Tickets can be purchased online, or from the Oklahoma City Ballet Ticket Office by calling our Box Office at (405) 848-TOES (8637).
Tickets can also be purchased at the Civic Center Music Hall in downtown Oklahoma City at 201 N Walker or by calling their Box Office at (405) 594-8300.
Student “Rush” Discounts are available at the Civic Center Box Office one hour prior to a performance. A valid student ID must be presented to use this discount. One ticket per valid ID.
We also offer a military ticket discount in gratitude to the men and women who serve in our military. Please be prepared to show a valid military ID. Visit our Bundles & Deals page for more information.
Everyone, including infants and young children who sit on a lap, must have a ticket. It's essential to have an accurate count of attendees in the theater.
If you bring an infant, please be considerate of other patrons. If your child disrupts the performance, you may be asked to step into the lobby. We recommend ages 5+ for our performances.
We appreciate our season ticket holders! We offer 3 different types of Season Packages. They are available February through August.
Please call our Box Office at (405) 848-8637 for any questions.
Oklahoma City Ballet does not offer refunds or exchanges on single ticket purchases. However, season ticket holders may contact our Box Office at 405-848-8637 or tickets@okcballet.org for assistance with exchanges or to donate their tickets.
Don't worry! You can always get your tickets re-delivered by arriving a little early to the theatre and asking the Box Office for another copy.
Our professional company performs at the Civic Center Music Hall, located at 201 N Walker Ave, Oklahoma City, OK 73102 in downtown Oklahoma City.
We also hold performances at the Susan E. Brackett Dance Center at 6800 N Classen Blvd, Oklahoma City, OK 73116.
Doors open 30 minutes prior to the start of the performance. Be sure to also allow yourself plenty of time to park and find your seat!
Parking for our performances in downtown Oklahoma City can be challenging due to traffic, construction, and special events. Street parking is limited, but there are many private lots nearby.
We recommend checking the Civic Center’s Directions and Parking page for detailed parking information. Most lots charge for event parking, so bringing $20 in cash is a good idea.
Seasons for our professional company typically consist of four to five productions, running from October to May.
Donations can be made online here. You can also donate via phone at (405) 843-9898 or mail a check to the following address (please make checks payable to Oklahoma City Ballet or OKC Ballet):
Oklahoma City Ballet
Attention: Development Dept.
6800 N. Classen Blvd.
Oklahoma City, OK 73116
There are many ways you can help support Oklahoma City Ballet. These include attending a special event, taking community classes, buying tickets to a performance, and sharing your love of the ballet by engaging with and sharing our social media posts.
Check out our support page to explore ways to get involved!
Ballet classes are available for students as young as three years of age. Division and class information can be found here.
You can view all of our class tuition rates here.
Yes! We offer scholarship opportunities to help our students pay for their tuition.
Registration continues throughout the year.
You can register onlineor in-person at the Susan E. Brackett Dance Center located at 6800 N Classen Blvd, Oklahoma City, OK 73116.
Please review our dress code guidelines here.
Students participating in our Summer Intensive program have the opportunity to audition for Day and Post-Graduate Programs, Trainee Program, OKCB II, and our professional company.
We offer a variety of classes for all ages:
Creative Movement classes for Ages 3-4
Teen & Adult Community classes
Senior Movement classes
Our community classes are open to the public, so the number of students in attendance can vary.
Community Classes can change month to month, but there are always ballet classes (Intro to Ballet all the way up through Advanced Ballet), as well as Diva Heels and Tap. Click here to see what's available this month!
We also offer a variety of movement classes for older adults: Click here to see class types and schedules.
Please see our complete schedule of classes here.
Typically, young dancers start ballet training as young as three years of age. Once you’ve got the hang of walking, you can start dancing.
Becoming a professional dancer takes years of training. Once a dancer has advanced through the required classes, the dancer then auditions to join a professional company.
Although the amount of training and practice it can take to go en pointe can vary, dancers typically reach this benchmark by the age of twelve. In order to pull this off, dancers must heavily train to strengthen the feet and lower legs or else risk potential lasting injury.
With very rare exceptions, men do not dance en pointe or use pointe shoes. A man will only dance en pointe in a specialist character role that requires it.
While the lifespan of a pair of pointe shoes can vary, most dancers can go through at least one pair in a single performance.
Male ballet dancers are referred to as danseurs.
The ballet dance style began in the Italian Renaissance courts during the 15th and 16th centuries. Ballet spread from Italy to France and Russia where it would be developed into a concert dance form. The Académie Royale de Musique was founded in 1669 by King Louis XIV, from which the Paris Opera Ballet would develop as the first professional ballet company.
Much of modern ballet was developed in France, and the terms have been handed down over generations. No matter what a dancer’s first language may be, all ballet dancers are united by the universal terms for movements.
You should clap anytime you feel moved to do so! When the dancers are pulling off spectacular moves, it’s perfectly acceptable to cheer the dancers on with storms of applause or shouts of “bravo” and “brava”.
Superstition holds that wishing a performer “good luck” will bring quite the opposite. While actors tell each other to “break a leg”, ballet dancers say “merde” before a performance. The term translates in French to a not-so-polite word for horse manure, as 19th-century patrons of the Paris Opera Ballet would arrive in horse-drawn carriages. If the Palais Garnier was covered in manure at the front, you had a packed audience.
Most ballet performances are divided into two acts with one intermission in the middle. Triple bill performances have three acts with an intermission between each act.
The Susan E. Brackett Dance Center is located at 6800 N Classen Blvd, Oklahoma City, OK 73116.
Oklahoma City Ballet has been the city’s professional ballet company since 1972, when it was founded by Yvonne Chouteau and Miguel Terekhov. As the resident dance company of the Civic Center Music Hall, Oklahoma City Ballet currently boasts talented dancers from around the world.
Yvonne Chouteau was one of the “Five Moons”, the celebrated Native American prima ballerinas of Oklahoma. As a founder of our organization, our first artistic director, and a prominent member of the Oklahoma community, our dance school is named in her honor.
Live accompaniment is provided by the Oklahoma City Philharmonic.
Ryan Jolicoeur-Nye was named Artistic Director in October 2022.
Our organization welcomed Jo Lynne Jones as the John Kirkpatrick Executive Director of Oklahoma City Ballet in February 2018. Jones takes the lead on fundraising, financial accountability, administrative management, and board engagement.
Oklahoma City Ballet is committed to serving our community through various outreach projects including BalletReach, ArtsReach, BalletKids Club, the Golden Swans senior dance program, Dance for Parkinson’s classes, and more! Learn more about our programs here and find out how you can get involved.
If you don’t see the answer to your question in our FAQs, please contact us!