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- From: Tom <twp@panix.com>
- Newsgroups: alt.arts.ballet,alt.answers,news.answers
- Subject: alt.arts.ballet FAQ 3: Dance and You
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- Date: Mon, 5 Apr 2004 15:06:37 +0000 (UTC)
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- Archive-name: dance/ballet-modern-faq/part2
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- Last-modified: Mar. 5, 2004
-
- ================================
- Part 3 of seven parts
- ================================
-
- Copyright (c) 1995-2004 by Thomas Parsons; all rights reserved.
- This FAQ may be posted to any USENET newsgroup, on-line service, BBS,
- or Web page, provided it is posted in its entirety, including this
- copyright statement, EXCEPT that this FAQ may not be posted to any Web
- page where such posting may result in assignment of copyright. This
- FAQ may not be distributed in part or in full for financial gain. No
- portion of this FAQ may be included in commercial collections or
- compilations without express permission from the author.
-
- ================
-
- Contents:
-
- PART 3. BALLET, MODERN DANCE, AND YOU
-
- 3.1. When should I start taking ballet?
- 3.2. When should I start taking modern dance?
- 3.3. I'm in my early twenties; it it too late for me to start a
- professional career in ballet?
- 3.4. I'm 35 (or 45 or 55 or...) years old. Is it ridiculous for me
- to consider ballet classes?
- 3.5. I'm thinking of returning to ballet after --- years; how should I
- start? Are there videos I can buy?
- 3.6. I'm a man. I feel funny about taking ballet classes. I mean,
- isn't it...er...a little...?
- 3.7. Okay, I'm starting ballet. What equipment do I need?
- 3.8. I'm a guy! Do I *have* to wear tights?
- 3.9. Where can I buy dancewear?
- 3.10. How can I make a tutu?
- 3.11. How do I find/choose a school or teacher?
- 3.12. How can I tell if a teacher is good?
- 3.13. If the teacher makes me feel good, won't I become overconfident?
- 3.14. I live in ----; where can I take classes?
- 3.15. I don't know a thing about ballet and I'm trying to select a
- school for my child. What should I look for?
- 3.16. What is this "Dolly Dinkle" business, anyway?
- 3.17. What about studying in a university dance department?
- 3.18. Where can I find out about Summer dance programs?
- 3.19. I took my first class and I couldn't understand what was going on!
- 3.20. I keep getting mixed up!
- 3.21. What is "B-plus"?
- 3.22. What are the basic movements in dance?
- 3.23. How can I learn to raise my leg over my shoulder, the way I see
- other dancers doing?
- 3.24. When can my daughter start toe dancing?
- 3.25. I'm an adult beginner. Am I too old for pointe?
- 3.26. I'm 5'7" (or whatever) high. Am I too tall for ballet?
- 3.27. What is a career in dancing like?
- 3.28. My daughter's gym classes are interfering with her ballet
- training. What can I do to make the school listen?
- 3.29. How can I build a proper floor for dancing?
- 3.30. How high should a ballet barre be?
- 3.31. I'm job hunting. Any tips for preparing a resume?
-
- ================
-
- 3. Ballet, Modern Dance, and You
-
-
- 3.1. When should I start taking ballet?
-
- The answer to that depends on how old you are. Children must wait
- until their bones are strong enough to stand the strain that dancing will
- put on them. Opinions differ as to exactly when that happens, and it
- depends a great deal on the individual, but it seems to be somewhere
- between ages six and nine. Younger children will often profit from special
- dance classes, in which the emphasis is on rhythm, spatial sense, musical
- sense, and placement.
-
- If you are older than that, the answer is, right away. The sooner
- you start, the better. If you start in your teens, you may be able to
- dance professionally, or you may not. Igor Youskevitch didn't start until
- he was 22, and he became a star; but he was Igor Youskevitch. By that age,
- most people can look forward to ballet only as a recreation. (But it is a
- *wonderful* recreation!)
-
-
- 3.2. When should I start taking modern dance?
-
- Opinions vary; some say, Right away; others say, After you've had
- a year or two of ballet to lay a foundation. A great deal depends on the
- individual. Ballet teaches a vocabulary of movement which has largely been
- rejected by modern dance; and some people find that ballet inhibits the
- kind of movement favored in modern dance. But ballet is unparallelled for
- strengthening your body and for teaching you to think of it as an instru-
- ment of dance. For many people, the ideal may be to take ballet and modern
- concurrently, if that's feasible.
-
-
- 3.3. I'm in my early twenties; it it too late for me to start a
- professional career in ballet?
-
- It's not impossible--it has been done before--but the odds are
- against it. Leigh Witchel offers more details:
-
- The average age of a woman starting ballet is between eight and eleven,
- of a man, often in his teens. Later is not unheard of; Melissa Hayden
- began at 15, Igor Youskevitch at 22. A word of warning, however: As
- you grow older, developing flexibility is infinitely more difficult.
- If you do not have a natural facility, you will be fighting an uphill
- battle the whole way and may find the pain too great to be worth it.
- Also, for a woman, developing the ankle strength and articulation of
- the feet necessary for pointe work takes around five years, which adds
- another handicap. Moreover, at the onset of training, you can really
- only take so many classes a week without risking injury. So the roads
- of an amateur and professional do not diverge until at least a little
- way into training. At that point, take a good look at what you are
- doing, your progress in relation to others, and how happy it is making
- you. Are you ready to play a game of catch-up that may be sisyphean?
- It may be worth the struggle.
-
- See also the following question.
-
-
- 3.4. I'm 35 (or 45 or 55 or...) years old. Is it ridiculous for me to
- consider ballet classes?
-
- This topic has come up repeatedly. The answer is No. We have a
- number of dancers on a.a.b. who started in their thirties or later. Many
- of them hesitated at first, then plunged in.
-
- It would be ridiculous only if you were contemplating a career in
- ballet at that age; most ballet dancers retire in their forties. (There
- have been some notable exceptions, however: Auguste Bournonville [Question
- 4.8.2] choreographed roles for dancers in their sixties; in his _Memoirs_
- Casanova describes a dazzling bravura performance by Louis Dupr'e, who was
- then sixty; and Pavel Gerdt continued to dance until he was 70.) But if
- you are 45 or older, you are presumably not looking for a professional
- career. The consensus on a.a.b. is that if your body can still handle the
- exertion, you can start at any age. The King of Sweden was still playing
- tennis in his nineties. Ballet is tougher than tennis, but if you can
- handle it...why not? (Someone on the Net wrote, "Socrates learned to dance
- when he was 70 because he felt that an essential part of himself had been
- neglected." And one poster on this group was in a class with a World War
- II veteran who started taking classes at the age of 72.)
-
- Much the same answer applies to taking modern dance, with increased
- force. Aging affects modern dancers much less than it does ballet dancers;
- modern dancers will keep performing almost until they drop.
