Virtual dance corrections – The Dance Coach

Dance expert Bob Rizzo believes virtual dance corrections can improve your technique, by him coaching and advising aspiring professional dancers. Previously Rizzo has directed and choreographed for television and live theatre, and his company, Riz-Biz Productions, has produced over seventy five dance teaching videos covering Jazz, Tap, Ballet, Lyrical, Hip Hop, and Swing; his website, thedancecoach.com, serves as a virtual dance instructor.

With the internet, pre-professional dancers can access a wide variety of information about the dance industry and their careers, such as where to study dance in their area, as well as searching for auditions. The Dance Coach website, however, was designed to give professional feedback and advice for dancers considering a professional career. It also provides a service for any dancer looking for personalised, detailed feedback on a dance or maybe even audition routine, such as how to improve their technique and/or performance, as well as their choreography. Dancers – and teachers too – can therefore refine their work from a passive, objective source.

The website also offers a phone and Skype service to discuss dance career goals, college choices, or making a move to a larger city, again offering objective advice for those that need it, especially if they would like a second opinion or have no other source of information. Many online forums can also be somewhat useful in this area, however that can become opinionated and subjective, which is less helpful when the experience or problem is relative. Website users can also schedule a session for a private, one-to-one coaching in a studio.

As a virtual service, thedancecoach.com is a very cost-effective way for dancers and teachers to get feedback, especially if feedback is only usually gained from competitions. Additionally, gaining access to this information is highly valuable, being able to discuss career goals, professional career guidance based on interests and aspirations, as well as suggestions for additional education, including workshops, internships and job-shadow opportunities.

The Elite Summer Ballet School launch

July 2015 will see Danceworks, one of the capital’s dance training facilities offering classes in a multitude of genres, launch its Elite Summer Ballet School. Open to 8-16 year old boys and girls, parents of talented young dancers are invited to bring their children along to meet the team behind London’s newest international ballet school in June, with the free Open House including a demonstration class.

Danceworks will be hosting a 2 week intensive ballet training course preceding the launch of the Danceworks International Ballet Academy which will open in September, to become London’s newest centre of excellence for training young ballet dancers. The course runs between 20 and 31 July and is open to both boys and girls. There are a limited number of scholarships on offer and the academy will consequently offer elite training to young dancers wishing to develop their love of dance.

Two renowned American ex-professional dancers are behind the new Academy initiative to promote the very best ballet training. Kim White, the Course Director and Antonia Franceschi, the Artistic Director, were both members of the New York City Ballet Company. Kim later set up and ran the Vevey Children’s Ballet School in Switzerland for many years. She devised, choreographed and directed a number of full ballets in Vevey’s local theatre. Antonia, who was a Principal ballerina at the New York City Ballet, also performed in the films ‘Grease’ and ‘Fame’. She teaches at the Royal Ballet School.

Both women believe passionately in the quest to perfect the art of ballet training. Their original course syllabus, the International Ballet Curriculum©, will focus, among other things, on the unique physicality of the American ‘school’. In addition, one of the major aims of the Academy is to invite adult dancers from major ballet companies to rehearse, work with and perform alongside students in an annual theatrical production.

The BBC Performing Arts Fund

It has been announced that the BBC Performing Arts Fund is set to close after 13 years in action, in March next year. A fund to aspire to, which has been a lifeline for many aspiring young artists, will no longer be available, which is a huge blow to both previous winners and future applicants.

The BBC Performing Arts Fund’s funding is created by revenue from phone voting in BBC TV shows such as Strictly Come Dancing and The Voice, however this has significantly diminished. It is now easier than ever to engage in shows such as these which require audience voting, and more and more people are voting for free with the touch of a button on their remotes. Not only is the media world becoming increasing accessible through dramatically less effort from the audience, it means less people are phoning the show and contributing to the funds in that way.

Since it was set up in 2003 the BBC Performing Arts Fund has distributed £5 million in grants to emerging talent. It was initially launched as the Fame Academy Bursary, and it has supported more than 1,200 individuals in the performing arts, and in excelling their careers. The BBC Performing Arts Fund has aided the work of globally recognisable names such as singing sensation Adele, composer Mark Simpson and the Bristol Old Vic as an organisation.

Before it closes, the BBC Performing Arts Fund will award £156,100 split between 17 alumni, however it could be argued that creating further alumni with this remaining fund would promote its work further, and the message of it closing, rather to those who have already benefited from the fund. Many owe the start of their careers to the BBC Performing Arts Fund, so it would be encouraging to see further use be made of the remaining money. It has been stated that the BBC’s commitment to the arts and nurturing talent remains as strong as ever, despite the fund’s closure.

