Wednesday, August 19, 2015

Wacky Wednesday Pop


Wacky Wednesday Pop

I’ve blogged before about assemblé; see Ballet Secret # 15d: “In an assemblé, to make sure the legs assemble in the air, imagine catching a fly between the ankles.”  As most dance students know, assemblés must assemble in the air. That’s the important part – in the air, not on the landing. And like a cabriole, the second leg must travel up and out to meet the first leg in the air. That means that the first leg can’tt go up so high that the second leg is unable to “catch” it.

Another fun step is the petit assemblé, which, unlike the standard assemblé, assembles as the leg (usually in cou de pied) shoots downward toward the floor, and a lovely fifth position sous-sus in the air is shown before the dancer lands in fifth.

To do this effectively, imagine the effervescence of a bottle of carbonated soda, and lift the body as though the bottle was just shaken and the bubbles rise madly - causing the top to pop off.

From the Big Blue Book of Ballet Secrets:

Secret #15gg:  
Petit assemblés assemble downward instead of outward.

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Quote of the Day:

“Life is not a solo act. It's a huge collaboration, and we all need to assemble around us the people who care about us and support us in times of strife.”
-          Tim Gunn


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