
2 minute read
VCU dance professors met through university, finish each others’ sentences
Samantha Foster Staff Writer
Susan and John Massey have been teaching at VCU for a collective total of more than 60 years, but their story together stretches far beyond the dance studio.
Susan Massey began teaching at VCU in 1976 but said she’s been teaching for about 52 years. While studying dance at the University of Utah, she started to work as a teacher in an afternoon dance class for children.
“I really wanted to perform,” Massey said. “I didn’t want to teach, but I got a lot of good experience going through school and teaching.”
Massey received her master’s degree in choreography from the University of Utah. She choreographed for a dance company in Utah before moving to Richmond.
“When I moved here, there wasn’t anywhere to perform, so I taught, and I just kept on teaching,” Massey said. “I always wanted to be a dancer, so it was not really deciding ‘oh, I think I’m going to teach dance.’ You just work into something like that.”
Massey said she simply called thendirector and current improvisation teacher at VCU, Frances Wessells, and asked if she needed a teacher for a ballet class at VCU. Wessells hired her without an interview.
“She asked what I needed, and I said that I’d like to have a piano, and (Wessells) said ‘Okay, I’ll find you a piano’ and she did. By the next class it was stolen,” Massey said of her first week teaching at VCU.
Massey is currently an adjunct faculty member at VCU and teaches full time at Richmond Ballet. In the past 36 years, she has taught every level of ballet and a course in dance history. This year though, she is teaching only non-major dance classes at VCU, including Introduction to Ballet Technique I and II.
Junior theater major Emily Marsh took Massey’s Introduction to Ballet Technique I class last semester.
“She’s strict enough to keep people in line, and then at the same time, she really made ballet fun,” Marsh said. “She would always say little things, like in a changement, you’re supposed to point your feet, so her way of reminding us was to say, ‘You’ve got to be little bullets.’”
“I find that I enjoy teaching very much,” Massey said. “Today’s college-age students seem open to learning the art form and are eager to apply themselves.”
At the Richmond Ballet, Massey teaches all levels, from 10 and 12 year olds to adults. She also performs in Richmond Ballet productions as the grandmother in “The Nutcracker,” Giselle’s mother in “Giselle” and the queen in “Swan Lake.”
“I have the good fortune of performing those roles,” Massey said.
Susan Massey’s husband John Massey received his bachelor’s degree in drama in 1972 from VCU and has been teaching at VCU since 1980.
“I was helping the lady who was already teaching the class, and then she had to give it up, so it just fell into my lap (in 1983),” Massey said.
Prior to his teaching career, Massey was working toward becoming a stage dancer.
“I went to New York, and, of course, usually when you go to a place like New York you have to do everything else,” Massey said. “You have to work in a restaurant and do this, that and the other to earn a living.”
Massey was then given the opportunity to attend an Arthur Murray training class where he learned about ballroom dance. He then taught ballroom occasionally