Beginner Danseur Profile: Don Wilson

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This week’s profile is of Don Wilson, one of my classmates at Philly Dance Fitness who started at our studio 6 months ago. Read more about him below:

When did you start doing ballet as an adult?

6 months ago I began taking Beginner 1 at Philly Dance Fitness.

Did you ever take lessons as a kid?

No, but wish I had!

Why did you decide to take ballet as an adult?

There are SO many reasons… For starters, I love to dance! Working at a desk most days, it’s nice to have a fun form of exercise. We men also tend to be a little too stiff in our general movements, so another goal was to move more fluidly and gracefully in everyday life. With only the reasons above, any dance probably would have been great but there’s just something about ballet that’s therapeutic. It’s so graceful, requires so much strength and concentration that it’s impossible to be thinking about problems at work or home when taking the class or practicing at home.

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Q and A with Nancy Lorenz, Author of the Strength of Ballerinas

Strength_of_Ballerinas_blog_tour

I was given the lovely opportunity to do a Q and A with the author of The Strength of Ballerinas, Nancy Lorenz, who is also a fellow adult ballerina! The book came out earlier this month, and you can learn more about it here and enter a chance to win it at the end of this post!

Why did you start ballet?

When I was younger, like many kids, I wanted to wear the pretty tutus. Then, later when I started to train more seriously, I still wanted to wear the tulle, but I wanted to dance to that glorious music too.  For me, there is an immense pull between the image of the graceful ballerina, the dance, the music, and the art that comes together so well in ballet.  The interpretation of the music to movement to audience is what makes it so magical.

When did you start taking classes?

I had a late start.  I took my first classes when I was four, but then not again until I was twelve.  I was unable to continue, but took it up again, at age sixteen and a half.  I started seriously studying too late to try for an apprentice program, or audition for a company.  I went to New York to study acting and dance, and I picked up my ballet training again.  I was in dance heaven there, and really loved the New York classes, as they were very professional.

What is your favorite part about ballet?

I love the drama of it all – especially the tragic ballets.  While I also love the happier dances, the folk ballets, and the shorter works, I think that the “white ballets” with their tragic themes bring us out of our normal lives, and into a world that enraptures, mesmerizes, and entertains us for a few hours.  It is an escape where we can suspend belief, and fall headlong into the story.

It’s the combination of the dramatic moments, again coupled with the crescendos of the music, as well as with the sweet violin that conveys the more tender moments that pull us toward the art.  Swan Lake, Giselle, Les Sylphlides are my favorites.

Least favorite part?

Sore feet.  Lack of stamina. It’s a continual perfectionism to remember to turn out, hold my hands just so, and point!

My character, Kendra, in The Strength of Ballerinas, tries to “maintain lift, land light as a feather, and stretch the jump.”  She thinks about all of these things at one time, yet makes it look effortless and graceful – a difficult task. Add some “star quality” and you have quite a tall order!

The prima’s do it; however, comparing yourself to the most elite performers makes you feel that you fall short. Everyone, though, you must remember, is a different performer, with different personalities, unusual presentations….  Every dancer has his or her own special set of qualities to offer.

What is your book, The Strength of Ballerinas, about?

Overall, the book is about having a voice in your own life.  It is about being able to accomplish something, despite an obstacle, and the way to do that is through determination, and, an immense love of your art.

Kendra Sutton is a ballerina with a clear path into an Apprentice program of a big company, but when fate deals her a different path, she must fight with all her might to get back to New York and to a placement in Manhattan Dance.  Does she do it?  You’ll have to read the book to find out!

Who should read it?

The book is YA – that’s for young adults, aged 12 through 18; however, I think that the idea of aspiring to be a ballerina is something that is pretty basic for females.  I can definitely see twenty-something’s reading it also (and I wouldn’t be surprised if a mom or two snuck in to read it, secretly admitting that they too always wanted to be a ballet dancer!  Adults of all ages, I think can relate.)

Even if you don’t like ballet (and many girls don’t) this book is about dreams, overcoming obstacles, and finding your own path in life.  Whether you are an actor, writer, musician, science major, or star athlete, you still need dedication. This book is about dedication, and discovering the cost of getting there.

How does your own personal ballet (and life) journey relate to your novel?