-
- One of the main problems for older dancers, particularly in ballet,
- is getting the teacher to take you seriously, and the older you get, the
- more acute this problem becomes. Ballet is the most ageist of the arts,
- after all. But pursuing an art as a recreation doesn't preclude pursuing
- it seriously and knocking yourself out to do the absolute best you can at
- it. Many teachers don't seem to realize this. You should be getting cor-
- rections the same as other, younger dancers. You are paying for instruc-
- tion, not just for space, an accompanist, and the balletic equivalent of a
- square-dance caller. Most teachers will judge your seriousness by how hard
- you work in class and how regularly you come to class. But if you are
- working hard and still feel you aren't being taken seriously as a dancer,
- complain. Don't let them treat you as if you had accidentally doddered
- into a ballet class on your way to the nearest Senior Center.
-
- Other observations on this topic from people on a.a.b. follow.
- Note that many of these apply equally well to dancers starting in their
- late teens or twenties (Question 3.3).
-
- 1. Take classes as often as you can. At the very start, it may not be
- a good idea to overdo it, but once your body is up to it, try for at
- least three classes a week. Learning is much faster then. Two people
- on this group report that the brain adapts physically in response to
- classes and that this adaptation progresses more rapidly if you take
- several classes per week.
-
- 2. In older dancers--as well as with younger dancers--many of the big-
- gest problems are intellectual, not physical. It takes a great deal of
- concentration to remember the steps that go into a given exercise. The
- ability to remember how a combination goes does not generally come
- naturally; it must be learned. Many newcomers are alarmed at the fact
- that their minds are not up to this; but it takes time for the mind to
- pick up this ability. It also takes time for the various steps--and
- there are so many of them!--to get "into your muscles" so you can do
- them and link them together at short notice.
-
- 3. Discouragement is the beginning dancer's worst enemy. Many of us
- have been dismayed to discover that ballet is much more difficult than
- we would have expected. It is particularly disheartening the first
- couple of times when you find that you just can't do some combination
- at all and have to stand on the side watching the others. And even
- after that passes--which it will--you may still feel that you are the
- worst klutz in the class. But (a) everybody else will be too worried
- about their own performance to notice you and (b) many on this group
- have reported that, when they had a moment to look around, they
- discovered that the others are doing no better than they were.
-
- 4. As an older dancer you have the advantages of greater maturity,
- life experience, and motivation. Older dancers tend to listen more
- carefully and to make a more serious effort to follow instructions.
- Indeed, one of the dangers is that you may try so hard that you forget
- that you are here to dance. Occasionally it helps just to forget about
- all the technicalities (for a moment), loosen up, and just dance.
-
- Finally, a word from Shannon:
- Personally I love teaching adults and would probably quit teaching if
- I couldn't have at least one class with them. I always come away from
- the studio with a smile on my face.
-
-
- 3.5. I'm thinking of returning to ballet after -- years; how should I
- start? Are there videos I can buy?
-
- Your best bet is to look for a school (question 3.11), just as if
- you were starting for the first time. There's not much you can learn from
- watching videotapes; the consensus of the group has been that your money
- is much better spent on classes. Steve Keeley put his finger on the main
- failing of dance videos: they can't give you corrections. You may want to
- observe a class, if you can, and see how it looks. If you still remember
- enough (in your mind and your muscles), you will quickly find your proper
- level, but take a beginners' class when you first go back.
-
-
- 3.6. I'm a man. I feel funny about taking ballet classes. I mean, isn't
- it...er...a little...?
-
- Well, it isn't easy for a man to start ballet, at least in English-
- speaking countries. There are a number of reasons for this. (1) There
- seems to be a persistent feeling, at least in our culture, that dancing of
- any kind is somehow *unmanly.* (2) We wear those tights, showing off our
- legs, our butts, and our male endowment: surely no "normal" man would go
- about dressed like that, even on stage! (3) Some of the movements in
- ballet, especially the use of the arms, look a little...well...flowery.
- (4) Many male dancers have been gay and have made little or no attempt to
- conceal the fact.
-
- Let's look at these points.
-
- (1) When I was a kid, nobody ever said explicitly that dancing was
- unmanly, but the idea was somehow in the air. (In grade school they tried
- teaching us folk dancing; the girls loved it; we boys hated it.) If you've
- internalized this attitude, then you have a real obstacle to overcome if
- you've ever contemplated ballet classes or have had them urged upon you.
- All I can say is that a ballet class is not a lot of effeminate flouncing
- about. It's damned hard work, demanding precision, discipline, concen-
- tration, and control. It's not for wimps. Take one ballet class, and
- you'll discover that; it will hit you like a ton of bricks, and the next
- day you'll ache from one end of your body to the other.
-
- I should point out that classes aren't like performances. Most
- of the classic ballets are about legends, fairy tales, or supernatural
- beings like enchanted swans. This kind of thing tends to be off-putting
- for many men, and the notion that this must be what classes are like
- is likely to repel any man. But ballet classes are nothing like that.
- They aren't about swans. They're about speed, coordination, stamina, and
- strength. You can be sure Knute Rockne didn't send football players to
- ballet classes so they could imitate swans on the playing field.
-
- (2) Dancewear is related to those demands. Dance involves your
- entire body, and there is great emphasis not only on how you move, but on
- how you hold yourself. In performance, every movement must be shown off
- to best advantage to the audience, and in class, every movement must be
- subjected to the minutest scrutiny from your teacher. The ideal, I
- suppose, would be to dance naked, but since this is generally unacceptable,
- the clothes worn must reveal everything, especially the muscles of the legs
- and hips. Hence the use of leotards and tights, designed to be as
- revealing--and unforgiving--as possible within the limits of decency.
-
- (3) The movements in ballet arise from three traditions: folk
- dancing, the body language of the 16th-century French court, and fencing.
- (Think of how a fencer holds his free arm, for example.) The use of the
- arms was strongly influenced by the last two of these traditions and was
- further refined as ballet was transformed from an amateur activity to a
- professional, theatrical art. If it bothers you when the teacher tells
- you to move the arm slowly and gracefully...well, that's just part of the
- tradition, and you just have to get used to it.
-
- (4) As for gay men in dance, sure, there are many gay dancers.
- There are also many gay accountants, athletes, clergymen, construction
- workers, engineers, journalists, lawyers, policemen, politicians,
- professors, scientists, writers...the list goes on and on. If gays are
- more visible in ballet, it's probably because there has been, historically,
- less prejudice in the performing arts and, in ballet, more emphasis on
- sheer ability.
-
- But the gay guys are in class for the same purpose as the straight
- guys and the gay and straight women--to develop and improve their technique
- and style in one of the most difficult and exacting arts known to man. If
- being around gay men makes you nervous, then yes, you are going to be
- uncomfortable in a ballet class (and lots of other places as well). I can
- only suggest, repectfully, that you do what I had to do myself: grow up and
- become more secure in your own sexuality.
-
- Many times, actually, you'll find you're the only man in the class.
- If you're serious and work hard, the women will love having you there. You
- will be surrounded by young women who are as scantily clad as you are. You
- are there to work, not to ogle, but there's no denying that it's *very*
- pleasant to work in such company. And yes, it's a great place to meet
- girls. And when you dance across the floor, you can watch the girl in
- front of you and try to dance with her, as if the two of you were partners.
- It isn't as good as actual partnering, but it adds a great deal to the
- enjoyment of a class, and I think it improves your dancing.
-
- I'll tell you this: once you are caught up in a ballet class and
- struggling with the work, you don't have time to be worried about
- "manliness."
