American dance teacher and artistic director (b. Jan. 25, 1910, Washington, D.C.—d. July 11, 2006, Washington, D.C.), cofounded (with Lisa Gardiner) in 1944 the Washington School of Ballet, which attracted students from throughout the country and turned out such illustrious talents as Kevin McKenzie (artistic director of American Ballet Theatre), Amanda McKerrow (dancer with ABT and the first American to win a gold medal at the Moscow International Ballet Competition), and Virginia Johnson (dancer with Dance Theatre of Harlem). Day, who became sole director of the school in 1958 following Gardiner’s death, in 1976 reorganized the school into a professional company, for which she staged experimental works while serving until 1999 as its artistic director. In 2003 the grande dame of Washington ballet retired as director of the school.
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