The school of Pennsylvania Ballet

For Pennsylvania Ballet, the future of ballet depends on young males. As one of the premier US ballet companies, the artistic director – Angel Corella – believes this is where the successful development of ballet lies. The number of boys beginning ballet training, and continuing this into later life, is significantly less than girls. Corella maintains that ballet requires gender balance because every ballet has specific choreographed roles and responsibilities for men and women.

Despite this, it appears boys are privy to more opportunities and greater roles, simply because there are less of them, compared with female competition for that gender. In order to encourage boys to continue with ballet training, gender stereotypes must be broken to help boys consider ballet to be as exciting, rewarding, challenging and as athletic as more traditional pursuits such as football or basketball, balancing the competition divide.

For Pennsylvania Ballet, there is a ballet school for boys and girls that seeks to maintain that all important balance. Many boys suffer ridicule and bullying simply because they enjoy dance, as sadly it is still often seen as effeminate rather than recognised for its requirements of strength, athleticism and artistry. Additionally it is one of the few professions that require complete engagement of every aspect of your being; mentally, emotionally and physically.

Corella believes you have to make ballet as easy to experience as possible, especially for young males, creating a positive atmosphere and helping families support a boy’s passion for ballet. It is therefore the role of ballet companies to create the vision and capture the dreams of children. Pennsylvania Ballet school has seven levels of training in the student division, in addition to pre-ballet classes. Boys train together to normalise the experience, and each year students are selected exclusively from the school to appear with the company in its annual production of Balanchine’s The Nutcracker: the younger they start, the better!

The Equity rate card

It has been announced that Equity, the body providing professional security for dancers, has launched a rate card for professional dancers which brings together industry minimum rates across the union’s dance agreements for the first time. This added measure for dancers means that there will be less chance of their talents being exploited by low, or even no pay. This recent campaign has been highly publicised in drawing attention to the low industry standards for many arts professionals.

The union claims the information will empower dancers to negotiate the correct rates when working on jobs, giving them the confidence through the correct information to ensure they are being paid sufficiently for their work. The rate card includes Equity minimums for dancers in areas such as West End productions, commercial productions, opera, film and television commercials. The variety of work for dancers is so broad, so the rate card must cover all eventualities.

The Equity organiser for dance maintained that the rate card – as a resource for dancers – would be particularly useful for new graduates with limited professional experience, and for dancers taking on work in new areas that are unfamiliar. It is the nature of the profession with its portfolio careers that people will do one or two days of work in different types of dance, in places which aren’t the normal place of work, and that they are not knowledgeable about.

As a result, it is ultimately important that the rate card is something that professionals can refer to, to know exactly what the Equity minimum rate should be and whether this work is meeting that standard. The rate card has been launched following the creation of Equity’s freelance dance network last year, and a similar rate card for choreographers is also in the process of being drawn up.

4dancers: Introducing the Dance Wellness Panel

The extensive website, 4dancers.org, is an incredible dance resource and source of information. Including features on training, interviews with young aspiring students and even information on cinema screenings of well-known ballets, 4dancers is the go-to for a wealth of dance information.

Recently the Dance Wellness segment of 4dancers has rocketed away from its previous stance. In 2012 the first article on Dance Medicine and Science – aka Dance Wellness – went live on the 4dancers website, introducing readers to information on that aspect of the dance world. The response from the 4dancers audience was so positive that a new section of the website was born: a new ongoing segment of 4dancers, entitled “Dance Wellness”, emerged and has been going strong ever since.

May 2015 saw a Dance Wellness panel created for 4dancers, following the eagerness of the audience to learn more about this important field of dance, and how it informs so much of the dance world we live in. 4dancers is the first source for this, spreading the word online about the many aspects of dance wellness and how it aids dance careers. The Wellness panel, therefore, is made up of a group of professionals from the dance science field, working together to inform and enthuse.

James Garrick, MD., is founder and Medical Director of the Center for Sports Medicine, at St. Francis Memorial Hospital in San Francisco. Dr. Garrick was physician for San Francisco Ballet Company, founded the clinic for dancers at San Francisco School for the Arts, and is currently on the physician panel for the San Francisco Ballet School.

Gigi Berardi, PhD has an academic background and performing experience that combined her interests in the natural and social sciences with her passion for dance. Over 300 of her articles and reviews have been published, including in Dance Magazine, Dance International, the Los Angeles Times, The Olympian, and scientific journals such as Journal of Dance Medicine & Science, Kinesiology and Medicine for Dance and Dance Research Journal.