-
- And if you contemplate a professional career, the prejudice will
- work in your favor. Aspiring ballerinas are abundant, but male dancers are
- a scarce commodity. Someone once told me that, in the 1950s, all a man had
- to do to get a job with American Ballet Theatre was be able to walk without
- crutches! That's no doubt an exaggeration, and very unfair to ABT and
- their dancers, but it suggests what the employment situation can be for a
- man.
-
-
- 3.7. Okay, I'm starting ballet. What equipment do I need?
-
- For males, tights, a T-shirt (or, optionally, a leotard), a dance
- belt, and shoes. For females, tights, a leotard, and shoes. For either
- sex, a "unitard" (a single garment combining tights and top) is also
- acceptable. Modern dancers tend to go barefoot and are less likely to wear
- tights.
-
- Tights and T-shirt (tucked in) are the traditional wear for ballet
- classes. They offer an unobstructed view of the leg muscles all the way up
- to the hip where turnout (Question 2.9) originates. But these days, things
- have become very casual, and in many schools dancers may be seen wearing
- anything from bicycle shorts to warmup pants. Studios are rarely air-
- conditioned, because the muscles are more supple and flexible when warm,
- and in hot weather bare legs are commonplace. Unitards with legs cut off
- in mid-thigh are popular. When in doubt, ask your teacher or observe what
- others in the class wear.
-
- The tights can be running tights of the kind you can get in most
- sporting-goods stores; but hold out for solid colors. Some teachers are
- fussy about colors and others aren't; moreover, some schools have a dress
- code in which color indicates your level in the school. When in doubt,
- ask your teacher before you buy. Otherwise, black or navy blue is a safe
- choice for men and black or pink is a safe choice for women. Lycra tights
- are much more forgiving in the matter of fit than all-nylon ones are.
- Men's tights must not sag at the crotch: use suspenders, use a belt (draw
- the tights up high and roll them over the belt), or wear a unitard. The
- sensible thing would be to wear a leotard over the tights to keep them
- pulled up, but for some unfathomable reason only women wear leotards over
- the tights; men who wear leotards wear them *under* the tights. (This rule
- has been frequently, and successfully, challenged, however.) Footed tights
- look better, but unfooted ones are less apt to sag; if you choose to wear a
- unitard, you may prefer an unfooted one.
-
- A dance belt is the dancer's equivalent of an athletic supporter.
- (Don't try to get by with a supporter; get the belt.) It's a funny-looking
- thing, designed to prevent elastic lines showing through the tights. It
- holds the male organs up against the abdomen, to avoid strains on the sup-
- porting ligaments. The wide fabric panel in front supports the virilia;
- the narrow strap in the back fits between the buttocks to hold the belt in
- place. A dance belt takes some getting used to, but it is essential for
- ballet training, since it affords the teacher an unobstructed view of the
- muscles in the upper thigh. NEVER try to dance without the belt; doing so
- entails the risk of abdominal strains which can be very painful and may
- take several days to subside. (There is also a discussion of dance belts
- in the alt.lycra FAQ at http://members.aol.com/rg1004/lycra.faq.html.)
-
- The shoes are ordinary ballet shoes; pointe shoes come later on.
- Fitting ballet shoes is a real art. They should be tight but not painfully
- so; if you can, get a teacher or an experienced dancer to check the fit.
- Leather shoes tend to stretch with time; canvas ones tend to shrink if
- washed. They come to about $30 here in New York. Not a bad price, IMHO,
- and once they begin to wear out, they make *wonderful* house slippers.
-
- There is a narrow lace that runs around the entire top of the shoe;
- you tighten this to hold the shoe on. For many dancers' feet, this isn't
- enough, so shoes normally come with a pair of elastic bands, which may be
- used to help keep the shoe on. The ends of the elastic are sewn onto the
- top of the shoe at a point just below the ankle bone. (Make sure the
- stitches do not pass through that lace, or it may not move freely.) Some
- dancers attach the elastic in a single loop; others make two pieces that
- cross over the foot. If you're as clumsy at sewing as I am, you can secure
- the elastic in the desired position with rubber cement. This isn't strong
- enough for actual wear, but it will hold the elastic in place while you're
- sewing it.
-
-
- 3.8. I'm a guy! Do I *have* to wear tights?
-
- For some reason, many men have problems with this, especially
- teenagers. And yes, you probably have to. They're worn for a reason, not
- just to make you look ridiculous or like a sex object <grin>. Your teacher
- needs to be able to see how the muscles in your legs work, as explained
- in the previous question. Any garment that obscures these lines interferes
- with proper instruction.
-
- I suppose you could get by wearing some of the alternatives men-
- tioned in the previous question; but what's the matter with tights, anyway?
- They're worn in the gym, by cyclists, by joggers, even on the ski slopes.
- There may well be more men wearing tights to-day than at any previous time
- in history. So why worry about wearing them in ballet class?
-
- One other point: When you start ballet, you are entering a new
- world, a completely different one with its own standards, ends, and customs.
- Such an experience is a rare gift, one not granted to everybody, and you
- should make the most of it. You should relish all the little peculiarities
- of the balletic tradition as well as the hard work in class. For me these
- peculiarities include the funny clothes we wear; these are as much a part
- of ballet as the gown and wig worn by Horace Rumpole are a part of English
- law. (And if you think tights are strange, wait until you see how ballet
- shoes are made.)
-
-
- 3.9. Where can I buy dancewear?
-
- There are stores that specialize in dancewear. Try the Yellow
- Pages; look at the ads in a magazine like Dance Magazine; or look in the
- files `mailorder.txt' and `shoes.txt' in the Dancers' Archive.
-
- It's harder to find dancewear for men than for women, because the
- market is smaller and many places do not stock clothing for men, or stock
- only a very limited selection. For men's tights, try sporting-goods
- stores, and remember also that tights are unisex. As long as you don't get
- sheer pink tights with red spangles, who's going to know whether you're
- wearing men's or women's? In cases of absolute desperation, you can try
- women's non-dance tights, available in any department store--but be warned
- that they're usually very sheer and look funny on a man. If you have to
- resort to these, try a light color: the sheerness is not as obvious in that
- case. (And beware of that conspicuous gusset or panel between the legs on
- many brands that marks them as women's tights. That can be embarrassing
- if you should do a cambr'e forward or a promenade en arabesque. I've seen
- some women's tights by Danskin that do not have the panel.)
-
- Buying shoes is troublesome, because it takes time to learn how to
- tell when a shoe fits properly. (It must fit like a glove.) Salespeople
- in dancewear stores may or may not know. It may be a good idea to show the
- shoes on your feet to your teacher and get him/her to pass on them.
-
-
- 3.10. How can I make a tutu?
-
- I know of two sources of information. First, _Beginning Ballet_, by Joan
- Lawson (London: A & C Black, New York: Theatre Arts, 1994, ISBN 0-87830-
- 056-2), has some simple designs for dance costumes, including a tutu.
