Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,503,364 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Divas & dudes: Les Ballets Trockadero de Monte Carlo.


It's hard out there for a vamp.

Not only do the ballerinas of Les Ballets Trockadero de Monte Carlo Les Ballets Trockadero de Monte Carlo is an all-male drag ballet corps parodying the clichés of romantic and classical ballet. It was founded by choreographer Peter Anastos in the United States in 1974 as a group producing small shows for friends, performing late-late shows in  tackle the daunting daunt  
tr.v. daunt·ed, daunt·ing, daunts
To abate the courage of; discourage. See Synonyms at dismay.



[Middle English daunten, from Old French danter, from Latin
 responsibilities of a diva, but they also portray their Prince Charmings. This all-male troupe has the pressure to demonstrate technical proficiency on pointe, perform double tours en l'air, and, yes, be funny. They tour most of the year, dancing nearly 200 shows annually at whistle stops from Poland to Pittsburgh. And the bulk of the glamour-bulk being the key word--takes place as an illusion on the audience's side of the footlights footlights

Row of lights set across the front of a stage floor to light the scene. The oil lamps and candles in use in the 17th century eventually gave way to gas and electricity.
. Gender-bending comedy aside, they're a hardworking group. Because of the company's tenacity, devotion to crowd-pleasing ballets, and display of past-era ballerina glamour, the Trocks share more than a little in common with the old Ballet Russe de Monte Garlo.

So here's a startling star·tle  
v. star·tled, star·tling, star·tles

v.tr.
1. To cause to make a quick involuntary movement or start.

2. To alarm, frighten, or surprise suddenly. See Synonyms at frighten.
 fact to ponder: The Trocks have now been an institution longer than the post-Diaghilev Ballet Russe during its several incarnations from 1931 to 1963. This year, the company celebrates 33 years of grand diva entertainment. The Trocks recently completed two sold-out seasons at the Peacock Theatre in London and snatched the Theatrical Management Association's Award for Achievement in Dance from venerable troupes like The Royal Ballet. They work 40 weeks per year (they could work 52, but nobody wants to mess with a batch of burned-out drag ballerinas) and are booked through January of 2009.

So what's the key to their success? Like the old Ballet Russe, they give the audience what they want. Tory Dobrin, the artistic director of the Troeks, once worked for a theatrical manager and found out that understanding what presenters and audiences want doesn't require a brain surgeon's skill. "The minute we started going for glamorous, old-time ballets, people started asking why other ballet companies weren't doing them anymore," says Dobrin. Slavic chestnuts like Paquita and Raymonda's Wedding, as well as Swan Lake, Pas de Quatre pas de quat·re  
n. pl. pas de quatre
A dance for four.



[French : pas, step + de, of, for + quatre, four.]

Noun 1.
, and Fokine's Les Sylphides provide the Trocks' bread-and-butter repertoire. This season, they are reviving Susan Trevino's version (after Massive) of Gaiter Parisians, the Ballet Ruse's perennial Offenbach program closer.

But beyond that, audiences want personality onstage, the kind that Alexandra Danilova and Frederic Franklin brought to Gaite Parisienne. "What was great about the recent Ballet Russe documentary is that those dancers loved to perform," says Dobrin. "Even when they were sitting on the couch On the Couch is an Australian television program formally broadcast on the Fox Footy Channel and it focuses on the current issues in the AFL. This is now broadcast on Fox Sports after the closure of Fox Footy Channel.

The show airs on Monday night and is hosted by Gerard Healy.
, they were entertaining. I can't imagine Danilova or any of those ballerinas going onstage and being boring or not wanting to be adored." Who hasn't heard the complaints--justified or not--about the emotional sterility and detachment of today's dancers, some of whom look like they're performing with iPods in their ears? The Trocks never suffer from that malady malady /mal·a·dy/ (-ah-de) disease.

mal·a·dy
n.
A disease, disorder, or ailment.



malady

a disease or illness.
.

So if the key is personality, how do you create it? Dobrin starts by assigning the outrageous Russian names associated with the Trocks. Robert Carter, who joined the company in 1995, dances as both Olga Supphozova and Yuri Smirnov. Fernando Medina-Gallego doubles as Prince Myshkin and Sveltlana Lofatkina ("the Chernobyl Cherub cherub (chĕr`əb), plural

cherubim, kind of angel. Cherubim were probably thought of in the ancient Middle East as composite creatures like the winged creatures of Assyria. In Jewish tradition, they are described (Ezek.
"). To help establish their diva personas, Dobrin calls them by their stage names in rehearsal. "Some of the younger dancers try to act like a gay guy imitating a girl," says Dobrin. "Imitating Madonna is not what we do. You have to find your character and blow it up."

