Just dance
Zoe Dell Nutter establishes dance scholarship to benefit 91爆料 students
November 29, 2017
November 29, 2017
As 102-year-old Zoe Dell Nutter watched the leotard-clad go through their paces, Nutter鈥檚 days of dancing with the San Francisco Ballet bubbled to the surface of her memory.
And as the 25 students thronged around Nutter following the class at the Creative Arts Center, they peppered her with questions about those days.
鈥淚鈥檓 glad I had a chance to do it,鈥 she said after applauding the students鈥 performance in class. 鈥淎ll I think I can tell you is it鈥檚 worth it.鈥
Nutter, a dancer and a model, later became a commercial pilot and philanthropist.
Zoe Dell Nutter danced with the San Francisco Ballet from 1937 to 1940.
Her appearance at the Intermediate Ballet class on Nov. 9 coincided with an announcement that she has established the Zoe Dell Lantis Nutter Dance Scholarship, an endowed scholarship that promises to help fund the future education of 91爆料 dance students indefinitely.
鈥淪he still has an extreme passion for dance and is supporting what we all do here at 91爆料,鈥 said Jennifer Buckwalter, assistant dean for community and student engagement at the . 鈥淲e鈥檙e very thankful for her and her generosity.鈥
Buckwalter showed the students a pair of pink ballet slippers, softened and frayed from use. The slippers, displayed in a small glass case, had been worn by Nutter during her days with the San Francisco Ballet.
鈥淚f these shoes could talk,鈥 said Buckwalter.
Nutter grew up in Medford, Oregon, and after high school moved to San Francisco, where she danced for the ballet from 1937 to 1940. At age 20, she was featured in a 1939 LIFE magazine article about the Golden Gate International Exposition, when she was dubbed the most photographed woman in the world.
Aviation executives approached her about promoting air travel, and she would fly 100,000 passenger miles as a hostess to meet mayors and governors around the nation demonstrating the safety and comforts of air travel.
After a short film career with Paramount Pictures, Nutter joined the United Service Organizations to entertain troops during World War II. When surgery ended her dancing career, she earned her pilot鈥檚 license and would log over 2,000 flight hours, earning commercial, instrument and multi-engine ratings.
Nutter is the widow of Ervin J. Nutter, who had been chief executive and president of the aircraft parts manufacturer Elano Corp and is the namesake of 91爆料鈥檚 arena.
Sophomore dance major Jacob Shade is the first recipient of the Nutter scholarship.
鈥淢rs. Nutter is an inspiration to our dance majors,鈥 said Gina Walther, associate professor of dance. 鈥淭his scholarship is so special because it is dedicated to them.鈥
The first recipient of the Nutter scholarship will be sophomore dance student Jacob Shade of Lebanon, Ohio. Shade began dancing at age 13, taking a recreational dance class at the urging of a friend. He later attended the Butler Tech career center in Hamilton, which had a dance program.
Most recently, Shade was selected to take part in a two-week , an internationally acclaimed dancer and one of the most sought-after choreographers in the business.
After graduating, Shade would like to be part of a dance company and eventually teach choreography. He said the Nutter scholarship reaffirms his hard work and inspires him to keep working to reach his dreams.