Because my training was not constant, I understand the angst of completing training to get somewhere.  I know what it’s like to have a goal, and not have the opportunity at hand.  Even with uninterrupted training, many dancers’ goals are thwarted, due to injury, proximity to a good ballet school, emotional and financial support, ability…. The list can go on and on.  Determination really kicks in to keep your eye on the goal though, no matter how long it takes.  I think I conveyed some of my personal journey in my character, Kendra.

What advice would you give to others looking to start ballet?

Well, even though I still take ballet three times a week, including pointe class, I work as a college adjunct professor in my day job.  As I say in my bio, my advice is for dancers to go out and read and learn more about the world.

Learn about other historical eras, and see how the clothing, culture, politics, customs, and time periods affected the way people behaved and moved.  After all, ballet companies perform many “period pieces,” and wouldn’t it be nice to know the etiquette of the era to bring back to your art?

For instance, how do you let a gentleman take your arm, as you walk into a dinner party?  How does wearing a longer skirt affect your movements onstage?   Which curtsy is appropriate for a ballet, set in the 19th century? The 18th?   It’s called, “style.”  You see it in the first act of  The Nutcracker; in Frederick Ashton’s, A Month in the Country.

 If you’re set to perform the sixteenth century lovers, Romeo and Juliet, you’ll have to follow the protocol of the era in dress and etiquette as well.  What’s the difference between a pavane, a Quadrille, and a waltz?

This is a long answer, I realize; however, I know that all of you out there know ballet.  You’ve got the pirouettes, arabesques and lifts.  My advice would be to learn more, by reading, or watching historical movies in order to bring knowledge back into your art!

Overall, I think that ballet is a zenith of art, as it contains music, drama, and dance.  We are so lucky to be able to participate in this art that inspires, moves, and elevates civilization itself.

I love ballet.

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Beginner Ballerina Profile: Mel Wong

Mel Battements

Mel Wong has been invited to study Contemporary Dance at the prestigious conservatoire Trinity Laban in London, so she’s running a fundraising campaign to help pay for it. She’s also trying to set the world record for most consecutive grand battements!

Learn more in my interview with her below!

When did you start doing ballet as an adult?

I took my first ballet class as an adult in Easter 2011.

Did you ever take lessons as a kid?

I didn’t have any formal classical ballet classes as a child, but my jazz and musical theatre teachers would incorporate elements of ballet into their classes. I completed vocational training in dance and performing arts to BTEC National Diploma level, but due to a mental illness and life circumstances I never got the opportunity at the ‘right’ age to complete my training and start a professional career.

Why did you decide to take ballet as an adult?

There were a few factors that made me decide to take up ballet as an adult, the first one being that for all my life I craved the opportunity to study classical ballet and after achieving a number of goals as a semi-professional athlete I worked up the courage to walk into my first ballet class. After I recovered from my illness I threw myself into training and competing as a martial artist, believing that I was no longer young enough or thin enough to go back to dance. But when I watched a UK company (the Northern Ballet) perform ‘Cleopatra’ something inside me just released and I felt the need to pursue dance training again.

Why are you running a fundraising campaign to support your dancing?

I have been invited to study Contemporary Dance at the prestigious conservatoire Trinity Laban in London, but it is very expensive and I am having to fund it alone since I have no relatives that I can rely on to support me in my studies. My age (I am 31) means that I am not eligible for dance scholarships, which I find incredibly unfair, and I am also not eligible for government support due to the internally-verified status of the course that I have been invited onto.

I have set up a fundraising campaign (http://www.gofundme.com/skydancerfund) to try and reach others out there in the world who understand my situation and want to see a dancer who doesn’t fit the mould in terms of age or ‘classical’ body shape achieve their ambitions. For any dancer pursuing full-time training is hard work, but I am ready to work! All my life I have been pursuing a dream to dance, choreograph and perform professionally and my experiences up until now have really prepared me for this opportunity and have given me the focus needed to knuckle down, complete my training and achieve my long term professional goals.

What is your ultimate goal with it?

