Recently, I taught my first ballet class. I have taught all
sorts of things in my time; I have been a certified ski instructor, a Red Cross
swimming instructor, an SAT coach, a rowing coach, and, for the last twenty
years, an art history teacher. Despite this, I did not go calmly into my first
class as a ballet teacher.
The voice in my head kept saying, “Come on, who do you think
you’re kidding? You were never even good enough to be a professional at the
lowest level!”
So, I steeled myself. I bought a new CD of ballet-class
music (Ballet Divas – piano arrangements of pop-songs ranging from “Holding Out
for a Hero” to “You’re Still the One”). I got a fresh notebook and wrote out
the combinations and track choices I had made. I re-read most of Agrippina
Vaganova’s Basic Principles of Classical Ballet. I made flyers and announced the class on
social media.
And nobody showed up, except my fourteen-year-old daughter,
whom I forced to come with me to that first class. After tendus, she was fed up
with my corrections, and went off in a huff.
For two weeks, I had the studio to myself. That was okay; I
used the time to work on a variation I am learning, and to practice things I’m
so bad at that I don’t like to do them in class, with other people watching
(brisé vole, anyone?). But I felt sad
and rejected, all the same.
Then I decided to
move the class an hour later, and last week, when I had basically given up on
the idea, five whole students showed up. All of them were beginners, though
some had a little ballet experience, or had danced as kids. All were actual adults
and not just teenagers getting a late start. The whole reason I wanted to teach
this class (which is free – I’m not experienced enough to charge for my
instruction, in my view) was to give people curious about trying ballet but
intimidated by even the relatively mellow atmosphere of the teen-adult classes
offered by the ballet school in town. Older people, people who feel like they
have the wrong body type for ballet, people who consider themselves awkward,
people who do not want to wear pink tights EVER… these people are my target
audience.
No thanks! |
Ballet, it must be
admitted, has a tendency to scare people. Whippet-thin women who actually look
good in skin-tight white leotards and flesh-toned tights, heads held haughtily
upon their long necks, swan-like arms and gazelle-like legs giving them a
preternatural grace that makes the ordinary human feel lumpen and clumsy can be
intimidating. The obscure, French vocabulary of the art form puts people on
thin ice – many a well-trained dancer I know still struggles to say “développé”
correctly (DEV-loh-pay being the most common American pronunciation). Also,
ballet asks the body to do things that it just does not do, in the common
choreography of most people’s lives; turnout is weird, walking toe-to-heel even
weirder.
Understanding
this, I want to open the door to ballet just a little wider and let the people
who have been standing there at the threshold, hesitating, step inside, even if
they never get much farther than one foot in the studio. Actually, I’d love it
if I could also lure in some people who don’t even want to approach the
threshold, but who might actually enjoy it if they gave it a try. But then I
would have to trick them into coming by calling it something else, such as,
say, “dancercise.” Euch.
A whole hour-long
class entirely devoted to the plié in first position would only interest a
ballet-geek like myself. I very much doubt that it would seduce a group of
adult beginners. So, while I did spend quite a bit of time playing around with
the idea with my five brave students, I did not only do pliés in first. We did, however lie down on the floor, on
our backs, let our extended legs fall into our natural degree of turnout, and
do what I call “air pliés” – that is, pliés without any weight-bearing.
I learned this
exercise from a somewhat zany, seventy-five-year-old former Martha Graham
dancer last summer. At first I was annoyed to have dragged my tired ass all the
way out to Bethesda just to lie on a dirty floor and do endless knee bends, but
then as she began to talk about how we should not think of bending our knees,
but rather of lifting the long muscles of the inner thighs up towards the
ceiling and towards our heads, something clicked. The great thing about doing
pliés while lying on one’s back on the floor is that all the stuff that gets
wobbly and uncertain in the upright position goes away, and one’s brain can
totally tune into the fundamental muscular process without a bunch of static.
In Inside Ballet Technique: Separating Anatomical Fact from Fiction in the Ballet Class, Valerie Grieg writes that two things – an understanding of the anatomy and kinesiology
of specific dance movements, and an ability to visualize the correct muscular
sequences – lie at the heart of the dancer’s discipline. This plié on the floor
thing is a perfect illustration of that – once I’ve done it a few times, when I
get up to plié at the barre, I feel hyperaware of the muscles that should be
doing the active work, and I can see, in the mirror, that my whole form,
meaning my alignment in the three axes, has vastly improved.
Alignment is of
course fundamentally important – adults in particular can injure themselves so
easily if they attempt to dance ballet steps in poor form. However, I want my
students also to enjoy dance and to feel like real ballerinas (they were all
women, no surprise). So the other thing we worked on (as we did tendus,
degagés, ronds-de-jambe, and a little port-de-bras combination in center) was
interpreting the music, and not being afraid to be a little schmaltzy. I mean,
why not teach them that instead of just holding one’s arm rigidly à la seconde,
one can breathe through the arm, let it flow a little, let the head follow the
hand? They are grownups, after all, and they want to dance, not just perform a routine set of calisthenics.

I really enjoyed your article as it took me back to my youth and my dreams of being a famous ballerina. Fifteen years and two kids later, I know those dreams are well over but I can still dream can’t I? Maybe it’s time to get my leotards out of storage and keep fit doing something I always enjoyed!
ReplyDeleteStephine @ Donita Ballet School
Absolutely! Go for it!
Delete