Robin Kish, MS, MFA, is an Assistant Professor in the Dance Department at Chapman University. Robin blends her background in dance and science to creative innovative educational programmes supporting the development of safe and effective dance training programmes. She has presented research and developed lectures for the Performing Arts Medicine Association (PAMA) and the International Association of Dance Medicine and Science (IADMS).

Moira McCormack, MS, is Head of Physiotherapy at the Royal Ballet in London. After a professional dance career in classical ballet she trained as a dance teacher and then as a Physical Therapist, and has worked with dancers for the last 20 years. She teaches anatomy, dance technique and injury prevention internationally, with a main interest in the management of the hypermobile dancer.

Janice G. Plastino, PhD is Emerita Professor from the University of California Irvine in the Dance Department. She is regarded as the founder of the field of Dance Science, and established the first dancer screening/wellness programme in an educational setting at UCI in 1982. Her pioneering and continuing work in the pre-participation screening of dancers has been lauded by the medical, research and dance communities.

Emma Redding, PhD is Head of Dance Science at Trinity Laban Conservatoire of Music and Dance. She has been Principal Investigator for several large-scale research projects including a 3 year government funded study into dance talent identification and development, as well as studies into the role of mental imagery within creative practice.

Erin Sanchez, MS is the Healthier Dancer Programme Manager at Dance UK, administrates the Rudolf Nureyev Foundation’s website for healthcare professionals and dancers, and manages the Dance Psychology Network. Erin is a registered provider for Safe in Dance International, a member of the International Association for Dance Medicine and Science and holds the qualification in Safe and Effective Dance Practice.

Selina Shah, MD, FACP is a sports medicine and internal medicine physician, and the Director of Dance Medicine at the Center for Sports Medicine in California. She is the dance company physician for San Francisco Ballet School, Liss Fain Dance Company and Diablo Ballet. She takes care of the performers for Cirque du Soleil and various Broadway productions when they come to San Francisco Bay.

Nancy Wozny is editor in chief of Arts + Culture Texas, reviews editor at Dance Source Houston and a contributor to Pointe Magazine, Dance Teacher and Dance Magazine, where she is also a contributing editor. She has taught and written about Feldenkrais and somatics in dance for two decades.

Matthew Wyon, PhD, is a Professor in Dance Science at the University of Wolverhampton, UK, and a Visiting Professor at the ArtEZ, Institute of the Arts, The Netherlands. At Wolverhampton he is the course leader for the MSc in Dance Science and Director of Studies for a number of dance science and medicine doctoral candidates. He is a founding partner of the National Institute of Dance Medicine and Science, UK.

Keep an eye in the 4dancers website for updates and wellness content!

The 7 Fingers

Running at the Peacock Theatre from 9 June to 12 July, The 7 Fingers (Les 7 Doigts de la Main) is one of the world’s most inventive contemporary circus companies. Its production TRACES is critically acclaimed, following previous success, now being presented for London audiences. With the company hailing from Québec, this is renowned as the home of modern circus disciplines.

In TRACES, the cast combines traditional acrobatic forms with street elements, mixed with theatre and contemporary dance. The show takes place in a make-shift shelter, an unknown catastrophe waiting outside the doors. In the face of an impending disaster they have determined that creation is the only antidote to destruction. Performance skills include tumbling through hoops, scaling Chinese poles and balancing seemingly effortlessly on each others’ heads, to basketball, skateboarding and playing classical piano.

TRACES redefines the art of circus. It is a poetic, humorous and thoughtful form, and with the use of film clips, narration and a range of music from rock ‘n’ roll to blues and hip hop. First performed in 2006, TRACES has gone on to be performed over 1,700 times in 23 countries. The show has featured as a part of The Royal Variety Performance, played at the Union Square Theater in New York for a year and has won multiple awards.

It is now being presented at the Peacock, as part of Sadler’s Wells. Sadler’s Wells is a world leader in dance, committed to producing, commissioning and presenting new works and to bringing the very best international and UK dance to the stage. The theatre’s year-round programme spans dance of every kind, from contemporary to flamenco, Bollywood to ballet, salsa to street dance and tango to tap. Since 2005 it has helped to bring over 90 new dance works to the stage and its international award-winning commissions and collaborative productions regularly tour the world.

La Soirée to return to the Southbank Centre

The Olivier Award-winning La Soirée is set to return to the capital this winter, for another residency in the Spiegeltent at the Southbank Centre’s Winter Festival. The strictly limited run will start on 27 October 2015 through to 17 January 2016 for the Christmas season, and will feature world class performers from across the globe. On Sunday 12 April earlier this year, La Soirée was awarded the prestigious Laurence Olivier Award for Best Entertainment.