- Second, Claudia Folts has written a set of four books (see the Reading
- List, Section 6.1.12) that provide instructions and patterns. They are
- available from
- Tutu.Com
- PO Box 472287,
- Charlotte, N.C. 28247-2287 USA
- (704) 542-2433
- Fax: (704) 542.1564
- Orders: (800) 420-2080
- Email: tutuclub@aol.com
- Web: http://www.tutu.com
-
- 3.11. How do I find/choose a school or teacher?
-
- If you know any dancers, ask them. If you don't, look in the
- Yellow Pages under dance instruction. You can also call the city's leading
- dance company (if you have one) and ask whether they have a school.
- There's also an extensive database on dance schools at
- http://www.pav.org/schools/CITYSEARCH.HTML
- And you can post in this group. If there are more than one studio, as
- there will be in large cities, go and try them all out. You will soon know
- when you are being well taught (see the next question).
-
- Here are some of the things you should look for:
-
- Does the class conform to the traditional format--barre, _adage_, and
- allegro? A place that offers something like ballet, jazz, and tap in
- a single class is not the place for you (unless there's no other choice
- where you live). Anything but pure, undiluted ballet (or modern) is
- not for you. Even if you plan eventually to dance in another
- tradition, ballet is the place to start.
-
- If you're an adult, do they offer a special introductory course for
- absolute beginners? Such courses are rare, but priceless; go for one
- if it's offered.
-
- Are you made to feel that you are really *dancing*, right from the
- first exercises at the barre? Is dance taught as movement or only as
- static poses?
-
- How much individual attention and correction do you get? An experi-
- enced dancer can do with less, but a beginner needs a great deal.
-
- Does the teacher instruct you in the use of the head and arms, even
- at the barre, or does (s)he just let your arms hang down like limp
- spaghetti? A great deal of what makes theatrical dance theatrical
- is the way the dancer uses his or her head and arms. The audience
- probably notices these more than the feet.
-
- Does the teacher show a good working knowledge of anatomy, and does
- (s)he pass that knowledge on to you?
-
- How does the teacher look when (s)he moves? Do you enjoy watching him/
- her move? We learn in part by conscious or unconscious imitation; is
- your teacher someone you want to imitate?
-
- Do they take time to show you how to do an unfamiliar step? Many
- teachers seem to expect you to pick a step up by watching the others;
- but watching the others is a bad habit. It makes you rely on the
- others instead of developing concentration.
-
- What is the atmosphere? Is it a warm, pleasant place to be? A good
- teacher explains, challenges, and encourages students--and answers
- their questions--without being condescending or putting them down. A
- good teacher gains the respect of his/her class by showing respect for
- them.
-
- How long is the class? The standard is an hour and a half; some
- studios give you only an hour and a quarter, which is too rushed.
- Other things being equal, hold out for the full hour and a half.
-
- Do they have a live accompanist, or taped music? Some excellent
- schools use tape, but a live accompanist is nearly always better.
- Do they have you dance to fine (classical) music?
-
- Barbara Early's book, _Finding the Best Dance Instruction_ (see
- the References in Part 4) is an excellent guide.
-
- One final word: Don't be put off by a ratty-looking studio.
- Ballet schools are frequently hand-to-mouth operations, with little or no
- money to spare for decor or even maintenance, and the best instruction I
- ever had anywhere was in an atrociously ugly, shabby, and depressing plant.
-
-
- 3.12. How can I tell if a teacher is good?
-
- I don't know whether you can, at the very start, although if (s)he
- makes class an unpleasant experience, (s)he's bad. One way to find out is
- to shop around if you can. The guidelines in question 3.11 should help.
- After you've tried three or four, you will know who's good, or good for
- you, at any rate. Part of the problem is that a good teacher for one
- dancer may not be so for another. The ideal teacher is the one who gives
- you what you need just now. Again, don't hesitate to *shop around*,
- even if you feel satisfied with your current teacher. Many people have
- discovered wonderful teachers just because their regular teacher was, for
- some reason, unavailable.
-
-
- 3.13. If the teacher makes me feel good, won't I become overconfident?
-
- Ballet is a difficult and exacting art, and for most of us progress
- is slow. Because of this, the danger isn't overconfidence but discourage-
- ment. Besides, people who feel good about themselves tend to perform
- better at most things than people who don't. If you are seriously worried
- about this, try alternating classes with a "feel-good" teacher and a
- fusser. The feel-good teacher will keep you dancing and the fusser will
- keep you honest. (The ideal is a teacher who does both.) In any case,
- feeling good really comes from knowing you have given the class your best
- effort (and the *best* feeling comes the day you discover you can do a step
- or combination you never imagined you could do).
-
-
- 3.14. I live in ----; where can I take classes?
-
- Again, look in the yellow pages or ask around. There is also a
- listing in the back of Dance Magazine every month. A project is in the
- works to compile a directory of schools for the Dancers' Archive. There's
- no telling, at this point, when it will be ready or how comprehensive it
- will be. But you can also post that question to this group; that's one of
- the things this group is for.
-
- Another alternative, if you are looking for a school outside your own area,
- is to use the nationwide Yellow Pages, available on CD-ROM at many public
- libraries. Look for Dance Instruction and copy the names. You may be
- able to get further information on schools from Dance/USA. Bonnie Brooks
- writes:
- Dance/USA has listings and Member Profiles on all of its member
- companies available (there is a cost for the Member Profiles), as
- well as local and regional dance service organizations. Address
- and phone:
- Dance/USA
- 1156 15th Street N.W. Suite 820
- Washington, DC 20005
- phone: (202)833-1717
- fax: (202)833-2686
- email: danceusa@tmn.com
- If there are particular cities you're interested in, we can also look
- at our entire database of dance companies (including non-members) to
- give you information about dance activity in particular cities. We
- don't have extensive information about non-members, but either way it
- would be a start.
-
- You can also consult colleges and universities in your area. Dance
- Magazine publishes an annual College Guide, usually announced in their
- February or March issue. The current (1996) price is $20.45 (US) including
- postage and handling; write to 33 West 60th Street, 10th Floor, New York,
- New York 10023 or call (212) 245-9050.
-
-
- 3.15. I don't know a thing about ballet and I'm trying to select a school
- for my child. Where should I look? And what should I look for?
-
- Barbara Early's book, _Finding the Best Dance Instruction_, listed in the
- References in Part 4, is a good place to start. Some of the pointers
- in the previous question also apply here. In addition, here are some
- suggestions posted by people on alt.arts.ballet. (Thanks to Sheila
- <LEHNERS@msn.com>, Frances Kemmish, the Collier Family, and Lobelia, from
- whose posts the following points were gathered.) These pointers are in no
- particular order. Note that many of them require observing a class; some
- teachers don't permit this, in which case you may have to resort to a
- little discreet espionage.
-
- As for where to look, you can try the Yellow Pages, but they don't provide
- any guidance. Staff at a dancewear store may be dancers, and you can try
- them. If there's a professional company where you live, try calling them
- and asking for suggestions. And Jeffrey Salzberg points out that many
- cities have dance councils which may be able to help you.
-
- As for evaluating a school, note first that, as Sheila points out, if
- your child is very young (age 4 or 5), (s)he should start with a creative
- movement class, not half tap, half ballet. From this (s)he should move on
- to ballet or modern. Tap can be started at any time but is truly not as
- beneficial as ballet.
