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thank-you so much-- that was incredibly interesting. The difference is palpable because there is an incredible lightness of being in Cecchetti movement and even smallest delicate movement fills the entire space of stage.
Thanks for a great observation! I believe the same could be said for an actor who can whisper but still their voice reaches to the back of the auditorium.
Hello Julie. I am Indian but follow all classical ballet. With my limitations, I wish to add that you are a saviour to all the modern ballerinas. Your method is scientific and aesthetically very graceful and artistic. That is what dance should be isn't it ? Please forge on and may you find greater and richer patronage amongst your people. Thanks.👍 for bearing with me.
LIKE EVERYTHING ELSE! EVERYTHING IN THE USA IS EXTREMES NOW. JOB SEARCHING, FINDING A JOB, GROWING UP, BUUYING A CAR, IT'S ALLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLL SO EXTREME! AND WHY? FOR MONEY, ONLY!!!
I wish I had been taught this. In the 1960s-70s I was the hyper flexible girl who could fly, but by my mid twenties my knees and hips were wrecked, and my lumbar spine showed arthritis in my early 30s. This film shows the physics and geometry in Cecchetti's principles, which make great sense. Thank you for this.
Our national ballet teaches the cechetti method, The National Ballet of Canada- what is the difference in how the Russians or French teach? I took adult ballet classes at age 26- they should be banned- schools need money- the school I went to was owned and run by a former soloist with THE NATIONAL...The teaching was good BUT the human body is not meant to turned out with feet pointing east and west! At least not mine- within 6mos I was in so much pain from bursitis of the hip, I had to see an orthopedic surgeon who amazingly had been the doctor at The Royal Ballet- so he knew. He was a character and told me to take up belly dancing! That was a long time ago- to to this day, I need arthritic rubs, cortisone shots, pain killers and cannot sleep without a pillow under my hip. I am thin and plan to be thinner, and well, if I had a child who showed promise, I wouldn't stop them but I'd make sure they spoke to good teachers, dancers etc- it is such a gamble. I will always love all genres of dance but I wish my hip couldn't predict the weather! This documentary is fascinating and I wish it had been out! Her detailed explanations can only add to my enjoyment from the front row!
@@MSYNGWIE12 As a former ballet teacher who enjoyed teaching ballet to adults as well as tochildren, I'm very sorry you had this experience. A good teacher of adult ballet will be exceptionally conscious of the limitations of an adult body as opposed to a pliant "blank slate" of a child's body, and will teach accordingly. I used to emphasize musicality, enjoyment, spirit and fun as opposed to goals. like attaining leg height, speed, and athletic prowess. Each student was asked about goals, why they were now studying ballet, and health and safety concerns were pre-eminent. I tried to incorporate little snippets of dance history, information about musical and dance styles, and would tell students if they wanted to learn how to compete with younger, stronger students of greater stamina, my class wasn't for them. There are always aerobics classes, gymnastics, etc, but they were immersing themselves art form. The highest aim was to feel something that transcended the body, to transmit that feeling to others, to merge with music and to convey love. Writing now seems a tad inadequate, but I loved seeing the smiles, seeing fluidity, watching the joy of discovery. I would err on the side of caution, to avoid injury, and strive to bring out the most beautiful components of each student. Sometimes victory was seeing a student relax into a lovely balance, stretch into a long line of arabesque, and hold that for a few seconds. Sometimes a ripple of infectious joy moved through us as the class polkaed together, breathed into a porte de bras, or did 6 clean sautes. If not a labour of love, why teach? If gentleness isn't incorporated, what is the point?
Cyn Hanrahan, I am exactly the same,you are so right, I am 58 with so many injuries,wish I could turn back time and have the opportunity to learn the Cecchetti method…..too late now,but this video is amazing
I was trained in the cechetti method and have never had an injury and know of no one who had an injury. I continued for many years to take classes as an adult, for my enjoyment. Now in my 70s, my knees, and my body, are in fine condition. I was always taught so carefully to move so as to protect my body. Bless my wonderful teachers!
Ballet is about feelings, expression, mood, line...should I go on? It has become a sport the last decades and there's no difference from one dancer to another. Who does higher, who does more turns, who stands on one leg longer...it has changed so much! Dame Margot Fonteyn didn't have the best feet, she didn't have the highest extensions...but WOW, you couldn't take your eyes off her when she danced! I miss the individuality of the difference of style, the ballet of each school of dance...they all look the same! Just how I feel...
Well, I've just been watching Marianela Nuñez, and I can't take my eyes off her. Mood, line, feelings, and the most beautiful expressions in her face. The great dancers of the past are irreplaceable, yes, but there are wonderful dancers today whom we will look back on as irreplaceable too someday. Just the thoughts of a non-expert.
Just like in figure skating. It's all about the quad jumps now. The beautiful artists like Jason Brown don't get as much credit. There's too much weight placed on jumps in the code of points. Same with gymnastics.
Just how I feel too. Actually, I think the lines and extensions are ugly. The banana legs and over extended arches aren't eye pleasing in my opinion. Take me back to Maria Tallchief or Dame Margot please.
For dancers from the past, I prefer Moira Shearer ... wish there was more video of her... and saying that, I wish there was more video of Margot Fonteyn as well.
Thank you! I am an ex- dancer Vaganova trained, who has decided to start classes again. The tips given are so helpful and inspiring. 😊 Lastly, you have voiced the opinion that I've had for a long time that ballet should not be an athletic competition. I started realizing this terrible trend when I started looking back at famous dancers in the 70's and they were brilliant without overextended legs and acrobatics. They had more heart than most of the artists of the day. Bravo for your work.
As a non-dancer I find these videos facinating. The strength and endurance of these dancers is amazing! Thank you for breaking down this most beautiful art form.
70 years old here ..... I wish my ballet teacher had explained the what and why while she taught, because this is what she was how she was teaching. I wish I could tell her how much I appreciate this method protected our bodies while teaching us the art of ballet.
I am a graduate of the Canadian National Ballet School, where I trained under Betty Oliphant. This video is marvelous, because I learned all these difficult combinations while young. I am now pretty old, yet still teaching ballet at the Colorado Ballet Academy. Throughout my long career I have never had a dance-caused injury, and I credit my Cecchetti training with keeping me safe. One thing I really like about Cecchetti is that the arms are controlled, and not all over the place as one sees from so many contemporary ballet dancers. Maybe Cecchetti is making a comeback!
Maybe! Thank you so much for your comments! It’s an interesting exercise to look back and never forget the best elements of the great teachers of the past. At the very least we could see a return to a ballet class with combinations that reverse, use interesting step vocabulary and a closer relationship between the dancer and the musician.
