September 11 - October 18, 2026

Subscriptions available now. Single tickets on sale August 1.

 

French Kiss

French Kiss, by Amy Seiwert
Stabat Mater, by Michael Smuin
World Premiere, by My’Kal Stromile

 

Fresh from a commission with the Paris Opera Ballet, My’Kal Stromile makes his West Coast debut with a world premiere. Amy Seiwert’s French Kiss, a color confection hailed by the San Francisco Chronicle as a “sweet, chic dessert,” returns to delight audiences once more. As we mark twenty years since Michael Smuin’s passing, we honor his lasting influence with a revival of his moving Stabat Mater, returning to the stage for the first time since 2016.

 

September 11 – 13, 2026 – Mountain View

September 18 – 19, 2026 – Walnut Creek

October 8 – 18, 2026 – San Francisco

Calendar for French Kiss

  • 7:30pm

    Mountain View Center for the Performing Arts

    500 Castro St. Mountain View, CA

  • 7:30pm

    Mountain View Center for the Performing Arts

    500 Castro St. Mountain View, CA

  • 2:00pm

    Mountain View Center for the Performing Arts

    500 Castro St. Mountain View, CA

  • 7:30pm

    Mountain View Center for the Performing Arts

    500 Castro St. Mountain View, CA

  • 2:00pm

    Mountain View Center for the Performing Arts

    500 Castro St. Mountain View, CA

  • 7:30pm

    Walnut Creek's Lesher Center

    1601 Civic Dr. Walnut Creek, CA

  • 2:00pm

    Walnut Creek's Lesher Center

    1601 Civic Dr. Walnut Creek, CA

  • 7:30pm

    Cowell Theater - Fort Mason Center for Arts & Culture

    2 Marina Blvd San Francisco, CA

  • 7:30pm

    Cowell Theater - Fort Mason Center for Arts & Culture

    2 Marina Blvd San Francisco, CA

  • 7:30pm

    Cowell Theater - Fort Mason Center for Arts & Culture

    2 Marina Blvd San Francisco, CA

  • 7:30pm

    Cowell Theater - Fort Mason Center for Arts & Culture

    2 Marina Blvd San Francisco, CA

  • 2:00pm

    Cowell Theater - Fort Mason Center for Arts & Culture

    2 Marina Blvd San Francisco, CA

  • 7:30pm

    Cowell Theater - Fort Mason Center for Arts & Culture

    2 Marina Blvd San Francisco, CA

Choreographers

Amy Seiwert

Amy Seiwert

Choreographer, French Kiss

Amy Seiwert enjoyed a nineteen-year performing career dancing with Smuin, Los Angeles Chamber, and Sacramento Ballets. As a dancer with Smuin, she became involved with the “Protégé Program,” where Michael Smuin was her mentor. She retired as a dancer from Smuin in 2008. That same year, Celia Fushille named her Choreographer in Residence, a position she held for a decade. She is the recipient of numerous choreographic awards, including a “Goldie” award from the San Francisco Bay Guardian in 2010, which described Seiwert as the Bay Area’s most original dance thinker, “taking what some consider a dead language and using it with a 21st-century lingo to tell us something about who we are.” 

In 2017 Seiwert’s first full-evening work, “Wandering,” set to Schubert’s Winterreise, was commissioned by the Joyce Theater in New York. The NEA and Kennedy Center have also supported Seiwert’s works. A former Artist in Residence at ODC Theater, she has also served on the Artist Faculty for Jacob’s Pillow’s Contemporary Ballet program. Her creations are in the repertory of Smuin, ODC/Dance, BalletX, Ballet Austin, and AXIS Dance, as well as Washington, Atlanta, Oakland, Kansas City, Colorado, Louisville, Cincinnati, Oklahoma City, American Repertory, and Milwaukee Ballets.

Michael Smuin

Michael Smuin

Choreographer, Stabat Mater

“In 1994, Michael Smuin set out to “infuse ballet with the rhythm, speed, and syncopation of American popular culture.”

In 1994, Michael Smuin set out to “infuse ballet with the rhythm, speed, and syncopation of American popular culture,” and Smuin Contemporary Ballet (née Smuin Ballets/SF, or more recently, Smuin Ballet) was born. Michael Smuin’s vision lives on following his sudden passing in 2007, and the Company continues to push the boundaries of contemporary ballet within a distinctly modern style, combining classical ballet training, technique, and artistry with uncommon physicality and expression.

