Beginner Ballerina Profile: Carolyn Johnson

This week’s profile is of Carolyn Johnson, who started ballet at the age of 50 for the first time after it was recommended to her to help improve her skating, which is pretty amazing. Check it out!

me6When did you start doing ballet as an adult? 

Age 50.

Did you ever take lessons as a kid?

No.

Why did you decide to take ballet as an adult? 

Won two Adult Figure Skating Competitions at my home rink – ballet was recommended to improve my skating as well as posture and balance.

Where do you take classes? 

New Braunfels, TX

What is your favorite part about ballet? 

Just started classes, but really enjoy the working out of my legs, core and learning control and balance.

What is your least favorite part?

Stares from other adults in the lobby who probably think I’m crazy for starting lessons at 50  😉

Who/What is your ballet inspiration?

Finis Jung

What motivates you to keep dancing?

Just started, but now is the time to embrace life and your passions.  I don’t plan on stopping

Do you take any other dance classes?

No

What are your hobbies outside of ballet?

Figure Skating and Ice Dance.

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

Put on blinder’s for your critics and enroll today.  Find an instructor that loves ballet so much he/she could teach it to an elephant.

Anything else you’d like to add? 

Thank you for this project!

 

Say what–I’m graduating???

This is only been my second post this week because I’ve been busy finishing up my college career. I took my last final yesterday from the comfort of my own bed at nine in the morning (I got an A-) and then had my Honor’s College Graduation last night. I had a job interview this afternoon for a part-time job to go with my internship with Campus Philly over the summer (keep your fingers crossed for me!) so that I don’t go completely broke.

Tomorrow is my last TWO graduations. Since Temple University is so huge, we have one ceremony in the morning with everyone university wide who is graduating and then one in the afternoon for our college. Woohoo!

So another reason I’ve not posted very much this week is I’ve decided to take the week off ballet AND running. Saturday and Sunday I had a pretty severe case of shin splints (I rocked my KT Tape at the interview and had everyone asking me what was up with my leg) so I decided between everything else that was going on, I should probably take this week off. I also pulled/strained/did something wacky to my lower right back in yoga (either in the studio or at home…I’m so busy that I can’t remember) so I’ve been taking it super easy. I should be okay to go for a short run this weekend while I’m back at home and then back to ballet on Monday when I get back to Philly to start at Campus Philly.

So I apologize if I don’t get the ballerina profile that usually goes up on Friday but I promise that it’ll be up as soon as I can get to it!

A Lovely Night at Pennsylvania Ballet’s Carnival of the Animals

I am always grateful for every chance I get to go see a ballet company perform because I don’t usually have the money to do so–that’s why I’ve seen so very few ballets. This time, I got the chance to see it with my boyfriend because I won a Twitter contest with TheArtsInPhilly. They do contests all the time to all sorts of arts performances in Philadelphia, so they’re definitely worth the follow.

Artists of Pennsylvania Ballet Photos: Alexander Iziliaev

Artists of Pennsylvania Ballet
Photos: Alexander Iziliaev

The first performance of the evening was Ballo Della Regina. Jong Sung Park impressed me greatly with his work during this piece, with impressive changemants and series of pirouettes  Roy Kaiser, PA Ballet’s artistic director, notes that this ballet places unique demands on the principal ballerina and that they were fortunate to get to work with Merill Ashley in the piece, whom Balanchine created the ballet for. It’s was clear to me and the boyfriend that in Friday’s performance that Lilian Di Piazza struggled somewhat (stepping in last minute for Brooke Moore–but even so, the dance was really powerful. The piece also featured several other soloists and was all together enjoyable.

Four Temperaments is another Balanchine piece, one that I enjoyed slightly less than the rest of the evening’s works. The dancers were dressed as if they were attending a ballet class–the female dancers wore simple black leotards and pink tights while the male dancers wore white shirts and black tights. This allowed me to focus on their movements instead of their costumes.

The first theme was one of my favorites. Elizabeth Mateer gracefully executed movements–one of my favorites was when she wrapped her leg in attitude around Harrison Monanco and dipped the top part of her body down and spread her arms out and bent them as if she was a low flying bird. As their theme finished, Monanco dragged Mateer, who was in a straddle, off-stage.

I really wish I could have seen Jermel Johnson perform the Phlegmatic temperament opening night since I was very impressed with him in Midsummer’s Night Dream. Gabriella Yudenich was impressive as ever, however, in the Choleric temperament and the finale. Four male dancers carefully turned Yudenich while in arabesque, around and around, all while she remained perfectly positioned.

My favorite part of the evening was definitely Wheeldon’s Carnival of the Animals. It’s the story of a young boy, Oliver, who falls asleep in the Natural History museum and goes unnoticed. He dreams that all of his classmates, friends, and family have turned into animals. It made me laugh, and was definitely a reminder that ballet can be fun.

John Litgow was the perfect narrator for the piece and also wrote the comedic text he performed. Although their were some audio issues, Litgow did the best he could to project his voice so that it could be heard in the theater.