-
- Specific points:
-
- Does (s)he have authority and assurance when teaching? Does (s)he hold
- the attention of the class or are there children running about and
- chattering out of control? This of course is an indication of the
- teacher's ability to control the class and create a good learning
- environment.
-
- Do the students seem to be performing the movements with ease and
- grace? That's right!! When proper foundations are built and students
- are taught at their own level, new steps come naturally and even Miss
- Klutz looks like (s)he knows what (s)he is doing!
-
- Does (s)he have some good common sense?
-
- Does the teacher explain what (s)he wants in terms the student can
- understand?
-
- Does (s)he demonstrate the movements carefully and take trouble over
- getting them right, or does (s)he seem to think that limbering and high
- kicks are all that matter?
-
- Does (s)he carefully 'break down' (take apart) new movements?
-
- Does (s)he generally give corrections, or does (s)he just show the
- steps and let the pupils get on as best they can?
-
- When (s)he makes corrections, does (s)he immediately follow up with
- praise when the child shows an effort to improve?
-
- Does the teacher use humor (but not sarcasm) to relax the class?
-
- Is her criticism constructive or destructive?
-
- Have the students been inspired to work hard and find pleasure in that
- work?
-
- What mattered to me [the mother of a three-year-old] was the attitude
- of the teachers, who were kind and generous and loving to the children.
-
- Does (s)he encourage the children to be expressive in their dancing
- by describing or having them describe the mood of the music or the
- movement?
-
- Does (s)he insist on pupils being neatly dressed (and is (s)he neatly
- dressed herself)?
-
- Another poster puts it this way: Do the students appear to be well
- groomed with hair neatly away from the face and dressed modestly in
- leotard and tights? Some people feel that students who are dressed
- uniformly work better as a group. It may also be easier for the
- teacher to spot mistakes.
-
- Does the class appear to be at a similiar age (within 3 years) and
- development?
-
- Speak to some of the other "ballet moms." They're probably biased, but
- some may be able to help you.
-
- Also do a little research on the methods of dancing (ie. Cechetti,
- Royal Academy etc.) and choose which you would prefer you child to do.
- Some say it makes no difference but some make quite a fuss about it.
-
- For mothers of young girls: at what age will the teacher let girls wear
- pointe (toe) shoes? Girls should not do pointe work (toe dancing)
- before the age of 10 or 11, because until then the bones in their feet
- are not well enough developed to support their weight. For further
- information on this point, see Question 3.23.
-
- In addition to these points, Alex Hill has provided the following list of
- danger signs:
-
- 1. If they display competition trophies, go somewhere else.
- 2. If they offer a huge variety of styles for children regardless of age,
- like jazz, tap, hip-hop, lyrical, tumbling, baton, etc., and especially if
- they offer "combo" classes with various styles combined, go somewhere else.
- 3. If they handle technique level promotions by age group, or by class
- group, rather than by individual assessment, go somewhere else.
- 4. As someone else mentioned, if they can't converse intelligently about a
- ballet syllabus (Vaganova, RAD, etc.), go somewhere else.
- 5. If they perform recitals where the dances are called "routines" or
- "numbers," go somewhere else.
- 6. If most classes and performances are accompanied by recorded pop music,
- go somewhere else.
- 7. If the name of the studio begins with "Miss (insert name here)'s School
- of Dance," go somewhere else. [Note: Someone on the newsgroup once said to
- steer clear of schools whose names included the words "Stage" or "Star."]
- 8. If it looks like many of the teachers are still in high school, go
- somewhere else.
- 9. If the instructor "teaches" by standing in front of the class with
- his/her back turned, expecting everyone to follow the movements, go
- somewhere else.
- 10. If the students and instructors don't habitually use French ballet
- terminology, go somewhere else.
-
- Schools range all the way from professional-track schools (where the
- emphasis is placed on eventually becoming a professional dancer) to schools
- for triflers (where, as Amy Reusch puts it, the emphasis seems to be on
- recital photo-opportunities for the parents and grandparents). In some
- circles, schools of the latter type are scornfully known as "Dolly Dinkle"
- schools. In larger cities, there's a broad spectrum from which to choose.
- Any professional-track school should welcome serious recreational dancers.
- Such students are more numerous, and, as someone posted here once, they're
- the backbone of the support for ballet in this country. And if you're
- forced to a choice between the two extremes, the professional-track school
- is the one to go for, because your child is more likely to be well trained
- there.
-
- Once you've selected a school, trust the teachers there and trust their
- judgement. Don't hover and don't try to second-guess the teachers.
-
-
- 3.16. What is this "Dolly Dinkle" business, anyway?
-
- The name was originally "Dolly Dingle," an artist's character from the
- 1920s or 30s. Somehow the -g- was changed to a -k- and, for some unknown
- reason, the name, "Dolly Dinkle," has come to be associated with everything
- that can go wrong in dance instruction for children. PriMoDnc
- <primodnc@aol.com> put it most concisely and eloquently:
-
- Dolly is the quintessential bad dance teacher, but she doesn't know
- that she is bad. She can be found in small towns and in large cities
- all of the USA, not just in the South. You can find just about any
- form of dance taught at her studio, none of them taught well, plus
- things like charm, flaming baton twirling, beauty pageant preparation,
- anything to do with the outer fringes of showbiz. She will have the
- biggest ad in the yellow pages, will belong to numerous dance organiza-
- tions in the hopes of adding credibility to her resume. She goes off
- to weekend workshops in the latest dance craze and comes back certified
- in two days. She loves garish costumes for her recitals, buys the
- recital routines mail order and is not aware that dancing on a cement
- floor is bad for the dancers.
-
-
- 3.17. What about studying in a university dance department?
-
- A. Amy Reusch compiled the following list of things to consider.
- Additional comments are from other posters on alt.arts.ballet.
-
- 1 - Are you hoping for a professional career as a dancer, choreographer,
- teacher, dance therapist, historian, critic, or not sure yet?
-
- 2 - Are you interested in ballet or modern particularly?
- *Comment* My opinion, which is based only on personal experience,
- is for classical ballet; it is by far best to get connected to a
- company school. The demographics clearly point towards beginning
- your training at an early age, though it must be admitted that men
- have a little more room for later starts. Yes, some can first go
- to college, but that some make up the small exception to the rule.
- I guess I'd say, take an inventory of your talents and prospects.
- Ballet's demands are explicit, see if you meet them, then off to
- the company school. --jonb@u.washington.edu
-
- 3 - Why are you considering college? Are you going to college for the
- academics, for conservatory training, or for the experience of "college
- life"?
