Wednesday, September 16, 2015

Wild Wednesday Towel Support



 

Wild Wednesday Towel Support

The most readily available prop in a dance classroom is probably a towel. I often use them as a prop for several things. For instance: Ballet Secret #20f: Use a towel to show how the arms must stay centered on the torso in a pirouette; Ballet Secret #20k: Pick up a dropped towel in the center to show how the weight of the body should fall around a central axis; and finally, Ballet Secret #20g:  A towel can be used to support the thigh of the working leg in rond de jambe en’lair.

Today’s secret is very similar to Ballet Secret 20g, and is Ballet Secret# 20m:  Use a towel underneath the working thigh to demonstrate the support necessary for petit battements.”


In a petit battement, the rapid back and forth movement (see yesterday’s blog) of the foot beside the ankle makes it very difficult to keep the working thigh still. (There is realistically a little unavoidable movement in the thigh, but dancers work to minimize this.) Using a towel underneath the working thigh that is held from above by the teacher or a partner helps the dancer feel the support they must create in order to keep the thigh from moving excessively. Then, when the towel is removed, the dancer tries to feel the same sensation of support by using their own muscles.

From the Big Blue Book of Ballet Secrets:
Secret #20m:  

“Use a towel underneath the working thigh to demonstrate the support necessary for petit battements.”

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