julie just was so struck by the choices that these people have been forced to make,” co-producer Abi Nielson said.
After completing the performance film, Adrenaline Films decided to pursue a documentary about how the war was affecting the artists and culture of Ukraine. Nielson was brought on to help with the development and distribution of “The Sky Was on Fire: Ballet and War in Ukraine” onto the project shortly after that decision.
For two years, the team worked on creating the documentary, a process that included two trips to Ukraine where they had to fly to a neighboring country and take a train into Ukraine to interview various dancers and artists in Kyiv.
“They live to make and experience art. They have been forced to make a choice to stay and perform under rocket fire, or have to go down into bomb shelters in the middle of performances, or to flee abroad and try to start over,” Nielson said.
Some of the artists have decided to pick up arms and join the front lines. Many of the ballet company’s continued performances aim to bring awareness to Ukraine’s situation and raise money for the war effort, Nielson said.