- *Comment* I have a daughter who is very interested in a dance
- major. Actually she would like to wait on college and audition for
- professional programs but I am strongly against that choice. I
- feel my college dance degree (TCU) has gotten me much farther than
- my performing years (Ft. Worth Ballet) would have on their own. A
- college setting which provides performance opportunities seems to
- be the best of both worlds. --tiptoa@aol.com
-
- *Comment* I ended up at the University of North Carolina at Chapel
- Hill and studied biology. There wasn't (and still isn't) a dance
- program there; it's part of the physical education department, but
- I was able to take some ballet and dabble in modern. I graduated
- with a biology degree and moved to NY to study with Merce. Two
- years later I became a member of the company. I would STRONGLY
- advise EVERYONE who is interested in becoming a modern dancer to go
- to college first. Even if you ARE going to study dance, I think
- it's so necessary to have that kind of experience where you can
- grow into your own person and get away from the "dancer life" for a
- while. College and working in a restaurant (sounds silly, I know,
- but so few dancers around me have EVER had a job) were the two
- greatest things I could possibly have done to further my under-
- standing of and respect for the fabulous career I have chosen. I
- know that I was lucky and this road may not be for everyone, but
- it worked for me. --banu@aol.com
-
- 4 - It's often a good idea to go to a school close to if not in a
- metropolitan area where it's possible to get to classes outside the
- University, in case you feel the need to supplement the technique
- classes offered there or be able to get to auditions.
-
- 5 - What kind of performance opportunities exist for students?
- *Comment* ...Criteria to consider might be performance opportu-
- nities. I have had students attend programs (Akron U. for example)
- where they actually get onstage very seldom. Dance is a performing
- art! Other programs like Butler and TCU provide many settings in
- which to perform often. --tiptoa@aol.com
-
- 6 - Does the school audition, or does it accept students based on
- their academic grades? It may be an indication of the quality of the
- department.
-
- 7 - What is the school's track record placing dancers in professional
- companies?
- *Comment* When you look for a school be sure that you take into
- consideration who's teaching and what the level of the students
- are at when they graduate. Are ex-students working in the field
- and where are they working? A schools track record is very
- important. Be sure to check the RECENT track record as schools'
- faculty changes and departments can suddenly change direction. A
- dance department is only as good as the faculty it currently has.
- --jsatinoff@aol.com
-
- 8 - How are the various schools rated?
- *Comment* My daughter is a serious ballet student and is consid-
- ering a dance major in college. We have conducted considerable
- research on schools that have dance majors, and I recommend that
- you consult a book published in 1994 by ARCO entitled "The
- Performing Arts Major's College Guide," compiled by the former
- Director of Admissions of the Juilliard School ($20.00 from local
- bookseller or check your public library). The book contains a
- listing of dance programs and categorizes them as "Most Highly
- Recommended Programs," "Recommended Programs," and "Other Note-
- worthy Programs" as determined by surveying dance and drama
- departments at 700 selective colleges and universities. The "Most
- Highly Recommended U.S. Programs" (in alphabetical order) are:
- Arizona State University;
- Boston Conservatory;
- Butler University;
- California Institute of the Arts;
- Hartford Ballet/University of Hartford/Hartt School;
- Indiana University;
- Juilliard School;
- New World School of the Arts (Fla.);
- New York University;
- North Carolina School of the Arts;
- Ohio State University;
- Southern Methodist University;
- SUNY, Purchase;
- University of California, Irvine;
- University of Utah;
- Obviously, some of these programs are better at classical ballet
- and others are more oriented to modern. There are another 50 or so
- schools mentioned as "Recommended Programs." --bond@ix.netcom.com
-
- 9 - There is more information on university dance departments available
- on the Internet.
- You can try the dance links at
- http://www.dancer.com/dance-links/
- or Peterson's College Guide at
- http://www.petersons.com/vpa/select/dancese.html
- or do a search on dance+program on Alta Vista, Yahoo, or any of the
- other Web Search facilities.
-
- B. Leigh Witchel says: The question is a hard one to answer. What
- do you want to do? How old are you? A lot of questions need to be asked.
- Here's a brief impersonal checklist.
-
- If you're under the age of fifteen, stop asking this question
- altogether (you're too young to be making yourself nuts).
-
- If you seriously want to dance in a major ballet company, you're
- not going to college yet. This is really almost a given, though there are
- exceptions. You want to go to a good company with a good school attached
- which takes dancers from its school as apprentices and full company members
- (not all do.) The best schools are like the best colleges--their name
- can open doors for you. Having gone to SAB doesn't mean you are a great
- dancer, but it does mean that you survived the selection process and have
- the physical attributes necessary to do ballet as defined in America.
- (This can be argued, but that's the way it is for now.)
-
- If your family resists this idea, or if you yourself feel that
- college is more important, consider one of a few colleges which actually
- place dancers into company positions or consider going to a good company
- school and going to a local college part time, to get some of the required
- courses out of the way. If you choose to go to a more competitive college,
- you can transfer the credits later.
-
- You are going to have to ask yourself seriously what your career
- prospects are when you make this decision. College dance is an entirely
- different animal than college ballet. There are quite a few colleges with
- modern dance programs whose alumnae regularly work in top modern companies.
-
- You should also ask yourself what you love. Learning of any sort
- can only improve your dancing. Exposure to other disciplines makes you a
- better dancer. But ballet on the top levels in this country requires a
- devotion verging on the monastic.
-
- C. I would add: Remember that there is life after dance, and in
- ballet it typically begins in your forties or fifties. (In modern dance,
- some people can continue indefinitely.) So start planning early for the
- day when you stop dancing, so you don't end up behind the counter in a
- fast-food place. (This has been known to happen.)
-
-
- 3.18. Where can I find out about Summer dance programs?
-
- You can ask in this group; but in addition Dance Magazine regularly
- publishes a special section on Summer programs in their January issue.
- There is also information on some Summer programs at
- <http://www.dancer.com/summer>
- This site is updated frequently, so it's useful to revisit occasionally.
-
-
- 3.19. I took my first class and I couldn't understand what was going on!
-
- This, I'm afraid, is all too typical. One's very first ballet
- class is apt to be an extremely discouraging experience. In the first
- place, ballet is *much* harder than most of us expect it to be. Second,
- you're asked to do things you don't know how to do (the terminology is all
- strange, and most of it is in French), so you stand there like a dummy
- while everybody else in the class goes bounding across the studio.
-
- The main problem is that the vast majority of ballet classes are
- ongoing: they don't start out in September with rank beginners and turn out
- some kind of finished product in June; they just go on and on and people
- can walk in and begin any time. The only exceptions to this are some
- children's courses and university courses, where they *do* start with rank
- beginners in September. And at the David Howard Dance Center in New York
- they used occasionally to offer a short course called "Introduction to
- Ballet" for those who knew nothing at all. This was the ideal way to
- start, because everybody in the class was presumed to be an absolute
- beginner, but such courses are rare.
-
- Failing this, look for Moss and Leopold's _The Joffrey Ballet
- School's Ballet-Fit_ (cited in the bibliography, Part 6). This book is
- specifically written for adult beginners and is ideal.
-
- Because of this, your classmates are all at different stages of
- development, especially since you may stay a beginner for two or more years
- and many of those supposed "beginners" with whom you're comparing yourself
- have that much background behind them. And just to delight you further, a
- few experienced dancers, and even some professionals, will occasionally
- show up for a beginners' class, maybe just to get an extra workout, and
- they *really* make you feel like a klutz.
-
- Under those circumstances, it's no wonder that so many people try
- one ballet class, think, "Oh, I'll never learn this!" and never come back
- again.