Hopefully! I can’t believe that I did these combinations as a child and a teenager. They are fiendishly difficult! If Cecchetti were to make a comeback it would help bring boys into ballet class. Cecchetti was a man, and Cecchetti arms are strong. Vaganova, on the other hand, was a woman, and Vaganova arms are feminine and often soft. In my opinion, the feminine arms of the Vaganova method are one reason it is so hard to get American boys to study ballet. What do you think? @@juliecronshaw7013
It’s a very interesting observation! Dance classes for boys are increasingly popular here in the UK and numbers got a boost with Billy Elliot and the Mathew Bourne Swan Lake a couple of decades ago, but boys still don’t necessarily take ballet. Regardless of the technique offered they usually think it’s for girls and you cannot blame them when outnumbered in class. It’s a perennial dilemma. I’ve found they often join ballet via other dance classes where the teacher has recommended it
Yes, all of that is true. Most ballet people I talk to say “it’s cultural,” and they let it go at that. However, it is possible to change culture. During my lifetime I have seen four major cultural revolutions: rights for minorities, rights for women, rights for LBGT individuals and rights for the handicapped. It would be easy to change the culture about ballet for boys-all you would have to do is put the message out there in public service announcements on TV and social media. These announcements would show boys dancing, perhaps with beautiful girls, and perhaps saying something like: “Ballet class is where all the beautiful girls hang out!” Ballet schools and companies would have to band together to make this happen, but it’s possible, and the goal of getting more boys in ballet could easily be achieved in a short amount of time. Quite frankly, it upsets me that ballet people do not do more to change the public perception of boys in ballet. They should be proactive and work to change the status quo, instead of just accepting the way things are.
Though never a dancer I've a life long love of classical ballet. I can understand how turning it to athletics would take out the emotion, the magic. Gymnists are awesome but, now that I think about it, watching is not emotional. I watch the ballet for the magic. I hope this video is watched by many who can make a difference in classical ballet.
As an RAD trained dancer I found many similarities. I agree the magic is being replaced by tricks. I don't go to the ballet to see tricks! Your programme was so well put together and any dancer would learn from it.
The demonstrator Muriel Valtat is That petite allegro about nine minutes in had me sympathetically gasping for air, followed by the urge to stand up and yell, Brava!" Those insanely fast yet articulated entrechat sixes, while maintaining a beautifully relaxed upper body and precise epaulment -- good Lord! Loved this film. I kept stopping and rewatching to study and savor the fantastic, rare footage. So glad this has been saved for future generations!
Thank you so much! This project was truly a ‘labour of love’ and I am forever grateful to Muriel and Salvo who gave their time -and trust- to me and the team, so we could realise it.
This is mind-bending !! I finally see what older generations of dancers were talking about when complaining about today's acrobatics. I can never look at my ballet classes the same way ever again and I cannot thank you enough for putting this film together and sharing it with the world !
Thank you for bringing us back the art of classical Ballet. I studied with Vincenzo Celli and Richard Thomas. In NYC. Our technique and style seemed so antiquated back in the 80’s! I am 61 still teaching and demonstrating, I attribute my longevity to my excellent training.
It is amazing and unique (so far) to hear from someone who studied directly with Vincenzo Celli. Richard Thomas had a following in NYC at the time if I remember. Good technique is never out of style and you are still dancing ...so what more needs to be said? Thank you for your comment and glad you enjoyed the film!
There is a dance magazine from 1980 with Cynthia Harvey on the cover. There is a short article about Celli in the photo is myself and another young dancer , my then fiancé took the photo. There is also a short film that was made in 1981 directed by Carol Jeffries and features my then teachers Jonette Swider and Eddie Verso and Toni Ann Gardella . The Film features Celli instructing the exercises, these dancers demonstrated the syllabus. It is a wonderful and important archive. Unfortunately I have lost contact with these people and was never able to get a copy.
Monday 11:39 Aplomb - Standing in the vertical; Tuesday 18:42 Epaulement - Opposition about the vertical; Wednesday 24:38 En-Dehors & En-Dedans - Turnout Thursday 32:39 Les Jetés - Transference of Weight Friday 36:25 La Batterie et Les Temps de Pointe - The Aerial Plane Saturday 40:27 Les Grands Fouettés Sautés: Ballon - Bouncing
It is so healing to watch ballet as a deeply rooted, strong, healthy expression of pure joy, and not the desperate dance on the edge of injury, hunger, self hatred and despair it can be in the present day.
Took me back completely. I studied ballet by the Cecchetti method from the age of 6 to 18, from the 60s to the late 70s. It struck me that we did, in effect, unwittingly go through all six types of principals through the week as you explain. I could relate to many aspects of your analysis and it has been a welcome revelation having the whys and wherefores explained in that my love of expressive virtuoso ballet is becoming increasingly difficult to come across in todays ballet arena, you demonstrate this so thoroughly. Thank you
Thank you so much for your observations. The Method is very special for those of us who have had training in it and I’m so glad it brought back great memories and that you enjoyed the film!
I couldn't agree more. I also studied via the Cecchetti method in my teens and other than an occasional class (non-Cecchetti) now and then I left the ballet world a long time ago other than a spectator. In my dotage, now rather shorter and much wider than I was in my youth, those principles in particular aplomb and epaulement, are instilled in my body in a way I hadn't realised; this became apparent when trying out an online Silver Swans tutorial. Might be arthritic and stiff but still got it. I wonder if todays top athletic dancers will be in that position? I feel sad to watch classes today where stretch bands and leg-rolling devices appear to have replaced a thoroughly grounded technique.
I have heard of Ciccheti, but not in the States, as much. Pure genius! As a physical therapist, I can see the method's obvious deference to the body's dynamic movement. I'm tired of cringing in sympathetic pain when I watch some ballets. This should be part of every dancer's training!
I was very fortunate in training in Cecchetti. Thank you Louise Lombard. I am 53 and have been dancing for 35 years without many injuries. Never understood why the adult women who I dance with, suffer from hip, joint and knee pain. They were Imperial or RAD trained. Now I think I know why. Thank you for a wonderful documentary.
Thank you so much! This is exactly what I heard and saw demonstrated in my Cecchetti classes/exams many years ago. Whatever the training system, the first principle must remain clear: ballet is art.
Whatever is happening in ballet is also happening in other forms of art, in education, in how we choose to live our lives. It seems to us that we have all the information we need to achieve something, yet we are totally lost in this search. We want quick results, quick tips and hacks that can fix things that take sometimes years to master. As a result, we get mediocrity and a whole lot of other problems. Thank you for your film. In my opinion, whether it is French school, Russian school or Italian school, the basic principles for ballet should remain the same, and we need to demand a change in the direction it is going, which is to follow a fast food method that for sure will lead our dancers into injuries.
Dear Joy, Thank you for your astute perceptions and I agree totally with your comments! There are indeed, many problems in so many areas of our culture. As artists are the mirrors of our society they will reflect its aspects, both bad and good.
@@juliecronshaw7013 I think part of the problem is that in our society in general, we have started to emphasize competition over cooperation, which leads to the competition to extend further rather than express better.
Finally I hear a professional saying something I have been saying for many years. Thank you, I wish more teachers and artistic directors would take this on board and get away from the acrobatics we see in dancers today,
While the acrobatics included in dance today is very popular and I dont discount acrobatics as it has positive features, I always felt that acrobatics in dance was a seperate interuption rather and definately not a real part of the dance.