When my training is complete my ultimate goal is to form my own artistic dance theatre company, which will give performance opportunities to other dancers like me who don’t meet set ‘standards’. I aim to create my own movement language, which will fuse classical ballet with more contemporary movement forms and martial arts to really push physical boundaries. I want to say something very clear with my work, I aim to show how male and female dancers can be equally strong and vulnerable and really showcase how beautiful and breathtaking dynamic bodies can be.

Where do you take classes?

I take as many open classes as my current finances allow studying ballet at my local dance studio – Hype Dance Company – three times a week and taking extra classes with the Northern Ballet.

What is your favorite part about ballet?

Ballet is so all-consuming, it requires total dedication and you can’t cheat or fake any elements of it. As a complete form of physical training, ballet develops the body in ways that other movement forms don’t encouraging strength, precision and expansion (which are things that I love). As an art form it is so versatile and offers so much room for expression and freedom, when I dance ballet I believe that I can really pour my soul and my heart into my physical movements. It facilitates so much more than jazz or contemporary styles.

What is your least favorite part?

I don’t have a least favourite part of the art or movement language itself, but I do have issues with the way that ballet is sometimes presented as an elitist privilege. Dancing ballet professionally is something that isn’t available to every human being on this earth, but that’s true of any gift or talent, and I don’t believe people who aren’t the ‘right’ colour, shape, age or gender should be automatically excluded from trying it. Yes, some professional companies will always require a certain aesthetic, but there is room in this art form for a variety of dancers provided they have something to contribute.

Who/What is your ballet inspiration?

I’ve been inspired by so many dancers throughout my life. As a youngster I idolized the glamourous stars of the 20thCentury – Rudolf Nureyev, Margot Fonteyn, Mikhail Baryshnikov, Gelsey Kirkland, Natalia Makarova – and as I grew older I fell in love with Sylvie Guillem, Alessandra Ferri, Darcey Bussell and Nicholas le Riche. Now I would say my main inspirations are the dancers who are surpassing what’s expected of them and the way that they move, so Guillem remains an inspiration as does Natalia Osipova, Tamara Rojo, Junor Souza and Marianela Nunez. And I wouldn’t be where I am today without my ballet teacher Emily Talks!

What motivates you to keep dancing?

I’m alive so that’s motivation enough for me! Seriously, dance is my life, it inhabits every moment to the point of obsession.

Do you take any other dance classes?

I have take as professional an approach as I can manage with the resources that have been available to me so in addition to ballet class 3-4 times a week, jazz and contemporary classes a few times a week and also daily practice in Yoga and Pilates.

What are your hobbies outside of ballet?

Aside from reading, watching movies and socializing with friends, I use a lot of my spare time outside of class for conditioning. So I attend Pilates and Yoga classes and one-to-ones regularly, and also work out at the gym to maintain my fitness.

What advice would you like to give to those who want to start ballet or have just started?

For anyone who is thinking of starting ballet you really just have to do it, don’t put barriers in the way of yourself. So what if you don’t have legs like Sylvie Guillem, you still have value as an individual dancer and ballet might just be the right art form for you. For anyone who’s just started ballet I would say stick with it, be as interested as possible in everything that you do in class, use YouTube to learn from the ballet legends and masters and never lose your beginners’ mindset!

Anything else you’d like to add?

Before I head off to dance school I am planning to set a new world record for the total number of continuous grand battements (the current record is 1,199!). I am fundraising for the record attempt with a Kickstarter page:https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1671982406/world-record-attempt-grand-battements and I hope to raise enough money so that I can make charitable donations to the Cats Protection League and MacMillan Cancer Care.

Do you have a blog?

I have a website: www.skydancermel.com where I blog about dance, movement, mental health and anything else that springs to mind! I also have a Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/MelSkydancer and Twitter account https://twitter.com/MelMAOW.

Beginner Ballerina Profile: Grace of Little Prince Billy

n223402569_9096648_2152200[1]This week’s profile is of Grace, who runs Little Prince Billy–a dance and lifestyle blog. Check it out–and learn more about her below!

When did you start doing ballet as an adult?

On my 18th Birthday (I’m now 24).

Did you ever take lessons as a kid?

Yes, when I was very little for about 6 months. I was a little chick in the school’s performance of The Wizard of Oz…!!

Why did you decide to take ballet as an adult?

