Jenifer Ellen Ringer (born 1972 or 1973)[1] is an American ballet dancer and educator. She joined the New York City Ballet in 1990, became a principal dancer in 2000, and retired from performing in 2014. She then became the director of the Colburn School's professional dance program, Colburn Dance Academy. She was named Dean of the Colburn's Trudl Zipper Dance Institute in 2017, before stepping down in 2021.
Ringer became an apprentice with the New York City Ballet in October 1989, then joined the corps de ballet the following year.[3] In 1994, she made her debut as the Sugar Plum Fairy in Balanchine's The Nutcracker,[6] and was promoted to soloist in January the following year.[3]
In her early dance career she struggled with weight and had anorexia then bulimia. She recalled Peter Martins told her to "stop eating cheesecake," and by 1997 she was 40 pounds (18 kg) heavier than most dancers.[2] In 1997, the company and she agreed that she should leave the company.[5] She stopped dancing completely and had different jobs. However, a former teacher convinced Ringer to start taking ballet classes again. She also became involved with her faith, Protestant Christianity, which she disconnected in her teenage years, and attended Overeaters Anonymous, both of which she credited for helping her comeback.[2][6][7] Ringer returned to the company in 1998.[6]
Ringer was promoted to principal dancer in 2000. She performed lead roles in works by George Balanchine and Jerome Robbins, and created roles for choreographers including Twyla Tharp, Helgi Tomasson, Alexei Ratmansky and Christopher Wheeldon.[3] She was featured in the web series city.ballet.[8] In both her memoir and in interviews, Ringer credits true religious faith with helping bring her back to the top of a field where she says ballet dancing and performing can exist as a false idol, as she puts it, “where ballet is god.”[2][4]
In 2010, when reviewing Ringer in The Nutcracker, New York Times critic Alastair Macaulay wrote that she "looked as if she'd eaten one sugarplum too many." The comment was regarded as body shaming.[9] Ringer was immediately defended by ballet bloggers and on online boards,[9] and the controversy led to her appearances on The Oprah Winfrey Show and The Today Show.[10][11] On the latter, she said, "As a dancer, I do put myself out there to be criticized, and my body is part of my art form," and noted she is not overweight.[10] In an interview in 2014, she said, she "was able to dismiss it within about 15 minutes, which was a huge personal triumph."[7]
In October 2013, the New York City Ballet announced that Ringer would retire in February the following year.[3] In her last performance, she appeared as the Pink Girl in Robbins' Dances at a Gathering and the Pearly Queen in Balanchine's Union Jack.[12][13] Ringer's memoir, Dancing Through It, was published in February 2014.[6]
After she retired from dancing, Ringer relocated to Los Angeles to become the director of the Colburn School's new professional dance program, Colburn Dance Academy.[14] In 2017, she was named Dean of the Colburn's Trudl Zipper Dance Institute, overseeing all dance programs.[15] In February 2021, it was announced that Ringer would stepped down from the Colburn School in July, and return to her home state of South Carolina, but intend to return to teach frequently. She was succeeded by former New York City Ballet dancer Silas Farley.[16]
In 2000, Ringer married James Fayette, also a New York City Ballet dancer.[1] They have two children.[13]
Though raised as an Evangelical Christian, Ringer had "always considered" herself a Protestant Christian. In New York, she went to an Episcopal Church, and a Presbyterian Church after she married Fayette.[4]