For his inspiration, Carter, who throws around some fierce technique, drew from ballerinas as different as the Kirov's Olga Chenchikova and Dance Theatre of Harlem's Virginia Johnson.

When dancing Raymonda, Medina-Gallego (Madame Lofatkina) imagines her as a "blood-driven woman, a bejeweled be·jew·eled or be·jew·elled  
adj.
Decorated with or as if with jewels.
 Hungarian princess, a strong woman, proud and elegant--and a little bit of a bitch." He also says, "The audience wants to see how far this ballerina will go to entertain."

Paul Ghiselin, who recently gave his final performance as the indomitable Ida Nevasayneva (although farewell promises from divas like Barbra Streisand and Cher are often broken with the right fee) had ideas about his character from the get-go: "I always imagined Ida as this very lofty, hardworking ballerina who has danced perhaps a little too long. She believes she has a large following and is a legend in her own mind."

To bolster their interpretations, the Trocks watch vintage videos of the classics performed by Russian stars. Dobrin brought in Elena Kunikova, who has been an invaluable coach. "I've gotten a strong sense of the Russian style from Elena, particularly the epaulement," says Carter. "Elena is witty with a sense of humor Noun 1. sense of humor - the trait of appreciating (and being able to express) the humorous; "she didn't appreciate my humor"; "you can't survive in the army without a sense of humor"
sense of humour, humor, humour
. The steps and the style are there, and it's a good partnership," says Medina-Gallego. In rehearsals, Dobrin also gives face notes to improve the ballerinas' stage presences. "I'm not talking about mugging," he says. "I mean basic acting skills."

As for the hallmark of a great Trocks evening--comedy--it's serious business, as any comedian will tell you. "There's a fine line between vulgar slapstick and comedy," says Dobrin. "I always ask the dancers, 'What are you trying to communicate here?' "

Carter says it took him a while to find his own sense of comic timing. "If you are doing beautiful dancing, you don't want to suddenly come across with this blatant slapstick moment that cheapens the whole thing," says Garter. "When is it too much or not enough? You have to find the balance." Dobrin admits that he had to rein in to check the speed of, or cause to stop, by drawing the reins.
to cause (a person) to slow down or cease some activity; - to rein in is used commonly of superiors in a chain of command, ordering a subordinate to moderate or cease some activity deemed excessive.

See also: Rein Rein
 Medina-Gallego in the beginning; he was doing 25 extraneous things when one would suffice.

Anyone who has been paying attention to the Trocks can't help but note the improvement in the technical finesse of the company in the last decade. Carter, who started experimenting with pointe work as a young student in South Carolina South Carolina, state of the SE United States. It is bordered by North Carolina (N), the Atlantic Ocean (SE), and Georgia (SW). Facts and Figures


Area, 31,055 sq mi (80,432 sq km). Pop. (2000) 4,012,012, a 15.
, can easily crank out quintuple quin·tu·ple  
adj.
1. Consisting of five parts or members.

2. Five times as much in size, strength, number, or amount.

n.
A fivefold amount or number.

tr. & intr.v.
 pirouettes and jackhammer hops on pointe. It took Medina-Gellago, who trained at Victor Ullate's school in Madrid, only two years of practice in his Gaynor Mindens to comfortably finish his 32 fouettes.

But credit has not been paid to the fact that many of the dancers excel in the male roles as well. Garter has danced both Kitri and Basil in the Don Quixote pas de deux pas de deux

(French; “step for two”)

Dance for two performers. A characteristic part of classical ballet, it includes an adagio, or slow dance, by the ballerina and her partner; solo variations by the male dancer and then the ballerina; and a coda, or
. This season he'll dance the male lead in La Cage (Robert LaFosse's parody of Robbins' The Cage) after switch-hitting as the ballerina in Paquita. Medina-Gellago recently performed Ali in Le Corsaire pas de deux and then slapped on his pointe shoes to dance Odile in the Black Swan pas de deux ("That adagio a·da·gio  
adv. & adj. Music
In a slow tempo, usually considered to be slower than andante but faster than larghetto. Used chiefly as a direction.

n. pl. a·da·gios
1.
 alone is seven minutes long," he groans).

