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ascballerina

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Posts posted by ascballerina

  1. And the director pulls his hat off and hides his face in it....

    It's true, though. I remember being in the wings once and stepping closer to the wall to get out of the way of some performers coming offstage. My foot hit something hot, which turned out to be a wire when I investigated. I got lucky I didn't hurt myself. I know someone else who fell off of a stage into a tuba (and I do mean into a tuba--her leg got stuck in there and broke), and she was a child. I remember in chemistry class there were "posted lab rules" and then "common sense rules" that weren't listed, but it made sense to follow (being careful around broken glass falls into that category). Sometimes, as bart pointed out, the big effects are really closely watched and taken care of, but the little "common sense" rules don't seem to have been looked after...

  2. likewise, the general public will remain generally ill-educated if misconceptions get reinforced by sources that should know better.

    Point taken. Instead of linking to the Nutcracker, when clicked on, the doodle should have linked to the page on this site where we discuss what a sugar plum actually is! shake2.gif

  3. Those are the best. My mother always used to make recital cakes for me, with ballerina cats or ballet shoes (I distinctly remember her making two ballet-shoe cakes when we had a class party--a pink one for the girls, and a white one for the boys! With the flavours being strawberry and blueberry) She also loved to make chocolate moulds of ballerinas and ballet shoes--she'd paint the colours into the mould with tinted white chocolate, and then pour the rest of the chocolate in.

  4. Thank you, Acsballerina, for your gracious reply. I'm picturing your step and thinking it's beautiful - -and realizing I haven't been asked to do demi-contretemps since Brynar mehl's class. and remembering that hte chasse was a lovely feature of that step -- which failli has to a slight degree [as you come down on that foot it should slide forward a little before you jump from it, depending on how much time you have]. Was your teacher Cecchetti-trained?

    Yes, my teacher was Cecchetti-trained. It's a lovely step!
  5. I've been taught demi-contretemps with a very small attitude to the back, then chasseing through to fourth, which is why I said it looked like a demi-contretemps, but really, it was hard for me to tell from the angle, which I'd never seen it done at before. I will bow to those with superior knowledge, and agree from the descriptions that it is most likely the failli-assemble combination.

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