-
- Most teachers will take a little extra care when an absolute
- beginner shows up, but there isn't much they can do, because there simply
- isn't time to stop and explain each new step for newcomers and to give them
- all the correction they need. So even with the best intentioned teachers,
- it's mainly sink-or-swim. In a sink-or-swim situation, the only thing you
- can do is *persist*. That's what sets apart those people you watch and
- wonder at in your very first class: they were presented with the same
- discouraging picture you're seeing, and they persisted.
-
- If you are in a locale where you can shop around, you can try to
- find a teacher who will take time to explain things for you, but remember
- that in a large class it isn't practical to make everyone wait while you
- master the step. You are not supposed to watch the others while you dance,
- but at this early stage nearly everyone does. Certainly you should watch
- everyone when you are not dancing yourself (for example, when you are
- waiting your turn to do a combination). And go to performances and watch
- the dancers. You learn dancing through a combination of seeing, hearing,
- and doing. Learning your way around a studio takes time, and with time--
- and sheer, dogged persistence--it will come to you.
-
- In any case, bear in mind that the other people in the class will
- *not*, repeat *NOT*, be laughing at you behind your back. They've all been
- there themselves. You will be lost a good deal of the time for perhaps the
- first six months, but gradually it all comes together. Some outside read-
- ing will help; look around in the library or in bookstores for introductory
- texts that describe the various steps. (Some of these are listed in the
- bibliography, part 6.1.) You will never learn to dance just by reading
- about it, but when a step has flummoxed you in class, it can help to read a
- description of it in the relative tranquility of your own home. You might
- also consider getting the ballet CD-ROM described in Question 2.18.
-
-
- 3.20 I keep getting mixed up!
-
- We all do; don't feel bad about it. Getting mixed up and making
- mistakes are to the dancer what wrong notes are to the musician or typos
- to the writer. And in a class, it's usually less important to do the right
- thing than to do whatever you do the right way and on the music. Even
- professionals, dancers who have been doing this for years, get mixed up;
- I've seen it happen. If it can happen to the pros, there's no reason for
- the rest of us to worry.
-
-
- 3.21. What is "B-plus"?
-
- B-plus is _crois'ee derri`ere_, usually used to describe the
- position you take before doing a combination. You stand in _crois'ee_ with
- the working leg to the back, relaxed and slightly bent but ready to move
- when the combination begins. The term originated in the New York City
- Ballet, and the "B" apparently stands for Balanchine.
-
-
- 3.22. What are the basic movements in dance?
-
- Somebody classified all the ways of moving in dance into seven
- categories. These are:
- plier, to bend 'elancer, to dart
- 'etendre, to stretch glisser, to glide
- relever, to rise tourner, to turn
- sauter, to leap
- The origin of this categorization is obscure. Contrary to what an earlier
- version of this FAQ stated, it is almost certainly not Noverre's (Question
- 4.?) work. The earliest version I have seen appears in Feuillet's
- _Chor'egraphie_ (Question 5.1); he omits darting and includes beats
- (movements in which one leg beats against the other) instead. Tom Baird
- has pointed out that you can't dart when wearing the heavy costumes used in
- Baroque dance and suggests that the list as we have it to-day must date
- back to the 19th Century at the earliest.
-
- 3.23. How can I learn to raise my leg over my shoulder, the way I see other
- dancers doing?
-
- The ability to do this is known as _extension_. It is partly a
- matter of training (and turnout) and partly a matter of physique. Dancing
- masters distinguish between two basic body types in dancers, known--in
- French, inevitably--as _arqu'e_ and _jarret'e_. This distinction was
- first drawn by Noverre (question 4.6), around 1760. The terminology is
- misleading, because in French, _arqu'e_ means bowlegged and _jarret'e_
- knock-kneed. But although even dancers' legs are rarely perfectly
- straight, the difference is actually functional: An _arqu'e_ dancer is
- tightly knit, doesn't have much extension, but is good at jumps, while a
- _jarret'e_ dancer is loose-limbed, not as good at jumps, but has great
- extension. Noverre said it was a mistake to teach these two types of
- dancer in exactly the same way.
-
- If you are _arqu'e_, you will probably never get your leg over your
- head. But we can all improve our extension by proper exercise. Once you
- have been taught stretching exercises in class, you can do them daily at
- home, and you should. You will be surprised at how much more extension you
- have after a year or two. Yoga exercises are also valuable; they stretch
- muscles that even ballet class sometimes misses.
-
- For an excellent summary of stretching exercises, including a
- reading list, see the stretching FAQ by Brad Appleton, available from
- http://www.enteract.com/~bradapp/docs/rec/stretching/
- Note that Brad's sources all recommend holding a stretch for *at least*
- fifteen seconds, to overcome the "stretch reflex." If they are right, then
- stretches at the barre, as they are done in most ballet classes, are too
- short; you should hold them longer when doing them at home.
-
-
- 3.24. When can my daughter start toe dancing?
-
- Girls must not go up on pointe (dance or exercise on their toes)
- until the bones of their feet are fully developed and the muscles--not only
- in the arches and legs, but also the lower torso--are strong enough to bear
- the stress. (Joan Lawson says ten; Gretchen Warren says eleven. Barbara
- Early quotes an orthopedic surgeon who says, not until two years after
- menarche. Individuals vary, however, and this must ultimately be a
- judgement call by the teacher. In some cases, it may be wise to get a
- physician's opinion as well, but pointe work before the age of ten is, or
- ought to be, out of the question.) They should also have had several years
- (at least three and preferably more) of proper training. All of this
- requires careful evaluation on the part of the teacher. Note that we have
- three requirements here: bones, muscles, and training.
-
- Once a dancer is ready, preparation for pointe work is a slow and
- gradual process. At first, it is just strengthening exercises at the
- barre--for example, simply going up on pointe and coming back down--for
- perhaps no more than five or ten minutes. It is only after six months to
- a year of this that the girls start dancing on pointe in the center. The
- entire process takes time and close supervision by the teacher. If a
- parent is knowledgeable about pointe work, (s)he should observe the pointe
- work to see that enough time is spent at the barre.
-
- Girls are sometimes allowed to go on pointe much younger--for
- example, at age 8 or 9. This may be the result of ignorance on the part
- of teacher, or perhaps she has knuckled under to pressure from parents who
- want to see their little darlings dancing on their toes. Beware of this!
- Starting pointe work at too early an age can do irreparable harm to those
- "little darlings."
-
-
- 3.25. I'm an adult beginner. Am I too old for pointe?
-
- It isn't out of the question. But you have to be just as careful in
- preparing for pointe as young children have to. Leigh Witchel summarizes:
-
- I've seen adult beginners progress to pointe work--it takes time, and
- their lines are usually not as refined as someone who has been working
- since childhood, but if this your dream there is no reason not to try
- it as long as you approach it sensibly and realistically. Briefly:
-
- 1) Make sure to find the best training possible, and in order to
- progress to pointe, you will need to take classes frequently. Once or
- twice a week won't do it.
-
- 2) Your technique and placement off pointe is what leads to the same
- things on pointe.
-
- 3) Pointe work takes ankle strength, development and flexibility.
- Tendus and releves, and resistance work with a theraband can help.
-
- 4) Discuss all of this with your teacher. S/he can tell you most
- honestly what sort of effort and preparation this might entail.