I won’t go into great detail about all the different animal segments–they were all wonderful and extremely comical. My favorite parts included the Turtle twins (Alyson Pray and Yudenich) who moved with ballet grace and the molasses-like speed of turtles, Johnson who swayed and moved on his arms like a real baboon (and to Jonathan Block as Oliver who copied his baboon-like piano’s teachers movements, Litgow as female elephant nurse (who is even lifted by the fellow rat dancers) and the ballerina fossils (in a production Oliver who spewed dust from their tutus with carefully executed brushes of the arms.

The most precious moment of the evening came during the baboon sequence. Oliver’s piano teacher keeps telling him to keep practicing and Oliver sighs each time he has to redo the exercise–the third time his teacher tells him to redo it a little girl in front of us also loudly sighed with a gigantic “awwww” that showed she was just as frustrated as Oliver was.

As always, a trip to the ballet always makes me want to practice it even more–and my boyfriend is also hoping he can find a way to take classes again this summer as well.

Beginner Ballet Tips: Sewing Elastic to Ballet Slippers

Roughly one year and one month ago, I picked up my first pair of ballet slippers at one of the local dance stores in Philadelphia and was told I needed to sew the elastics myself. Nothing more. I was clueless. I searched online and was frustrated with every article and how-to telling me how to sew pointe shoe ribbons and elastics. I eventually found this video and sewed on my elastics the best I could:

Looking back at those shoes, my elastics were sewn kind of terribly (not because the technique in the video is bad, but just because I’m horrible at sewing). I wish I had found these tips by Adult Beginner and Dave Tries Ballet to help me out when I needed it. Adult Beginner uses a single elastic, so if that’s what you’ve got, go check her’s out. The video, Dave Tries Ballet, and my tutorial below deals with criss-cross elastics that are already sewn at the back-end. I wear Sansha split sole canvas shoes (I’m looking into trying more, I just bought these because I needed new shoes and knew these would fit if I ordered them online).

Here’s what you’ll need:

Shoes

Pen or Permanent Marker

Scissors

Safety Pins

Needle and Thread (I recommend Bunhead’s Stitch Kit if you don’t already have needles and thread lying around. It’s super thick, strong thread that will make sure the elastics will stay put both on pointe shoes and ballet slippers)

My elastics are pulled tight so that my shoes fit my feet.

Step 1. Tighten the elastic strings at the top of your ballet slipper until you get a nice fit. You don’t want them strangling your foot but you don’t want the shoes to be falling off either.

Step 2. Mark where you will sew the elastics with permanent marker at your arches by stretching them over your feet–I just sew mine to the middle seam in my slipper. Again, you want them to be holding your foot in but not too tight. I sew the elastic from the inside of the foot underneath and the one that comes in from the outside over (I’m pretty sure there’s no rules written in stone about this–I just know it’s mentioned in one of the videos I watched so that’s what I do). I then mark each slipper somewhere on the inside so I can quickly know which one is left and right without having to look super carefully at the elastic.

Step 3. Secure the elastic using a safety pin where you will sew them and try them on again, making sure that you’ve got the right fit. Point and flex your feet a couple of times.

Step 4: Cut the elastics if you need to so they fit into the shoe (I usually leave about 1/2 an inch from the very top part of the shoe so there’s enough to sew securely in). You could probably burn the elastics to make sure they don’t fray but I don’t find it necessary.

I can’t really give you any advice on doing the actual sewing part since I’m a novice at it–some people hand sew, others use a machine. Whichever method you choose, make sure you don’t sew into the elastic string that goes around the shoe by accident.

Step 5: Put your shoes on and check the elastic string for tightness again, making sure you’ve got it where you want it. Some people will leave their strings long and tie them in a bow and then tuck them in (they shouldn’t be left out so your foot doesn’t get dragged over them and/or so you don’t trip on them).Having all the loose strings shoved into my shoe drives me crazy, so I double knot mine (without tying a bow), cut them pretty short, and then burn the ends.

Step 6: Put them on, check for the correct fit (one last time!) and admire a job well done!

What do you wish you would’ve known before starting ballet classes?

PS If you’ve got any tips for how you attach your elastics to ballet slippers, let me know! This is still a work in progress for me!

Beginner Ballerina Profile: Riette Hartzenberg

Today’s profile is of Riette Hartzenberg, who also takes classes at Susan Attfield’s ballet studio in South Africa.

When did you start doing ballet as an adult?

About 3 years ago.

Did you ever take lessons as a kid?

No.

Why did you decide to take ballet as an adult?

It was something I always wanted to do and finally got around to doing. I also read an article about the toning benefits of a good ballet session.

Riette Hartzenberg Where do you take classes?

At the Irene dance hub.

What is your favorite part about ballet?

Getting something right after lots and lots of practice. Furthermore it forces you to concentrate on nothing else for an hour. For an hour you are “forced” to spend some me-time with yourself. Plus it is really very toning. I made some good friends and we laugh a lot.

What is your least favorite part?

Pirouettes. I don’t handle turns very well.

What motivates you to keep dancing?

I really enjoy it.

What are your hobbies outside of ballet?

I go the gym a few times during the week, and enjoy doing arts and crafts.

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

Go for it! Just enjoy it and give yourself time to grow into it. We all like to be perfect from the start, but you have to be between 5 and 15 to master it in a day.

Riette Hartzenberg 2nd from left

Riette Hartzenberg is 2nd from left

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