Jump to content

Colman

Just4DoingDance
  • Posts

    730
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by Colman

  1. 3 minutes ago, Kate_N said:

    The alternative would be to take a live class online - both Danceworks and Pineapple in London offer this, as does Steps on Broadway and Broadway Dance Centre (5 hour time difference between New York City and BST). I can attest to the excellence of the care taken by several teachers to give attention & feedback to those online. I think this is option much better than doing something on your own. And you have access to a wonderful range of teaching expertise live!

     

    Hannah Frost has been really good at that in our experience, picking up every error either of us made when she had a studio full of in-person students as well. 


    Dance Masterclass is interesting as an educational resource, not sure there's anything I'd use as a regular class in it. 

     

    The time difference from New York can be really useful if your logistics are complicated - I do tai chi classes from New York very late in the evening my time, which means they almost never clash with stuff going on locally.

  2. 11 hours ago, Birdy said:

    satin? My DD’s teachers always made the students sew their own shoes (is this just an American thing? I’ve never sewn shoes for my daughter).

    We’ve always made our son sew his own pointe shoes.

  3. Both Labour and the Tories have repudiated the offer, for reasons I can’t  begin to describe (nor would I be allowed to here) never mind understand.
     

    On the other hand, my Irish son’s colleagues going  the professional route via U.K. colleges this year will have the best of both worlds, putting U.K. competitors at a disadvantage. Isn’t that nice?

  4. Discovering Rep 2 class unit coming up soon, which is fun because I've been injured for a while and now have a couple of weeks to get my stupid feet pointed under me again in petit allegro and that many times damned allegro 3. 

  5. 28 minutes ago, Peanut68 said:

    That’s very well put Colman - (found I couldn’t ‘like’ or ‘thank’ on the post…)

    I’m kept in a little box by the mods and only let out in “Doing Dance”, excluded from likes or liking (so don’t take offence when I fail to star posts), less I disrupt less robust forums when they discuss politics. 
     

    (The box is reasonably well padded, thankfully, and I can see out the slot in the lid.)

  6. Those mixed open recreational adult classes are a problem for teachers: they’re a mix of keep fitters or ballet romantics who don’t want corrections and will take it personally if they get any and students who want to improve and will get frustrated if they don’t get corrections, it’s very hard to cater to both, and they need both to make the class profitable for them. 
     

    I think some teachers also have difficulty understanding that adult students exist. 🤷🏻‍♂️
     

    I find it’s best to tell teachers you’d like corrections and that you are doing curriculum classes or whatever as well. If they don’t take that hint, find another class (or use the class to work on what you need to work on - two of my classes are a bit like that, with little correction: the general level one I use to push fitness and the beginner/improver I modify exercises as I need - doing stuff on demi-pointe for instance. (If the teacher won’t correct and complains about you pushing yourself within the exercises definitely find another class!))

  7. 7 is a bit young for events. Keep an eye on RAD Project B stuff, but their event in April is for 8+. I don't know how hard that age limit is, of course. 

     

    I thought LBBS had evaporated, but I'm told their Facebook is still active, so maybe contact them: our two did online classes with them over lockdown and they were pretty good. I think they're running online classes again, which might be an option for a few classes in a "look, other boys" sort of way - we were lucky, we had another family with two boys in classes when our two started, so we had a little suburban ballet school with *five* boys dancing (including me). 

     

    I would expect most of the RAD workshops to have a few boys - maybe contact organisers and get a feel for which would be most appropriate?

  8. It's also one of those breakpoint ages when kids just dump pursuits. I can't remember where it is in the changing of schools in UK terms. So some of them may not want to be there, but may just be marking time until they're allowed stop.

  9. 1 hour ago, LinMM said:

    Yes I’ve found this with Colmans posts on other threads you can’t “like” them 

    Perhaps you can opt out of this if you want to I don’t know. 

    My account is limited by admins in an effort to stop me reacting badly to reactionary posters and upsetting them*.  I have my own special group "Just4DoingDance".

     

    I'm only allowed post or comment in Doing Dance and the ticket forum as far as I know, and I can't like posts or be liked.

     

    (* The admins might phrase this differently. It's the least tendentious way I can think to put it. 🤷‍♂️)

  10. I’ve always been suspicious of teachers - of martial arts or dance - who discourage their students from training more widely.

     

    Specific concerns about programmes or teachers are one thing, but a blanket discouragement - or outright forbidding it - suggests both insecurity in their own teaching and an inappropriate possessiveness. 

     

    It’s good manners to inform them and (perhaps) ask their advice, but all the good teachers I know have encouraged training elsewhere (except maybe when training a new style of martial art or dance when you aren’t reasonably secure in the current one, which can lead to confusing crossover and learning neither well.)

  11. 21 minutes ago, Sim said:

    I eat dinner from time to time with a couple of top level ballerinas and they eat a lot.    

    It does seem to be at odds with modern best practice, but a lot of these problems seem to be more perpetuation of past cycles of abusive practice than based in professionally reasoned positions. "Never did me any harm. <twitch>"

     

    I can see a certain logic to it: I'm pretty sure that our 15 year old  - not in vocational school - has been passed over for things because he's a bit too chubby for some people's preferences, but the idea that he could actually build enough strength to dance at 10% body fat or whatever they think is desirable is just contrary to all the science. He can cut when he's an adult if he needs to.

     

    If he'd been a girl, missing those opportunities would probably have been lethal to his hopes, but given the demand for boys here - especially post-lockdown, where (in Ireland at least) we seem to have lost a generation of teenage boys from ballet -  it's not such a problem. So if you expect powerful people with an unhealthy relationship to both food and body fat to be making the decisions about who's good enough, you'll try to fit into their preferences.

×
×
  • Create New...