Selasa, 17 Mei 2011

Ballet Vocabulary

Ballet Poses

A comprehensive ballet vocabulary includes a variety of ballet poses as well as ballet steps and positions. These are the most common poses:

Arabesque

This pose is done standing on one leg, either flat, on half point, or on full point. The leg that is extended to the back (always straight) is usually at a 90-degree angle to the leg of the supporting foot (parallel to the floor), although an arabesque can also be higher or lower than 90 degrees.

Attitude

An attitude is not a particular way of doing something (as its name might suggest), but rather a static position that is similar to an arabesque. On one leg, the raised leg differs from the arabesque in that the knee is bent and that an attitude can be done to the side or the front, as well as the back, whereas an arabesque can only be done to the back.

Ballet Steps

Assemblé

This item of ballet vocabulary does have some sense to an English speaker; you 'assemble' your feet (bring them together) while you are in the air. First, brush one foot to the front, side, or back, and then jump, bringing both feet together and landing in fifth position on both feet.

Glissade

A simple step found in many combinations. From the French 'to slide', one foot slides out and the other foot joins it, closing in fifth. The slide can be to the front, back, or side.

Passé

In this step, one foot passes the knee of the other leg, the standing leg. In point work, as the foot comes to the knee, the dancer often raises onto point and comes down again as the foot comes back to the floor.

Plié

The French 'to bend' refers to the knees in this term. This step can be done in any position, and to three different depths: plié, demi-plié (halfway to the floor), and grand-plié (all the way down, with heels off the floor-except in second position).

Tombé

A nice visual step despite its simplicity, you step onto one foot in plié, creating an illusion that you're falling onto that foot.

Ballet Jumps

The most common ballet jumps should also be a part of your basic ballet vocabulary.

Changement

Stand in fifth position, plié, and then jump straight up into the air, switching the foot that was in back on the ground into the front, creating as little visual space between the two feet in the air as possible. As you land, plié again to absorb the shock of the jump. Your feet should be in fifth position, with the opposite foot in front.

Entrechat

This jump is an extension of the changement, and a number always follows the name of the jump; the number tells you how many times the feet have to swap positions in the air before landing on the ground again. In an entrechat-quatre (most common), essentially two changements are done in the air so that you end up in fifth with the same foot in front as you originally had. It probably goes without saying that the jump must be higher than a changement in order to complete the jump before you land.

Grand Jeté

This is perhaps the best-known ballet jump, where the dancer seems to do a split in midair moving forwards. Again, the dancer needs some height in order to have the time to achieve a split before landing again.

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