The Cecchetti method is most often compared to the Vaganova method, which started in Russia, but is now used widely. What exactly do you mean by "today's method"? Dancers do tend to be more acrobatic these days, in terms of extensions and leaps. Balanchine contributed a lot to latter-day ideas of what a ballet dancer should be.
This was brilliant to watch. Thank you. My 9 year old son is a brilliant dancer and we want to help him as much as we can. His teacher feels strongly that he’d do well dancing professionally as he grows up. I’m completely new to all of this and am researching as much as possible to better understand this beautiful world of ballet that I’ve been introduced to.
What a wonderful and important "work of love" you've given us. I am so thankful that you have documented what is almost lost in classical ballet today. The exquisite style and dancing that is shown in this video, sadly, because it's not seen in class or on stage almost look 'foreign' now but it is our classical ballet history and so important to the core of it.
I just started a history of dance class at uni and this documentary is so helpful, thank you so much! Brilliantly made and such a beautiful voice to listen to!
The argument "Ballet is dead" perfectly echoes what I was told at University while studying music. That tonality is dead. But tonality to adheres to certain physical principles. There is still much to do to explore music while not abandoning or dismissing tonality. Noise for the sake of noise is not music just the way nudity for the sake of nudity is not art.
Oh My GOSH am I glad that I found this!!! I thought it was just me that was annoyed with all the contemporary dance fusions into classical ballet. I love this so much!!! Thank you for posting this!!! It's the beauty of the dance that drew me in for years, not the physical prowess and bone-breaking athleticism.
Wonderful! It's helping me to stay in form at my age. Brings me back to my classes in my youth. I still do the bar. Thank you for the lessons. Mille grazie!
What a beautiful film on the true meaning of danse de ballet classique! I think every dancer has always known that dance was and is always meant to be a silent expression of emotion enhanced by the music .
I truly appreciate this documentary .As a dancer I can vouch for the schedule and how each step helps to build towards connections of new transitions in a performance. Turn outs , Transfer of weight and center of gravity are a mainstay in my ballet school.
Hi Julie, it's lovely to see this excellent film. I couldn't agree more, I'm teaching all my students that ballet is an artform not a sport, it's hard to convince this generation and we need more voices saying this! Lovely to see you again in this film, our paths have crossed quite a few times over the years! Katy (Lane) Sinnadurai x
I wish that this type of dancing would come back. Dancers acheve lots of triks very young and laking in artistry puting lor of presure on their body. Loved this video.
I enjoyed the film very much because I can see similarities with the art of singing. With a good sound technique (that involves the whole body), you can sing effortlessly and surprise yourself with what you are able to express and convey. I loved the emphasis that art is a language (not a dazzling display of strength or painful extremes). And, indeed, all (including the very lovely piano playing!) was graceful, impressive and inspiring. Thank you very much. And I wish a happy musical and artistic journey to all💐🎶😘
@@juliecronshaw7013 thank you Julie. Still singing!!!!! (not dancing I m afraid, although I did a lot in younger days : folk, ballroom.... and an intense night clubber!)
Thank you, Miss Cronshaw, for this wonderful video. I agree that current ballet has become vulgar and ridiculous in appearance. In my youth, I studied with Richard Ellis and Christine DuBoulay in Chicago, IL. They taught the Cecchetti method. Whenever professional dancers were in town, they always came to their studio for class. I was lucky to have danced with the Boston Ballet during the 1970's and my training held me in good stead. Even then, though, one could see gymnastic dancing beginning to creep in. Dancers stopped moving and began linking poses together calling it dance.
Thank you for your comment, that is a really good observation. Karsavina always talked about the flow of movement, what the Russians call 'plastique' . At the end of the day we would all rather watch a dancer with that quality, no?
Thank you so much Ms. Cronshaw for putting this documentary together. It brought my mind back to the fundamentals and reasons in the training of classical ballet. I taught ballet for 30 years and now in retirement I teach Pilates mat classes. My ballet training and experience is always in my mind when teaching Pilates. Again, thank you and I am passing on this documentary to a ballet friend who still teaches in America. With every good wish, Anne C-C
This was wonderful and I can't wait to watch the other videos. My teacher was a Cecchetti examiner and I remember those grueling days preparing for our exams. Looking forward to sharing this link with some of my own students. Thank you
In my training, I was very fortunate to have a training of Checchetti & Vaganova...a very well planned syllabus that our mistress brought out into each level class that reached into the very best of each dancer. Many went onto professional company careers. 🌹
What a delight to come across this video! My favourite ballet technique without a doubt. I'm now 50 and retired from professional dance 20 years ago to pursue a business career. This brings back so many great memories of my ballet mistress Sheila Dickie, a former student of Dame Ninette de Valois.
I am so thankful to have run across this documentary! I studied Cicchetti as a child and now am training to teach it! Love this resource. Thank you for putting this on TH-cam!
I am not a dancer, I am an enthusiastic audience member. To me this technique makes sense. It takes advantage of the ergonomics of the body and by doing so it makes the body move as it should and that is beautiful. Ballet for me as an audience member is to see the body at its best. Why strain the feet and back when it is possible to use the core? All structure has to take into account stress. I now see why a lot of modern dancers do not have the poise or the elegant extension of the past.
Absolutely fantastic video! I have noticed the trend of making dance into a gymnastics contest and this video is absolute gold! Thank you for sharing this. Bravo to those beautiful dancers who were an absolute delight to watch. xx
Thanks dear friend thanks for sharing your beautiful thoughts and experience. Thanks to the dedicated dancer for sharing your beautiful experiences. Thanks to the musician. Thanks for sharing your inspiring message. Thanks to master Checcetti for his inspired work.
This is absolutely heroic - going against the tide of spectacle in order to preserve the artistic...as well as the bodies and minds of aspiring dancers caught in the Machine.
The majority of modern works are no good. This documentary is absolutely wonderful, learned so much.We must maintain the integrity and the originality of ballet.
Dear Julie, what a lovely piece of research. This is a door to find those endless times and treasures of the past that are very present now. Thank you and to all those talented and wonderful dancers and teachers on those research. A great legacy.
As an American, I find the interview with Massey so refreshing. There are but few young men in the US who could speak with such clarity and intelligence and thoughtfulness as he does. I wish more young Americans could be exposed to European culture. The ones I have met who have been are quite different.
Fabulous! This educational video is a goldmine of information on the fundamentals of Chechetti technique. The film is exquisitely crafted and left me breathless at the end.
What a labour of love! This documentary and the fantastic website have given me much food for thought. Thanks for your wonderful contribution to dance knowledge and education - I have recommended it to three colleagues already!
Thank you! I’m a huge fan of Bournonville. In my opinion he was the Mozart of choreography. He found it so easy to create he couldn’t understand why those around him couldn’t put ballets together ‘just like that’. And like Cecchetti, who was a generation after him, he had a strong moral conscience and keen sense of social responsibility wanting better working conditions for his dancers.