Company Founder Michael Smuin was born on October 13, 1938, in Missoula, Montana. Smuin studied tap dancing as a child and became instantly enamoured with ballet when his mother took him to see the Ballet Russe on tour at the University of Montana. At the age of 15, Smuin moved to Salt Lake City to study dance on scholarship at the University of Utah. A few years later, San Francisco Ballet director Lew Christensen recruited Smuin for San Francisco Ballet, where he danced for six years. Smuin took a leave of absence from the company in 1962 to relocate to New York, where he performed in Bob Fosse’s Little Me on Broadway. During this time, Smuin created a nightclub act with his then-wife and fellow dancer Paula Tracy. Their “well-disguised ballet,” as Smuin would call it, toured widely and was billed alongside such entertainers as Louis Armstrong, Peggy Lee, and Frank Sinatra. The act later appeared on television on The Ed Sullivan Show, The Hollywood Palace, and Bell Telephone Hour, among others. Smuin joined American Ballet Theatre in 1965, where he choreographed Pulcinella Variations, The Catherine Wheel, Eternal Idol and several other pieces for the company before returning to San Francisco in 1973. During his years in New York he also worked with Leonard Bernstein, choreographing Candide.

Smuin spent 12 years as a choreographer and co-director of San Francisco Ballet, a period that coincided with his direction of Sophisticated Ladies on Broadway. Smuin served as Artistic Director of San Francisco Ballet until 1985, and was instrumental in raising the company’s profile in the international arts community. His ventures included serving as co-chairman of the National Endowment for the Arts dance panel (1979-1981), staging a performance at the White House, and presenting his Romeo and Juliet and his Emmy Award-winning feature A Song for Dead Warriors for PBS’s Dance in America program. In 1988, Smuin received both a Tony and a Drama Desk Award for his choreography for Anything Goes.

Outside of ballet and Broadway, Smuin choreographed several Francis Ford Coppola films, some of which include Rumble Fish, The Cotton Club and Bram Stoker’s Dracula. His choreography can also be seen in such films as A Walk in the Clouds, The Joy Luck Club, The Fantastiks, and Star Wars: Episode VI – Return of the Jedi (Special Edition).

Michael Smuin’s ballets are currently in the repertories of major dance companies around the country. Since founding Smuin Contemporary American Ballet in 1994, he created 40 new works for his company alone. His creations range from classical, as seen in his acclaimed September 11th tribute, Stabat Mater (2002), and Carmina Burana (1997), to the innovative Bluegrass/Slyde with its revolving-pole set, to one-act story ballets like Pinocchio (1999) and  Zorro (2003). Many of Smuin’s ballet’s boast a touch of Broadway flair, such as the wildly popular Dancin’ With Gershwin (2001) and Fly Me to the Moon (2004).

Smuin passed away suddenly on April 23, 2007, surrounded by his dancers while teaching company class. His vision, style, and energy remain with the Company to this day.

My'Kal Stromile

My’Kal Stromile

Choreographer, World Premiere

MY’KAL STROMILE received his BFA from The Juilliard School under the direction of Larry Rhodes, following training with Kim Abel, Ceyhun Ozsoy, Dereque Whiturs, and Anna-Marie Holmes at The School at Jacob’s Pillow. A 2014 U.S. Presidential Scholar in the Arts, an honor awarded by President Barack Obama, he has performed works by William Forsythe, Aszure Barton, Crystal Pite, Dwight Rhoden, and Jerome Robbins, among others. Stromile also danced with Bruce Wood Dance, Disney Productions, and Boston Ballet (2018– 2024), where he was a Princess Grace Award nominee.

Stromile has choreographed new works for Boston Ballet, including Form and Gesture in 2023, The Leisurely Installation of a New Window in 2026, The Juilliard School, the Joyce Theater’s UNITE Ballet Festival, AILEY II, and Vail Dance Festival, among others. In 2024, he was commissioned by the Paris Opera Ballet, creating Word for Word, and collaborated with CHANEL on costume designs. He also participated in the 2024 New York Choreographic Institute at New York City Ballet. He is the recipient of Juilliard’s Hector Zaraspe Prize in Choreography and was recognized with Choreographic Honors three consecutive years. Stromile considers himself a movement architect, taking a multidisciplinary approach to his practice, collaborating with artists and technologists.

 

Headshot by Liza Vol Photography