-
- Trog Woolley says:
-
- Take it slow and steady; we oldies don't bounce as well as the
- youngsters and if you fall over it will probably hurt a lot and could
- be very serious. When you start, relax, enjoy the challenge and the
- sensation in your body and let it happen. It will. You need to
- increase the strength in your ankles. There are three really good ways
- I know to do this. Getting on pointe is one way. Another is to take
- up tightwire walking (no really! I've been doing it for years and when
- I started on pointe, my teacher was very surprised how I didn't hobble
- off the floor at the end of my first session). A more practical way is
- to get a wobble board. I don't mean one off those musical instruments
- me old mate Rolf Harris plays. It's a circle of wood with a hemisphere
- glued in the centre. You stand on it and keep the rim off the floor.
-
- The easiest way to strengthen the ankles is to stand on a step. Just
- have your toes on the step and the rest of you foot out over the edge.
- Lower yourself as much over the edge as possible. You get a great
- stretch in the back of the legs. Now stand up on tip toes as high
- as you can. Repeat ad infinitum, lowering yourself slowly. Use the
- handrail to aid balance. When this becomes too easy, do them on one
- leg.
-
-
- 3.26. I'm 5'7" (or whatever) high. Am I too tall for ballet?
-
- This question comes up regularly. For anybody who simply wants to take
- ballet for health and recreation, the answer is No: there's no height
- limit. If you hope to dance professionally, I'm afraid there isn't any
- satisfactory answer. There have been reports on the group that women
- dancers are getting higher and other reports that they are getting shorter;
- in both cases it depends a good deal on the time frame the writer has in
- mind. Gretchen Warren's book, _Classical Ballet Technique_, gives the
- following figures for the ideal female dancer: height 5'2" to 5'8" (157 to
- 174 cm), weight 85 to 115 lbs (38 to 52 kg). But PNB's principal dancer
- Ariana Lallone is reportedly 5'11" (180 cm) tall, so there is no hard and
- fast rule. In practice, what's acceptable depends on the company and on
- the director (some companies reportedly go in for tall dancers in general)
- --and on whether and how badly they want you.
-
- (P.S.: Warren's figures for the ideal male: height 5'9" to 6'2" (175 to 188
- cm), weight 135 to 165 lbs (61 to 75 kg). Remember, again, that these are
- *ideal* figures.)
-
- 3.27. What is a career in dancing like?
-
- Rough. It's demanding and highly competitive, especially for
- women. It is also psychologically stressful, because of the constant
- pressure for perfection. Salaries are better than they used to be, but
- still not good. Stagehands are paid better than dancers; so are typists.
- Your time will not be your own, since you may be called for rehearsals at
- any time, and your social life will suffer. In ballet, your career will
- be short, with poor prospects after retirement, and there is the ever-
- present danger of injuries. Merle Kessler said, "Football players, like
- prostitutes, are in the business of ruining their bodies for the pleasure
- of strangers." The same could be said, in lesser degree, of dancers. To
- make a career in ballet, you have to be head over heels in love with it:
- that, and talented and tough-minded--and lucky enough to be in the right
- place at the right time. It's even harder for modern dancers; the pay is
- worse and the job openings fewer. The one advantage modern dancers have
- over ballet dancers is that their careers last longer. Ballet dancers
- must be young and athletic and usually retire some time in their forties.
- Modern dancers may go on into their eighties.
-
-
- 3.28. My daughter's gym classes are interfering with her ballet training.
- What can I do to make the school listen?
-
- A great deal depends on the form the gym class takes; don't panic
- until you have found exactly what the gym classes entail and have discussed
- the matter with your daughter's (or son's) teacher.
-
- As for what to do if it is indeed a serious problem, one poster on
- this group replied as follows:
-
- Primarily we have found it difficult to deal directly with PE
- teachers; rather, we have educated our doctor! By finding numerous
- articles related to ballet biomechanics and running, we were able to
- show our physician that good running form contradicts good ballet
- form. The doctor signed the school district exemption for us with the
- diagnosis "serious ballet student". (Similar exemptions are given to
- sports athletes.)
-
- If the PE teacher still fails to heed the physician's note,
- (which we have been told to expect in junior high here), it has been
- suggested to us to say to the principal "Under advice of counsel, we
- need the names of all who are involved in undermining our medical
- doctor's advice." Get from him the names of the individuals that will
- appear on a legal suit, whether or not you intend to proceed, including
- the PE teachers and the principal, or anyone else who desires to take
- responsibility.
-
- At this point, the principal will probably wake up. While you
- have his attention, explain:
- 1) the number of years your child has devoted to training; explain
- the commitment; iterate the time and expense you have
- contributed to support the pursuit of her dream;
- 2) show the state's minimum PE requirement in minutes per week,
- compared to the number of minutes per week your daughter trains
- --usually the ballet training exceeds the PE requirements by
- four- or five-to-one.
- 3) show the body of evidence that you presented to your physician,
- along with the physician's exemption.
- 4) explain the damage that PE commonly inflicts on a serious ballet
- student.
- 5) Impart the information that if your daughter does suffer
- injury, you will request damages based on a full ballet career,
- which has been denied her because of the school's inflexibility
- and shortsighted stupidity.
-
- In these times, authorities prioritize matters by legal threats, thus
- attracting what they hope to avoid.
-
- Best of luck. Write back if you are successful.
-
- --William Fitzgerald wdfitzgrld@pplant.ucdavis.edu
-
-
- 3.29. How can I build a proper floor for dancing?</a>
-
- First, the reason for this question: A hard, unyielding surface
- like concrete is a killer. To avoid injuries, you need a resilient floor.
- These floors are termed "sprung floors," because the construction makes
- the floor springy.
-
- My own opinion is that this is a job best left to professionals.
- But for a discussion of ways to make a sprung floor, look at
- http://www.dancers-archive.com/rec-arts-dance/topics/dance-floor-FAQ.txt
- which is a collection of e-mail messages discussing various aspects of
- making, finishing, and maintaining dance floors.
-
-
- 3.30. How high should a ballet barre be?
-
- For a studio, the short answer is, 3 feet 6 inches (107 cm) to the
- top surface of the barre, at least in the studios I've heard about or been
- able to measure myself. It's a good idea to have a second barre 8 to 10
- inches (20 to 25 cm) below the first for children, shorter dancers, or
- those with limited extension.
-
- For private use, the answer is less clear-cut. Waist-high is one
- answer. Robert Joffrey, on the other hand, used to say that the hand on
- the barre should be the same height as the other hand when the free arm is
- in second position. This would place the barre even with the bottom of
- your breastbone. In any case, it's best if the height is adjustable to
- accommodate the dancer's height, especially if it is for a growing child
- (or children).
-
-
- 3.31. I'm job hunting. Any tips for preparing a resume?
-
- There is information available on line: look for
- http://wolfram.org/writing/ydr/index.html
- or consult the bibliography for Eric Wolfram's book.
-
- ================================
- Continued in Part 4....
- ================================
-
- --
- --
- twp@panix.com | To get nowhere, follow the crowd.
- | --Source unknown
- http://www.panix.com/~twp |
-