I’ve never done ballet (or any dance) but I absolutely adored this!!! Recently I became interested in ballet because it’s influenced some fashion trends. In other words, because of the aesthetic. But I used to play and teach a classical instrument so I quickly connected with the musicality of ballet. I really admire the respect for the body that you’ve highlighted here. It’s so important!
I also appreciate the emphasis on basics. Once I was told that clarinetists were notorious for neglecting their scales and while I’d hated scales and thought they were useless until then I took it personally. Out of spite and stubbornness I became among the best at scales and it improved every aspect of my playing. Now I love them! I also took to heart how difficult it is to correct poor technique when it took my teacher well over a year to correct one of my classmates’ tongue posture even though they were extremely dedicated to fixing it. Ever since I’ve dreaded experiencing something like that. We also learn the importance of not pushing beyond your limits early on, if you begin playing high notes before you have the strength you’ll be flat. I honestly don’t know if it can be corrected… I guess reaching higher registers is a bit like going en pointe? My clarinet teachers (and one great chemistry teacher) taught me how to approach learning and it’s fascinating to see the similarities with Cecchetti. I was very lucky!! Sadly I quit clarinet due to undiagnosed adhd, after grade 6 it became harder and harder for me to practice long enough because of my difficulties staying still/still-ish. I miss the music but it’s not realistic for me. Maybe I should try ballet instead? If I do it’ll definitely be this method
This is the best ballet video/documentary ever! I guess I am partial, because I was Cecchetti-trained from the age of 4. It gave me the most beautiful, solid ballet foundation. The attention to detail, the way it challenged my mind, the strength and perfect line, beautiful arms and head placement. No other technique teaches epaulment. The Best!
Thank you so much for this documentary. It was both eye opening and superbly explanatory. I always wondered why so many dancers were injured so frequently and now I have my answer. Cheers.
Thank you so much for this channel. I'm working on a fictional book that has the characters dancing classical ballet, and yours is the first video channel that's been able to communicate the concepts in a way I (as someone who is not particularly physical) can understand. Best!
watched at the perfect time as I begin a long road of healing with PT and physical training. Made my workout COMPLETELY different (and waaay more productive!) (not a dancer, btw)
Excellent documentary and a truer word has not been spoken. In all forms of dance, ballet, ballroom, skating, it has become a series of gymnastic moves where indeed impossible contortions of body are required and all forms of artistic presentation is lost.
Thank you for this! I studied classical ballet as a child and teenager. I now practice Brazilian Jiu Jitsu and Arnis-Eskrima (Filipino Martial Arts) but classical ballet is the basis for my warm ups. Now, I'm thinking, I need to create a similar system of body mechanic drills and principles to help people studying these arts. We have drills in these arts, but I'd like to explore them deeper, connecting the mechanical function inside the torso to the goal of the drill in a detailed manner.
I stumbled across your film completely by accident Julie and what a pleasure it has been to watch - well done. It strikes a special chord because even though I am now a professional singer/actress "who moves well" I did 7 years of Cecchetti ballet training as a child and this at a time when the method was less in "in favour" than others. However, I feel it has always helped me with my artistic expression on stage. As other people have said here I do hope you find a wide audience for his. Good luck with it!
Mon premier professeur quand j avais 4 ans était premier danseur étoile du Caire et d Alger et avait été partenaire d Anna Pavlova. J'ai danse aux grands ballets classiques de France, merci pour cette magnifique émission, Awicha
Thank you so much for this absolute wonderful and clear work finally I hear and see that at some point in the future there might be the chance that Ballet as it is shown here will come back to the world of dance. As Ballet is now I call it nervous wriggling what I see everywhere and it is mostly void of an artistic vision. Of course this is a personal opinion...
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And thank you all so much for the the support and kindness, it really means a lot :)
thank-you so much-- that was incredibly interesting. The difference is palpable because there is an incredible lightness of being in Cecchetti movement and even smallest delicate movement fills the entire space of stage.
Thank you so much and glad you enjoyed the film!
Thanks for a great observation! I believe the same could be said for an actor who can whisper but still their voice reaches to the back of the auditorium.
Hello Julie. I am Indian but follow all classical ballet. With my limitations, I wish to add that you are a saviour to all the modern ballerinas. Your method is scientific and aesthetically very graceful and artistic. That is what dance should be isn't it ? Please forge on and may you find greater and richer patronage amongst your people. Thanks.👍 for bearing with me.
Thank 's👏👏👏🇧🇷
"Dance is reaching extremes that go against artistry." True, true. The more I learn and teach Cecchetti, the more I am astounded by his genius!
funny how he was seen as bombastic/circus dancing when he first appeared in russia..
That is so true.
Cecchetti is old fashion
@@georgesteplitsky8561 Fashion is irrelevant. Art is eternal.
LIKE EVERYTHING ELSE! EVERYTHING IN THE USA IS EXTREMES NOW. JOB SEARCHING, FINDING A JOB, GROWING UP, BUUYING A CAR, IT'S ALLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLL SO EXTREME! AND WHY? FOR MONEY, ONLY!!!
I wish I had been taught this. In the 1960s-70s I was the hyper flexible girl who could fly, but by my mid twenties my knees and hips were wrecked, and my lumbar spine showed arthritis in my early 30s. This film shows the physics and geometry in Cecchetti's principles, which make great sense. Thank you for this.
Our national ballet teaches the cechetti method, The National Ballet of Canada- what is the difference in how the Russians or French teach? I took adult ballet classes at age 26- they should be banned- schools need money- the school I went to was owned and run by a former soloist with THE NATIONAL...The teaching was good BUT the human body is not meant to turned out with feet pointing east and west! At least not mine- within 6mos I was in so much pain from bursitis of the hip, I had to see an orthopedic surgeon who amazingly had been the doctor at The Royal Ballet- so he knew. He was a character and told me to take up belly dancing! That was a long time ago- to to this day, I need arthritic rubs, cortisone shots, pain killers and cannot sleep without a pillow under my hip. I am thin and plan to be thinner, and well, if I had a child who showed promise, I wouldn't stop them but I'd make sure they spoke to good teachers, dancers etc- it is such a gamble. I will always love all genres of dance but I wish my hip couldn't predict the weather! This documentary is fascinating and I wish it had been out! Her detailed explanations can only add to my enjoyment from the front row!
@@MSYNGWIE12 As a former ballet teacher who enjoyed teaching ballet to adults as well as tochildren, I'm very sorry you had this experience. A good teacher of adult ballet will be exceptionally conscious of the limitations of an adult body as opposed to a pliant "blank slate" of a child's body, and will teach accordingly. I used to emphasize musicality, enjoyment, spirit and fun as opposed to goals. like attaining leg height, speed, and athletic prowess. Each student was asked about goals, why they were now studying ballet, and health and safety concerns were pre-eminent. I tried to incorporate little snippets of dance history, information about musical and dance styles, and would tell students if they wanted to learn how to compete with younger, stronger students of greater stamina, my class wasn't for them. There are always aerobics classes, gymnastics, etc, but they were immersing themselves art form. The highest aim was to feel something that transcended the body, to transmit that feeling to others, to merge with music and to convey love. Writing now seems a tad inadequate, but I loved seeing the smiles, seeing fluidity, watching the joy of discovery. I would err on the side of caution, to avoid injury, and strive to bring out the most beautiful components of each student. Sometimes victory was seeing a student relax into a lovely balance, stretch into a long line of arabesque, and hold that for a few seconds. Sometimes a ripple of infectious joy moved through us as the class polkaed together, breathed into a porte de bras, or did 6 clean sautes. If not a labour of love, why teach? If gentleness isn't incorporated, what is the point?
