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Dance*is*life

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  1. And you know you can apply to a school and not be accepted and then what do you do? I think you should apply, audition and see which schools are willing to accept you and then do the research. Visit the schools and try and see the facilities and get an idea of the atmosphere. All the big schools are excellent. A student of mine was accepted for 3 Summer schools at RBS, but didn't get taken on for student training there, much to his disappointment. However, Elmhurst accepted him with alacrity as did Central. He decided on Elmhurst, because it was residential and because of its connection with BRB and it was a wonderful experience and first class training. We'll never know if he would have been better off at Central, but he became a very good professional dancer, so who cares?

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  2. In my day the adjudicators would remark on any dance that was not age appropriate and I have to say that I am shocked by some of the routines I've seen. Both the costumes and the movements are ultra "suggestive" and not the sort of thing children should be doing.

     

    The trouble is that something like this case will probably stir up a can of worms about teachers physically touching their students in order to correct them.

  3. Did anyone ever see a BBC play called "Happy Feet"? I have it recorded somewhere on video and must get it transferred to DVD - they never released it generally, which was a real shame. It was wonderful! All about a group of kids from a stage school travelling on the coach to a competition with their teacher and her dad who's the pianist. There's an hilarious incident in it, when some rival school's pianist is seen trying to identify their music, presumably for future use. The father decides to cover the sheet music with brown paper, so that no-one can see what he's playing, but it muddles him as well and he starts playing the wrong music for their star pupil. The poor little girl stops in the middle and comes forward so the judge can see her (the judge gets more and more tipsy from drink as the comp continues) and says pathetically - Please Miss it's the wrong music! It was really true to life and they showed quite a lot of the dances including an excellent boy (forerunner of Billy Elliot).

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  4. Oh no I lived in South London when I was a child,Tulip, so the bus journey was between 40 and 60 minutes, depending on traffic, to get into central London. We didn't have a tube where I lived, so bus was the best way to get anywhere. I do understand your mum's reluctance to take a train, but even with a loo on the bus, I don't think I'd like to sit 9 hours on a coach! The trains are so good nowadays, on time and quick.You can reserve a seat too and if you book in advance at certain hours of the day you can find really cheap fares.

  5. Gosh it's amazing that the All England is still going strong! I used to compete in it when I was a child - many, many, many moons ago! There used to be 2 semi-finals with 4 from each being sent through to the final in London. If someone didn't take up their place from the northern semis then the 5th place from the southern semis was taken and so on and so forth. Anyway, the first All-England I competed in, when I was 8 or 9, I came 8th in the National solo in the semis. The day before the finals, the organisers contacted me that no-one was coming from up north and that I was therefore eligible to compete. My dad was working, so my mum and I and the pianist went up to London on the bus with the costume in a bag on our laps. After we got off the bus, we suddenly realised that the pianist had left my music on the bus seat :( . Luckily she knew it off by heart and I went on to win the section! My next school also competed in the All-England and I continued dancing in it in solos, duets, groups and troupes until I went off to RBS at 16. Magical days and something I looked forward to all year........ So good luck to everyone and have fun!!!

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  6. What I found interesting was the reviewer's comment that the ballet students she spoke to told her that they didn't read ballet books and she wondered if it was because they danced themselves, so didn't feel the need. I personally don't think this can be true - my little niece dances and she loves reading any book connected with ballet. What I do think is that in this age of computers and i-phones etc reading has become less popular and many children simply don't read books. I myself adored Noel Streatfeild books and I still have almost the whole series of Ballet for Drina books and the series about "The Wells", but I come from a different era. I shall have to ask my own students as I find this rather intriguing.......!

  7. I find Gaynors really difficult to sew ribbons to. A student's kept coming off and normally if that happens in class, I whip out my needle and re-sew them so that they can continue to dance. I could not sew through the thick material and we ended up using a safety pin! Her Mum kept trying and they just kept falling off. In the end I think she took them to a seamstress who sewed them on with a machine, but you have to be very careful that you can still pull the drawstrings, which for some reason are on the side. I'm glad they've changed the design and fabric somewhat, perhaps that will help. In theory the elastics get sewn on either side of the achilles tendon on the heel, so as to stop the backs slipping off and the ribbons in the usual place (folding the back over to find the spot).

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  8. When I was at RBS I consistantly came in the top three for the test class at the end of term. But when they took students from my class into the company, they didn't choose me. When I went to Barbara Fewster to query it, I was told that my head was too large and that was that. So I guess even talent and personality aren't enough - the physical proportions are important too. It's a cruel world and the Royal doesn't want flawed - they want perfect.

  9. Yup he came second!   I can't believe it - I was sure he won!  Who beat Cliff????  And apparently Bryan Johnson sang Looking High High High not Kenneth (sorry not Ian) McKellar (who recorded it later I think) and he also came 2nd.  Oh well - good thing there's an Internet to check these things! 

     

    I looked it up some Spanish girl singer beat Cliff!  Her song was called La La La and basically that's all she sang!   Bah humbug!

  10. Once upon a time the Eurovision was rather a special event that we all enjoyed watching.  I remember that when I was dancing in a ballet company in Germany in 1967 and had no TV in my digs, I was so upset at missing the Eurovision that I knocked on my neighbour's door and begged her to let me watch!   Ah such happy innocent days when Cliff won with the delightfully twee song Congratulations!  Oh and not to forget Ian McKellar and Looking High High High!!!!!  