The tantalising world of La Soirée is offering a phenomenal discount to fans, if they book tickets before 21 June. Ringside tickets for the jaw-dropping, awe-inspiring cabaret sensation are only £25 each if booked before this time. All standard tickets for November shows will also be £25 or less, with £10 off ‘Posh Seats’. From 22 June to 31 October, bookers can enjoy £10 off all ticket prices (except standing).

Before returning to London in the autumn, La Soirée will be continuing its world tour with dates in Australia, Denmark, Hong Kong and a stop off at a well-known festival first. La Soirée’s band of dazzling divas and cabaret royalty will be donning wellies and pitching tents in Glastonbury to headline Glastonbury’s Circus Big Top on all three nights of the festival. Promising festival-goers an electric start to the evenings, this will be La Soirée’s Glastonbury première.

Creative producer Brett Haylock is currently rounding up La Soirée’s dysfunctional family of new burlesque, circus sideshow and variety acts so the contemporaries set to entertain London from October can be announced soon. Southbank Centre’s Winter Festival with NatWest in 2015 – aside from the glamour and debauchery of La Soirée – will transform the Southbank Centre with performances and free events including choirs, festive art installations and lights, bustling markets and pop-up bars.

A new cast for West End’s Mamma Mia!

Mamma Mia!, currently playing at the Novello Theatre in the heart of London’s Theatreland, has announced its new cast starting from June. It appears there will be major cast changes; Mazz Murray will be joining the cast as Tanya, Jo Napthine as Rosie, Gabriella Williams as Sophie Sheridan and James Darch as Sky. Also joining the cast will be Louise Young as Ali, Stephanie Fearon as Lisa, Dan Partridge as Pepper and Rory Phelan as Eddie. Dianne Pilkington will continue to star as Donna Sheridan, with Richard Trinder as Sam, Alasdair Harvey as Harry and Charles Daish as Bill.

Mazz Murray is the daughter of songwriter Mitch Murray, and she makes up one third of vocal group Woman. As an actress, Mazz played Killer Queen in We Will Rock You at the Dominion Theatre for seven years, and other theatre includes Maureen in the UK tour of Rent, the UK tour and West End production of Fame and the UK tour of Smokey Joe’s Café.

An update for the ensemble also will see Tom Bowen, Adam Clayton-Smith, Jasmin Colangelo, Kate Coysten, Stephen John Davis, Katy Day, Olivia Kate Holding, George Ioannides, Alex Jordan-Mills, Craig Anthony Kelly, Sorelle Marsh, George Miller, Stacey Leanne Mills, Fergal McGoff, Ella Nonini, Katy Osborne, Robbie Scotcher, Brad Veitch, Caitlin Ward and Sasha Wareham also join the cast.

From West End to global phenomenon, the show tells the story of family and friendship unfolding on a Greek island, set to ABBA’s timeless songs. To date, it has been seen by more than 54 million people in 49 productions in 16 different languages, grossing more than $2billion at the box office. Mamma Mia! originally opened in London at the Prince Edward Theatre on 6 April 1999, before transferring to the Prince of Wales Theatre in 2004. The musical re-opened at the Novello Theatre in 2012 where it celebrated its 16th birthday on 6 April.

West End Live 2015

The 2015 West End Live festival is set to greet Londoners with a bang for another year running, taking place on 20 and 21 June in Trafalgar Square, and showcasing London theatre productions.

Casts from Mamma Mia!, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory and Sunny Afternoon will be featured as part of the festival, and will perform as part of this year’s West End Live, a complete treat for the musical theatre fans, passers-by and tourists that happen across West End Live in the summer.

West End Live is jointly organised by the Society of London Theatre and Westminster City Council, proving first-class entertainment in live shows in the Square. The other shows that are set to appear include Jersey Boys, Wicked and Beautiful – The Carole King Musical. West End Live will run across the entire weekend, with 2015 following the 10th anniversary of the festival in 2014.

The 2014 festival saw a fantastic theatrical line up of much-loved favourites and exclusive performances from the very best that Theatreland and London’s cultural institutions have to offer. Thousands of people gathered together to enjoy free performances from 25 West End shows, including unique appearances from The Royal Opera House Chorus, conducted by Placido Domingo, the English National Opera and an exclusive of Michael Flatley’s Lord of the Dance: Dangerous Games.

The West End Live 10th anniversary also saw old favourites take to the stage once more including Avenue Q, Chicago and Priscilla Queen of the Desert the Musical, all presented by Oliver Tompsett, huge highlights of the weekend for audiences. Also marking the anniversary was the hosting of the West End Live Theatre Emporium – offering an exclusive look into the world of theatre and drama, all housed in a beautiful 1920s Spiegeltent. With more for the 2015 festival to be announced soon, the festival looks set to match the excitement of last year too!