Yes, I agree. I wish I had been trained in this method also when I was younger.
Cyn Hanrahan, I am exactly the same,you are so right, I am 58 with so many injuries,wish I could turn back time and have the opportunity to learn the Cecchetti method…..too late now,but this video is amazing
I was trained in the cechetti method and have never had an injury and know of no one who had an injury. I continued for many years to take classes as an adult, for my enjoyment. Now in my 70s, my knees, and my body, are in fine condition. I was always taught so carefully to move so as to protect my body. Bless my wonderful teachers!
Ballet is about feelings, expression, mood, line...should I go on? It has become a sport the last decades and there's no difference from one dancer to another. Who does higher, who does more turns, who stands on one leg longer...it has changed so much! Dame Margot Fonteyn didn't have the best feet, she didn't have the highest extensions...but WOW, you couldn't take your eyes off her when she danced! I miss the individuality of the difference of style, the ballet of each school of dance...they all look the same! Just how I feel...
Well, I've just been watching Marianela Nuñez, and I can't take my eyes off her. Mood, line, feelings, and the most beautiful expressions in her face. The great dancers of the past are irreplaceable, yes, but there are wonderful dancers today whom we will look back on as irreplaceable too someday. Just the thoughts of a non-expert.
Tetsuya Kumakawa !!
Just like in figure skating. It's all about the quad jumps now. The beautiful artists like Jason Brown don't get as much credit. There's too much weight placed on jumps in the code of points. Same with gymnastics.
Just how I feel too. Actually, I think the lines and extensions are ugly. The banana legs and over extended arches aren't eye pleasing in my opinion. Take me back to Maria Tallchief or Dame Margot please.
For dancers from the past, I prefer Moira Shearer ... wish there was more video of her... and saying that, I wish there was more video of Margot Fonteyn as well.
Thank you! I am an ex- dancer Vaganova trained, who has decided to start classes again. The tips given are so helpful and inspiring. 😊 Lastly, you have voiced the opinion that I've had for a long time that ballet should not be an athletic competition. I started realizing this terrible trend when I started looking back at famous dancers in the 70's and they were brilliant without overextended legs and acrobatics. They had more heart than most of the artists of the day. Bravo for your work.
Thank you! It does appear that dancers from decades before the 1980s ‘had more heart’. I know what you mean without going into detail.
As a non-dancer I find these videos facinating. The strength and endurance of these dancers is amazing! Thank you for breaking down this most beautiful art form.
70 years old here ..... I wish my ballet teacher had explained the what and why while she taught, because this is what she was how she was teaching. I wish I could tell her how much I appreciate this method protected our bodies while teaching us the art of ballet.
Same here.
I am a graduate of the Canadian National Ballet School, where I trained under Betty Oliphant. This video is marvelous, because I learned all these difficult combinations while young. I am now pretty old, yet still teaching ballet at the Colorado Ballet Academy. Throughout my long career I have never had a dance-caused injury, and I credit my Cecchetti training with keeping me safe. One thing I really like about Cecchetti is that the arms are controlled, and not all over the place as one sees from so many contemporary ballet dancers. Maybe Cecchetti is making a comeback!
Maybe! Thank you so much for your comments! It’s an interesting exercise to look back and never forget the best elements of the great teachers of the past. At the very least we could see a return to a ballet class with combinations that reverse, use interesting step vocabulary and a closer relationship between the dancer and the musician.
Hopefully! I can’t believe that I did these combinations as a child and a teenager. They are fiendishly difficult!
If Cecchetti were to make a comeback it would help bring boys into ballet class. Cecchetti was a man, and Cecchetti arms are strong. Vaganova, on the other hand, was a woman, and Vaganova arms are feminine and often soft. In my opinion, the feminine arms of the Vaganova method are one reason it is so hard to get American boys to study ballet.
What do you think?
@@juliecronshaw7013
It’s a very interesting observation! Dance classes for boys are increasingly popular here in the UK and numbers got a boost with Billy Elliot and the Mathew
Bourne Swan Lake a couple of decades ago, but boys still don’t necessarily take ballet. Regardless of the technique offered they usually think it’s for girls and you cannot blame them when outnumbered in class. It’s a perennial dilemma. I’ve found they often join ballet via other dance classes where the teacher has recommended it
Also, would Cecchetti make a difference now? Yes I bet he would!
Yes, all of that is true. Most ballet people I talk to say “it’s cultural,” and they let it go at that.
However, it is possible to change culture. During my lifetime I have seen four major cultural revolutions: rights for minorities, rights for women, rights for LBGT individuals and rights for the handicapped. It would be easy to change the culture about ballet for boys-all you would have to do is put the message out there in public service announcements on TV and social media. These announcements would show boys dancing, perhaps with beautiful girls, and perhaps saying something like: “Ballet class is where all the beautiful girls hang out!”
Ballet schools and companies would have to band together to make this happen, but it’s possible, and the goal of getting more boys in ballet could easily be achieved in a short amount of time.
Quite frankly, it upsets me that ballet people do not do more to change the public perception of boys in ballet. They should be proactive and work to change the status quo, instead of just accepting the way things are.
Though never a dancer I've a life long love of classical ballet. I can understand how turning it to athletics would take out the emotion, the magic. Gymnists are awesome but, now that I think about it, watching is not emotional. I watch the ballet for the magic. I hope this video is watched by many who can make a difference in classical ballet.
As an RAD trained dancer I found many similarities. I agree the magic is being replaced by tricks. I don't go to the ballet to see tricks! Your programme was so well put together and any dancer would learn from it.
And non-dancer ❤
I was lucky to have learned ballet with this method and never suffered an injury. Ballet was and is an art.
The demonstrator Muriel Valtat is That petite allegro about nine minutes in had me sympathetically gasping for air, followed by the urge to stand up and yell, Brava!" Those insanely fast yet articulated entrechat sixes, while maintaining a beautifully relaxed upper body and precise epaulment -- good Lord!
Loved this film. I kept stopping and rewatching to study and savor the fantastic, rare footage. So glad this has been saved for future generations!
Oops. Entrechat quatre.
Thank you so much! This project was truly a ‘labour of love’ and I am forever grateful to Muriel and Salvo who gave their time -and trust- to me and the team, so we could realise it.
This is mind-bending !! I finally see what older generations of dancers were talking about when complaining about today's acrobatics. I can never look at my ballet classes the same way ever again and I cannot thank you enough for putting this film together and sharing it with the world !