Reaching my 18th birthday, I felt old. It was all very dramatic…! I was someone I felt I should be, not the person I wanted to be. I set myself resolutions, and the first of these was to learn what I’d always dreamed of – how to dance.

Where do you take classes?

Usually at Pineapple Studios in London, as it’s all drop-in so I can make it work around a full-time job.

What is your favorite part about ballet?

The discipline – there are no short cuts, you just have to work really hard. And if you want it enough, you can be successful. It’s a great lesson for other areas of life!

What is your least favorite part?

The injuries! I was very sadly injured about 8 months ago, and I’ve still not yet been fit enough to return to ballet. Gosh do I miss it!

Who/What is your ballet inspiration?

Darcey Bussell – my mum took me to see her dance at The Royal Opera House, London when I was very little and I was completely mesmerised. I met her many years later, and she was lovely!

What motivates you to keep dancing?

The fact that I’m in love with it! That and a drive to be the best I can be. I feel happiest when I’m in class, it’s a feeling like nothing else.

Do you take any other dance classes?

Yes – Commercial Jazz and Technique classes. I also do Contemporary when I have the time too.

What are your hobbies outside of ballet?

I love to write, and run a London Lifestyle and Dance blog – www.littleprincebilly.wordpress.com. I love to bake (when I’ve got an audience) and have recently perfected Cookie Monster cupcakes.

What advice would you like to give to those who want to start ballet or have just started?

Don’t worry about what anyone else is doing – everyone had to start somewhere, and just focus on your own process. It is never too late to start ballet, and it will be tough, but oh so worth it!

Beginner Ballerina Profile: Leanne Jessica

216portfoliosonlineCheck out this great profile of Leanne Jessica, who runs http://www.straighttothepointe.net:

When did you start doing ballet as an adult?

I started doing ballet when I was 21.

Did you ever take lessons as a kid?

Sadly I didn’t take ballet as a child but I always wanted to. I did jazz and modern ISTD instead. I did so much as a child that I couldn’t do ballet aswell. When I grew up I thought it was impossible for adults to start. Thank goodness I found an adult class!

Why did you decide to take ballet as an adult?

I decided to take ballet up because I was doing dancing in night clubs (nothing seedy by the way!) and also burlesque. I always wanted to do a performance incorperating ballet. I never realised adults could start ballet but after doing some research I realised they could! I also wanted to do ballet for fitness reasons and also for good escapism and relaxation.

Where do you take classes?

I take classes at a dance school in Basildon in Essex. I also sometimes take various classes in London.

What is your favorite part about ballet?

All of it! But of course I adore pointe and seeing my progress.

What is your least favorite part?

I’m not very keen on arabesques or attitudes.

Who/What is your ballet inspiration?

My ballet inspiration comes from many things… Such as fellow adult students, ballerinas, dancers I see on the internet and youtube, and also just looking back on yourself and seeing how far you have come is an inspiration in itself!

What motivates you to keep dancing?

I don’t need motivating 😀 but what makes me excited for it is knowing the escapism and relaxation you achieve from it and knowing that each day is different… Although we all have days where our balance is off or we feel we can’t achieve something… But hey ballet isn’t ment to be easy 😉

Do you take any other dance classes?

Not anymore. Ballet is my main focus!

What are your hobbies outside of ballet?

I love to do pilates. I also enjoy ballet pilates which is called ballates 🙂 I also love to see my friends, vintage, shopping, running my mobile pointe shoe fitting business and helping dancers get the right pointe shoes, running my blog and YouTube channel, photography, modeling, eating out, the beach, travel, all sorts of things 🙂

What advice would you like to give to those who want to start ballet or have just started?

To believe in yourself and go for it! Don’t be shy or put off by the other dancers around you. Everyone starts somewhere. It’s also handy to film your classes sometimes, because you can then track your progression. Also, remember your limits… Don’t push yourself too hard to the point of injury!

Anything else you’d like to add?

Yes! If any dancers reading this would like a thorough pointe shoe fitting with me please get in touch. I’m based in Essex and London in England but I can travel too.

Connect with Leanne:

YouTube channel: www.youtube.com/straighttothepointe
Facebook: www.facebook.com/tothepointefitting
Twitter: www.twitter.com/pointeballetuk
Instagram: www.instagram.com/straighttothepointeballet