A Gold Star Mother and her ballet company use dance to evoke the life and death of her son, a Marine killed in action in IraqThe parents of fallen warriors do whatever they can to keep the memory of their children alive. Which is why one mother is taking such extraordinary steps for her son. David Martin has her story:
November 2 2014 - Ballet dancers -- with all their grace and fluidity -- would seem to inhabit a different universe than Marines. You can call Marines a lot of things, but graceful would not be one of them.
"Hard to imagine, for most people I think, two more different worlds," Martin said.
"Exactly," said Amy Wolfe, the director of the Manassas Ballet in Virginia.
She has lived in both worlds, and says they're not really that different: "You can even take the word 'corps.' Marine Corps and corps de ballet. Same word: Body. Marine Corps, they are all together as one body fighting together. Ballet corps, we are all dancing together as one body."
Amy's son, Colin, grew up dancing, which -- combined with his slight stature -- earned him more than his fair share of teasing as a teenager.
But then he joined the Marines -- right out of high school, at age 18. read more>>>
November 1 2014 - In this excerpt from a report by correspondent David Martin, Amy Wolfe, mother of a young Marine killed in Iraq in 2006, talks about how the athleticism of her son's ballet training shaped his ability to serve in the armed forces.
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