Thank you for bringing us back the art of classical Ballet.
I studied with Vincenzo Celli and Richard Thomas. In NYC. Our technique and style seemed so antiquated back in the 80’s!
I am 61 still teaching and demonstrating, I attribute my longevity to my excellent training.
It is amazing and unique (so far) to hear from someone who studied directly with Vincenzo Celli. Richard Thomas had a following in NYC at the time if I remember. Good technique is never out of style and you are still dancing ...so what more needs to be said? Thank you for your comment and glad you enjoyed the film!
There is a dance magazine from 1980 with Cynthia Harvey on the cover. There is a short article about Celli in the photo is myself and another young dancer , my then fiancé took the photo.
There is also a short film that was made in 1981 directed by Carol Jeffries and features my then teachers Jonette Swider and Eddie Verso and Toni Ann Gardella . The Film features Celli instructing the exercises, these dancers demonstrated the syllabus. It is a wonderful and important archive. Unfortunately I have lost contact with these people and was never able to get a copy.
Maybe someone reading your post can help find this film, it would be so valuable.
did r thomas teach the russian school? ...was it he?
@@POLMAZURKA as far as I know Richard Thomas taught cecchetti method
For the sake of every dancer I hope these words are heard.
Yes, Me too!
Monday 11:39 Aplomb - Standing in the vertical;
Tuesday 18:42 Epaulement - Opposition about the vertical;
Wednesday 24:38 En-Dehors & En-Dedans - Turnout
Thursday 32:39 Les Jetés - Transference of Weight
Friday 36:25 La Batterie et Les Temps de Pointe - The Aerial Plane
Saturday 40:27 Les Grands Fouettés Sautés: Ballon - Bouncing
Woah, thank you!!
The great stir fried whips.... LOL!
It is so healing to watch ballet as a deeply rooted, strong, healthy expression of pure joy, and not the desperate dance on the edge of injury, hunger, self hatred and despair it can be in the present day.
Took me back completely. I studied ballet by the Cecchetti method from the age of 6 to 18, from the 60s to the late 70s.
It struck me that we did, in effect, unwittingly go through all six types of principals through the week as you explain. I could relate to many aspects of your analysis and it has been a welcome revelation having the whys and wherefores explained in that my love of expressive virtuoso ballet is becoming increasingly difficult to come across in todays ballet arena, you demonstrate this so thoroughly. Thank you
Thank you so much for your observations. The Method is very special for those of us who have had training in it and I’m so glad it brought back great memories and that you enjoyed the film!
I couldn't agree more. I also studied via the Cecchetti method in my teens and other than an occasional class (non-Cecchetti) now and then I left the ballet world a long time ago other than a spectator. In my dotage, now rather shorter and much wider than I was in my youth, those principles in particular aplomb and epaulement, are instilled in my body in a way I hadn't realised; this became apparent when trying out an online Silver Swans tutorial. Might be arthritic and stiff but still got it. I wonder if todays top athletic dancers will be in that position? I feel sad to watch classes today where stretch bands and leg-rolling devices appear to have replaced a thoroughly grounded technique.
You raise a most interesting debate! Thank you for watching and I hope you are enjoying your classes again, even if online.
@@denisehill7769 u
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This is a masterpiece of Ballet documentary so inspirational. I truly appreciate it . Thank you so much for sharing this.🩰💖
Thank you so much!
Cecchetti’s ballet movements are organic and so compelling to watch! This was a treat to watch and learn about.
I have heard of Ciccheti, but not in the States, as much. Pure genius! As a physical therapist, I can see the method's obvious deference to the body's dynamic movement. I'm tired of cringing in sympathetic pain when I watch some ballets. This should be part of every dancer's training!
The dancers here are a pleasure to watch!
Such an incredible film. As a young dancer, in a world of trying to go beyond the human limit, this was very helpful. Thank you 😊
I can imagine the relief of trying to be something unnatural, and instead building natural strength and artistry.
I was very fortunate in training in Cecchetti. Thank you Louise Lombard.
I am 53 and have been dancing for 35 years without many injuries. Never understood why the adult women who I dance with, suffer from hip, joint and knee pain. They were Imperial or RAD trained. Now I think I know why.
Thank you for a wonderful documentary.
Thank you so much! This is exactly what I heard and saw demonstrated in my Cecchetti classes/exams many years ago. Whatever the training system, the first principle must remain clear: ballet is art.
Thank you for your comment! Yes indeed, never forget, ballet is an art (and not a sport...)
Whatever is happening in ballet is also happening in other forms of art, in education, in how we choose to live our lives. It seems to us that we have all the information we need to achieve something, yet we are totally lost in this search. We want quick results, quick tips and hacks that can fix things that take sometimes years to master. As a result, we get mediocrity and a whole lot of other problems.
Thank you for your film. In my opinion, whether it is French school, Russian school or Italian school, the basic principles for ballet should remain the same, and we need to demand a change in the direction it is going, which is to follow a fast food method that for sure will lead our dancers into injuries.
Dear Joy, Thank you for your astute perceptions and I agree totally with your comments! There are indeed, many problems in so many areas of our culture. As artists are the mirrors of our society they will reflect its aspects, both bad and good.
@@juliecronshaw7013 love this thank you so much !!
@@juliecronshaw7013 I think part of the problem is that in our society in general, we have started to emphasize competition over cooperation, which leads to the competition to extend further rather than express better.
You are absolutely right.
Yup.
Finally I hear a professional saying something I have been saying for many years. Thank you, I wish more teachers and artistic directors would take this on board and get away from the acrobatics we see in dancers today,
While the acrobatics included in dance today is very popular and I dont discount acrobatics as it has positive features, I always felt that acrobatics in dance was a seperate interuption rather and definately not a real part of the dance.
Brilliant. Every dancer needs to see this.
I would love to see side by side something danced using Cecchetti’s method and today’s method.
The Cecchetti method is most often compared to the Vaganova method, which started in Russia, but is now used widely. What exactly do you mean by "today's method"? Dancers do tend to be more acrobatic these days, in terms of extensions and leaps. Balanchine contributed a lot to latter-day ideas of what a ballet dancer should be.
to me the exercises look like a real ballet stage performing; so beautiful and mesmerizing , at the same time powerful and functional
This is just wonderful. I hope it impacts ballet for years to come.
This was brilliant to watch. Thank you.
My 9 year old son is a brilliant dancer and we want to help him as much as we can. His teacher feels strongly that he’d do well dancing professionally as he grows up.
I’m completely new to all of this and am researching as much as possible to better understand this beautiful world of ballet that I’ve been introduced to.
Thank you very much for publishing this documentary. I applaud, you Julie.
I like how you paired he term "anatomically safe" to ballet!
This documentary got me really touched. Thanks for sharing it
Watching this Again, so beautiful and a brilliant view into the truth of the spirit and virtue of ballet!