Dobrin sees the interchange of gender roles in ballet as simply an extension of the evolution of a dancer's training. To illustrate, he gives a tennis analogy: "I don't differentiate between male and female dancing--one happens to be in pointe shoes. It's like Steffi Graf and Andre Agassi--they do exactly the same thing, it's just that Agassi hits the ball harder." Carter enjoys the gear shift and appreciates keeping the male elements of his technique, like jumping, intact. "The basis of my training was male dancing," says Carter. "Doing the ballerina stuff doesn't necessarily make my male dancing less masculine. The vocabulary is the same; it's just the implementation that's different."

Whether in white tights or tutus, the Trocks have come a long way, farther than Tobrin imagined when he entered the company in 1980. Joining the Trocks is now viewed by many as a bona fide [Latin, In good faith.] Honest; genuine; actual; authentic; acting without the intention of defrauding.

A bona fide purchaser is one who purchases property for a valuable consideration that is inducement for entering into a contract and without suspicion of being
 career move, one that dancers sometimes seek right after graduation from their ballet academies.

"We started out in a loft at midnight in 1974," says Tobrin. "Now we're playing the Theatre du Chatelet in Paris and the Bolshoi in Moscow in the same year."

Joseph Carman Car´man

n. 1. A man whose employment is to drive, or to convey goods in, a car or car.
 is a Contributing Editor to Dance Magazine and the author of Round About the Ballet (Limelight Editions).

Ida Nevasayneva's Tips For Developing Your Diva Skills

1 Always hold the arabesque arabesque (ărəbĕsk`) [Fr.,=Arabian], in art, term applied to any complex, linear decoration based on flowing lines. In Islamic art it was often exploited to cover entire surfaces.  balance at the end of your variation until whichever screams first-the audience or your bunions.

2 Don't allow anything or anyone to upstage your lipstick, mascara, or tiara. Remember that your face is always your center of gravity.

3 If you start to lose your focus during your 32 fouettes, spot the patron in the fifth row center-the Russian guy who owns several corporate conglomerates. It helps.

4 Your eyebrows are capable of expressing 73 subtle emotions. Use them liberally.

5 If your bows and ovations don't clock in longer than the coda of the piece you just danced, you flopped. Back to the corps.

6 Always complete your makeup with large Ballet Russe red dots in the medial corners of your eye sockets. They help to evoke inconsolable grief in The Dying Swan, or rage in La Bayadere ba·ya·dere  
n.
A fabric with contrasting horizontal stripes.



[French bayadère, from Portuguese bailadeira, dancer, from bailar, to dance, from Late Latin
 when, as Gamzatti, you smack Nikiya upside the head.

7 With age, backs can turn into ironing boards, arches become petrified pet·ri·fy  
v. pet·ri·fied, pet·ri·fy·ing, pet·ri·fies

v.tr.
1. To convert (wood or other organic matter) into a stony replica by petrifaction.

2.
, and extensions may lose their oomph. But port de bras port de bras  
n.
The technique or practice of positioning and moving the arms in ballet.
 and mannerisms are forever.

8 If you splat See asterisk.

1. splat - Name used in many places (DEC, IBM, and others) for the asterisk ("*") character (ASCII 0101010). This may derive from the "squashed-bug" appearance of the asterisk on many early line printers.
2.
 face down center stage, crawl gracefully offstage on all fours--in character.

9 Prima ballerinas require discipline, commitment, poise, and perfect eye shadow-not necessarily in that order.

10 If a ballerina drops dead backstage or accidentally gets locked in a broom closet, always be prepared to jump into her costume. And please remember: Never say never.
COPYRIGHT 2007 Dance Magazine, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2007, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Author:Carman, Joseph
Publication:Dance Magazine
Date:Feb 1, 2007
Words:1524
Previous Article:Passionate partnerships: life and love at home, in the studio, and--sometimes--onstage: five couples who span the dance world from ballet to hip hop...
Next Article:A touch of class: master teacher Azari Plissetski shares his vision of working through the basics.(TAKING CLASS: Perspectives on a daily ritual)



Related Articles
Milwaukee Ballet Company.(Marcus Center for the Performing Arts, Milwaukee, Wisconsin)
Les Ballets Trockadero de Monte Carlo, Joyce Theater, August 17-23, 1998.
TROCK OR TREAT?(Review)
SUMMER PERFORMANCE GUIDE 2001.
January calendar.
Dance Magazine summer 2002 calendar of performances: May 1-September 2.
Trock `n' Roll.(Les Ballets Trockadero de Monte Carlo)(Critical Essay)
Not-so-tiny dancer: once you meet queer cross-dressing 6-foot-4 ballerina Joshua Grant, you'll never look at tutus the same way again.(GEN Q)
Corrections.(Correction notice)
Les Ballets Trockadero De Monte Carlo.(GRANTS AND AWARDS)(Theater review)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles