Raina’s grandmother was MDT Founder Loyce Houlton, and her mother is MDT’s current Artistic Director Lise Houlton. Raina and her sister Kaitlyn Gilliland grew up at MDT, trained there, went on to have remarkable careers in dance, with Kaitlyn at New York City Ballet and Raina at Minnesota Dance Theatre.
You might imagine then that Raina’s first memories of her Nana were in the dance studio. But no. Raina says, “There was a lot of playing, never a dull moment. We would be sitting on the patio at my Nana’s house, playing with Fisher-Price cars. We were always outside.”
And her first memories of the studio? “Running around while my mom taught class. Kaitlyn would try to take class, and I’d run in circles. Being in the studio always felt like play too.”
At some point through the play she developed into an aspiring professional. “There was never a moment of realizing ‘this is my calling.’ It was just a natural progression.”
When Raina was 16, she flew from the nest and landed at the renowned School of American Ballet in New York City. It was a big change, going from a place led by women to one that focused on the influence of George Balanchine under Peter Martin’s direction. And so Raina felt most connected to and impacted by her female teachers at SAB: Suki Schorer, Susan Pilarre, and Kay Mazzo.
But even then at 16, Raina was no novice. Having grown up through the MDT school which is deeply connected to the company, she’d already had numerous professional experiences in dance, being part of new works choreographed by Scott Rink, Wynn Fricke, and her mother Lise Houlton, among others.
Then at SAB, she was actually not performing as much and missed it, so after three years there she returned to Minnesota to join the MDT company where she danced for eight seasons, dazzling audiences with her striking beauty, powerful presence, and endlessly long limbs
As rewarding as the dancing was, Raina said it was always a great joy working with students, passing on roles, and coaching them in Loyce Houlton’s ballets. Throughout her dancing career, she was teaching in the school. In fact, she trained some of the current company members and trainees when they were just starting out and has had the chance to see them grow into young professionals.
After Raina’s final performance with the company in 2017, she took a year off to focus on school at the University of Minnesota, with a concentration in Child Development and Youth Studies. It was actually MDT’s outreach program, CAN Dance, that inspired Raina to focus in that area, as she was wanting to better understand the needs of the children that CAN Dance reaches.