  11. I suppose it's because the UK isn't really part of a voting block like all the former soviet countries or the scandinavian ones - they all seem to vote for each other......  But I do like Believe in Me - whilst it's not Total Eclipse it is a good song and worth listening to.  Most of the songs were instantly forgettable. 

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  12. I loved pink as a child - my bedroom had pink wallpaper and my bedspread was pink -  I actually wore pink clothes into my twenties!  Embarrassing, I know :wub:   I tend to wear richer colours nowadays, but obviously I still have a dormant pink desire!   And there's nothing quite so cute as a new born baby girl in tiny pink clothes, even if once she grows up and has the choice, she opts for black!

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  13. Just had to add this - after having tried 3 times for a dancing daughter and getting three boys (wonderful but non-dancing) and then getting two grandsons (gorgeous but probably also non-dancing), my daughter-in-law has just informed us that she is pregnant with a girl!!!!!   No doubt with two big brothers she'll be a tomboy and won't want to dance, but I can finally satisfy my desperation to buy pink cute and sparkly fairies etc!  Yeahhhhh! :) :) :)

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  14. That you'd be so addicted that even in your 60's you can't bear the thought of not being able to do class ever again, so you keep going, even though your body is falling to pieces, trying to ward off that terrible day just a while longer.............

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  15. I don't think that 9 year olds doing fouettes should be the bar that we aim at in training children, although I do agree that talented kids should be pushed more. However I am afraid that this will only happen when children have more intensive training at a younger age in the UK.  Those that go to the junior vocational schools are fine, but the ones that go once a week for 45 minutes ballet are not going to get there however talented they are. In my opinion the problem is not so much the RAD syllabus (and the new ones are indeed pushing in more difficult steps and requiring less set work) but the fact that the students have too few hours of training a week to enable them to move more quickly up the grades or even jump a level en route.  My mother took me away from a very good RAD school, because they expected me to stay at the same level until I was old enough to take the next exam (which I could do after a term's training).  I went back to RAD a few years later and took the Major exams (now Vocational) but if there had not been that rigidity I don't suppose I would have left my first ballet school when I did.

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  16. Ah yes that would probably be the reason - he took it in the December session. I must say I was surprised that even at HQ there wasn't one Adv 2 boy to take the exam with him!

  17. Just wanted to note that I had a former student who went to Elmhurst and took his Advanced 2 from there. Interestingly, they did send him down to London to take his exam - not to Birmingham. This was about 5 or 6 years ago, so perhaps the Birmingham Centre didn't exist then????? Unfortunately, in spite of taking his exam at HQ there were no other boys taking it with him. He passed with 82 and was eligible for the Genee that year, which was supposed to be in the UK. Of course that had to be the year that the Genee was cancelled through lack of funding and by the following year he had turned pro. He was very frustrated as I had dangled the carrot of the Genee in front of him when I wanted to encourage him to take his exams!

  18. I hope it's OK to copy and post this from the comments on the above article. Please remove if it's not. I just thought that the writer (under the pseudonym of Green Knight) made a very valid point. If other top international companies hire mainly home-grown dancers, why can't the RB?

     

    "Additionally, the British White Lodgers have to compete for their places with increasing numbers of students brought in from abroad, a process many find stressful and demoralising."

    ...

    "Globalisation notwithstanding, the world's great classical dance companies – the Bolshoi Ballet, Mariinsky Ballet, Paris Opera Ballet, New York City Ballet and others – draw almost exclusively from their own schools and home-grown students and, in consequence, maintain an individuality of style and tradition which the Royal Ballet, for all the brilliance of its imported stars, has lost. Commercially speaking, you underestimate the appeal of local talent at your peril. Darcey Bussell was a wonderful dancer but British audiences loved her first and foremost because she was a home-girl, one of their own."

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  19. One of the things missing from modern interpretations of Ashton's ballets for me is understatement and delicacy. Big and bold and over-the-top has eclipsed this. I watched Fille with Nadia Nerina a few weeks ago on youtube and the humour was so charming and understated and the acting in general was simply delightful. I rather felt sorry for poor silly Alain, rather than laughing uproariously at his antics, I smiled compassionately! Cinderella too - the original ugly sisters of Helpman and Ashton were real people rather than characatures from pantomime. For me this is what is missing. It's true that I don't like gymnastically high legs when they spoil the beauty of the lines, but I very much appreciate the advances in technique and do not bemoan the passing of the 60 degree arabesque etc. What I do find sad is this lack of quintessentially English understated quality, but perhaps I'm clinging on to something that doesn't really exist anymore?

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  20. I am presuming RAD - I doubt if there is a difference in marks between the centres, because every year there is a different examiner, so maybe one year a particular centre will have an examiner who gives higher marks and the next year not. In general they are supposed to mark alike as they have the same criteria, but of course personal preferences will always out. In principal my students generally get the marks they deserve, even if they don't always agree with that! And I have noticed too that the examiners do usually place the students in the same "batting order" that I would place them.

     

    Therefore, I think your decision should be made on the actual quality of the exam studio in each centre. Is the studio big enough? Does it have a good sprung floor that's not too slippery? Is there an extra studio for warming up? Is the person in charge pleasant? All this will help your daughter to do her best.

     

    My advice would be to look for a studio your daughter feels comfortable in. Of course, if there is a centre where your daughter can take a class or two before the exam, that would be a big help. Going in for an exam in a strange studio is hard - it does help to try it out beforehand.

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