What a wonderful and important "work of love" you've given us. I am so thankful that you have documented what is almost lost in classical ballet today. The exquisite style and dancing that is shown in this video, sadly, because it's not seen in class or on stage almost look 'foreign' now but it is our classical ballet history and so important to the core of it.
I just started a history of dance class at uni and this documentary is so helpful, thank you so much! Brilliantly made and such a beautiful voice to listen to!
Thank you very much, am glad to help!
The argument "Ballet is dead" perfectly echoes what I was told at University while studying music. That tonality is dead.
But tonality to adheres to certain physical principles. There is still much to do to explore music while not abandoning or dismissing tonality. Noise for the sake of noise is not music just the way nudity for the sake of nudity is not art.
Such ideas are the proof of a decadent, depraved view of art. Hopefully the ideas will swing away soon.
The death of tonality and classicism in dance will pass on too.
It was interesting to watch this film ! Dear author, thank you for the effort to save the art of ballet.
Thank you for your lovely comment!
I am reliving my ballet classes of MANY decades ago...in a Checchetti oriented NYC ballet school, Thalia Mara and Arthur Mahoney teachers, + others.
I studied with in NYC with Vincenzo Celli and Richard Thomas MANY decades ago! ;)
Oh My GOSH am I glad that I found this!!! I thought it was just me that was annoyed with all the contemporary dance fusions into classical ballet. I love this so much!!! Thank you for posting this!!! It's the beauty of the dance that drew me in for years, not the physical prowess and bone-breaking athleticism.
For this entire film to be edited by George Massey alone, that's a phenomenal amount of work. I know how hard editing is. He's done an incredible job
George is unique and has the patience of Job. Thank you, he appreciates you noticed it!
Beautifully done. My gratitude to the filmaker, teacher, and dancers who put this together.
Wonderful! It's helping me to stay in form at my age. Brings me back to my classes in my youth. I still do the bar. Thank you for the lessons. Mille grazie!
What a beautiful and compassionate film this is. Technically perfect, sound, vision and soul. Thank you Julie.
You are so right; ballet is a spiritual, soulful, quintessential cosmic theory .
I loved your presentation. Dance is higher language .DANCELINES
What a beautiful film on the true meaning of danse de ballet classique! I think every dancer has always known that dance was and is always meant to be a silent expression of emotion enhanced by the music .
I truly appreciate this documentary .As a dancer I can vouch for the schedule and how each step helps to build towards connections of new transitions in a performance. Turn outs , Transfer of weight and center of gravity are a mainstay in my ballet school.
Wonderful! Thank you! Ballet is Art!
Hi Julie, it's lovely to see this excellent film. I couldn't agree more, I'm teaching all my students that ballet is an artform not a sport, it's hard to convince this generation and we need more voices saying this! Lovely to see you again in this film, our paths have crossed quite a few times over the years! Katy (Lane) Sinnadurai x
Thank you so much! I hope we cross paths again soon.
I wish that this type of dancing would come back. Dancers acheve lots of triks very young and laking in artistry puting lor of presure on their body. Loved this video.
I enjoyed the film very much because I can see similarities with the art of singing. With a good sound technique (that involves the whole body), you can sing effortlessly and surprise yourself with what you are able to express and convey.
I loved the emphasis that art is a language (not a dazzling display of strength or painful extremes).
And, indeed, all (including the very lovely piano playing!) was graceful, impressive and inspiring.
Thank you very much. And I wish a happy musical and artistic journey to all💐🎶😘
Thank you Fred! I sang a lot as a child and couldn’t agree more. A happy, artistic journey to you
@@juliecronshaw7013 thank you Julie. Still singing!!!!! (not dancing I m afraid, although I did a lot in younger days : folk, ballroom.... and an intense night clubber!)
I have to remember singing and dancing are also much, much different postures lol
Thank you, Miss Cronshaw, for this wonderful video. I agree that current ballet has become vulgar and ridiculous in appearance. In my youth, I studied with Richard Ellis and Christine DuBoulay in Chicago, IL. They taught the Cecchetti method. Whenever professional dancers were in town, they always came to their studio for class. I was lucky to have danced with the Boston Ballet during the 1970's and my training held me in good stead. Even then, though, one could see gymnastic dancing beginning to creep in. Dancers stopped moving and began linking poses together calling it dance.
Thank you for your comment, that is a really good observation. Karsavina always talked about the flow of movement, what the Russians call 'plastique' . At the end of the day we would all rather watch a dancer with that quality, no?
Thank you so much Ms. Cronshaw for putting this documentary together. It brought my mind back to the fundamentals and reasons in the training of classical ballet. I taught ballet for 30 years and now in retirement I teach Pilates mat classes. My ballet training and experience is always in my mind when teaching Pilates. Again, thank you and I am passing on this documentary to a ballet friend who still teaches in America.
With every good wish,
Anne C-C
What a beautiful document. We as Lballet are underscoring every word! Thank you so much. best regards, LBallet Paul Valk (Netherlands)
The dancers in the old footage are saying something about what it is to be human, with every step. And they don't seem stressed. Wow, what a concept.
Yes, you nailed it! What it is to be human….
I wish I this video would have been available during my dance carreer! So enlightening!
This was wonderful and I can't wait to watch the other videos. My teacher was a Cecchetti examiner and I remember those grueling days preparing for our exams. Looking forward to sharing this link with some of my own students. Thank you
Thank you so much! Really appreciate the feedaback.
In my training, I was very fortunate to have a training of Checchetti & Vaganova...a very well planned syllabus that our mistress brought out into each level class that reached into the very best of each dancer. Many went onto professional company careers. 🌹
What a delight to come across this video! My favourite ballet technique without a doubt. I'm now 50 and retired from professional dance 20 years ago to pursue a business career. This brings back so many great memories of my ballet mistress Sheila Dickie, a former student of Dame Ninette de Valois.
This is so incredible on so many levels - thank you!!!!
Thank you very much indeed.
I am so thankful to have run across this documentary! I studied Cicchetti as a child and now am training to teach it! Love this resource. Thank you for putting this on TH-cam!
Fantastic. Thank you for sharing. It would be great if young generations could watch this video.
I am not a dancer, I am an enthusiastic audience member. To me this technique makes sense. It takes advantage of the ergonomics of the body and by doing so it makes the body move as it should and that is beautiful. Ballet for me as an audience member is to see the body at its best. Why strain the feet and back when it is possible to use the core? All structure has to take into account stress. I now see why a lot of modern dancers do not have the poise or the elegant extension of the past.
Absolutely brilliant and will help a lot of young dancers!
Absolutely fantastic video! I have noticed the trend of making dance into a gymnastics contest and this video is absolute gold! Thank you for sharing this. Bravo to those beautiful dancers who were an absolute delight to watch. xx
Can't say how much I enjoyed to watch your documentary, Julie! Truly amazing and beautiful, thank you so much!
I have read about the Cecchetti method but I have never seen it demonstrated. Thank you.
Thank you for this wonderful film!
Thanks dear friend thanks for sharing your beautiful thoughts and experience. Thanks to the dedicated dancer for sharing your beautiful experiences. Thanks to the musician. Thanks for sharing your inspiring message. Thanks to master Checcetti for his inspired work.
What a wonderful documentary!! Muriel Valtat is beautiful to watch, what graceful and effortless display of strength and beauty in her movements.
Thank you so much!
This is absolutely heroic - going against the tide of spectacle in order to preserve the artistic...as well as the bodies and minds of aspiring dancers caught in the Machine.
The majority of modern works are no good. This documentary is absolutely wonderful, learned so much.We must maintain the integrity and the originality of ballet.
Thank you for this beautiful film about something so meaningful. You show so much love and care for the art of ballet. Dance is an expression of life.
Always preserve the almost spiritual appeal of ballet which is a bit deeper than beauty
Yes indeed.
Dear Julie, what a lovely piece of research. This is a door to find those endless times and treasures of the past that are very present now. Thank you and to all those talented and wonderful dancers and teachers on those research. A great legacy.
A big Thank You for everything you say in this video....This is vital to a dancer's blood. I agree 100%.
As an American, I find the interview with Massey so refreshing. There are but few young men in the US who could speak with such clarity and intelligence and thoughtfulness as he does. I wish more young Americans could be exposed to European culture. The ones I have met who have been are quite different.
Thank you!
Fabulous! This educational video is a goldmine of information on the fundamentals of Chechetti technique. The film is exquisitely crafted and left me breathless at the end.
Divine! Thanks for sharing such precious knowledge!
What a labour of love! This documentary and the fantastic website have given me much food for thought. Thanks for your wonderful contribution to dance knowledge and education - I have recommended it to three colleagues already!
Thank you so much! I’ve got more articles and essays on my resource website TheCecchettiConnection.com, with more to come!
This looks like what Dance should be - and once was. This reminds me of Bournonville's Ballets.
Thank you! I’m a huge fan of Bournonville. In my opinion he was the Mozart of choreography. He found it so easy to create he couldn’t understand why those around him couldn’t put ballets together ‘just like that’. And like Cecchetti, who was a generation after him, he had a strong moral conscience and keen sense of social responsibility wanting better working conditions for his dancers.
What a beautiful, fascinating, eye and mind opening documentary video. Thank you very much for sharing!
Dear Julie, I'm thrilled to find your documentary: so wonderful, inspiring, impressive... thank you!!!
Thank you so much!
Such an amazing source of information! Thank you so much. Every ballet teacher should watch it. 👏🏻👏🏻
I always feel sad when I hear young dancers describe ballet as Sport. Oh dear,oh dear. Its ART!
I've always viewed it as both! Which is unique only to ballet... and WWE! Lol sounds silly but think about it! But more so ballet...
@@elizabethsedai854 I would say figure skating is both, also.
@@valmacclinchy oh yes!! I forgot about figure skating!! You're totally right!!
@@elizabethsedai854 ...and rhythmic gymnastics ...and synchronised swimming...?
@@Coucoutchicou yes!! Those too!! Definitely!
I learnt ballet under the best Italian instructors in Milan following this method and I can say : it was a joy ! Exciting and no injuries ❤
I’ve never done ballet (or any dance) but I absolutely adored this!!! Recently I became interested in ballet because it’s influenced some fashion trends. In other words, because of the aesthetic. But I used to play and teach a classical instrument so I quickly connected with the musicality of ballet. I really admire the respect for the body that you’ve highlighted here. It’s so important!
I also appreciate the emphasis on basics. Once I was told that clarinetists were notorious for neglecting their scales and while I’d hated scales and thought they were useless until then I took it personally. Out of spite and stubbornness I became among the best at scales and it improved every aspect of my playing. Now I love them! I also took to heart how difficult it is to correct poor technique when it took my teacher well over a year to correct one of my classmates’ tongue posture even though they were extremely dedicated to fixing it. Ever since I’ve dreaded experiencing something like that. We also learn the importance of not pushing beyond your limits early on, if you begin playing high notes before you have the strength you’ll be flat. I honestly don’t know if it can be corrected… I guess reaching higher registers is a bit like going en pointe? My clarinet teachers (and one great chemistry teacher) taught me how to approach learning and it’s fascinating to see the similarities with Cecchetti. I was very lucky!!
Sadly I quit clarinet due to undiagnosed adhd, after grade 6 it became harder and harder for me to practice long enough because of my difficulties staying still/still-ish. I miss the music but it’s not realistic for me. Maybe I should try ballet instead? If I do it’ll definitely be this method
Well done Julie! So thrilled this is all available globally now. :)
Thank you Donna! Hope you enjoyed watching!
@@juliecronshaw7013 6
This is the best ballet video/documentary ever! I guess I am partial, because I was Cecchetti-trained from the age of 4. It gave me the most beautiful, solid ballet foundation. The attention to detail, the way it challenged my mind, the strength and perfect line, beautiful arms and head placement. No other technique teaches epaulment. The Best!
Thank you so much for your comment!
Thank you so much for this documentary. It was both eye opening and superbly explanatory. I always wondered why so many dancers were injured so frequently and now I have my answer. Cheers.
Pavlova’s dying swan was the only one that made me cry.
Thank you so much for this channel. I'm working on a fictional book that has the characters dancing classical ballet, and yours is the first video channel that's been able to communicate the concepts in a way I (as someone who is not particularly physical) can understand. Best!
watched at the perfect time as I begin a long road of healing with PT and physical training. Made my workout COMPLETELY different (and waaay more productive!) (not a dancer, btw)
There is a dancer in all of us! Good luck with your recovery.
Excellent documentary and a truer word has not been spoken. In all forms of dance, ballet, ballroom, skating, it has become a series of gymnastic moves where indeed impossible contortions of body are required and all forms of artistic presentation is lost.
Thank you for this! I studied classical ballet as a child and teenager. I now practice Brazilian Jiu Jitsu and Arnis-Eskrima (Filipino Martial Arts) but classical ballet is the basis for my warm ups. Now, I'm thinking, I need to create a similar system of body mechanic drills and principles to help people studying these arts. We have drills in these arts, but I'd like to explore them deeper, connecting the mechanical function inside the torso to the goal of the drill in a detailed manner.
I stumbled across your film completely by accident Julie and what a pleasure it has been to watch - well done. It strikes a special chord because even though I am now a professional singer/actress "who moves well" I did 7 years of Cecchetti ballet training as a child and this at a time when the method was less in "in favour" than others. However, I feel it has always helped me with my artistic expression on stage. As other people have said here I do hope you find a wide audience for his. Good luck with it!
Mon premier professeur quand j avais 4 ans était premier danseur étoile du Caire et d Alger et avait été partenaire d Anna Pavlova. J'ai danse aux grands ballets classiques de France, merci pour cette magnifique émission, Awicha
Thank you so much for this absolute wonderful and clear work finally I hear and see that at some point in the future there might be the chance that Ballet as it is shown here will come back to the world of dance. As Ballet is now I call it nervous wriggling what I see everywhere and it is mostly void of an artistic vision. Of course this is a personal opinion...