Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,588,558 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Franco De Vita teachers's wisdom.


In 2005, American Ballet Theatre American Ballet Theatre, one of the foremost international dance companies of the 20th cent. It was founded in 1937 as the Mordkin Ballet and reorganized as the Ballet Theatre in 1940 under the direction of Lucia Chase and Rich Pleasant.  asked Franco De Vita Franco De Vita (born January 23, 1954 in Caracas, Venezuela) is a singer-songwriter popular in Latin music.

One of three children born in Latin America to Italian immigrants, De Vita’s family returned to Italy when he was 3.
 to become the principal of the Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis School, a new institution devoted to training ABT ABT About
ABT Abteilung (German: Department)
ABT Abbott Laboratories (stock symbol)
ABT American Ballet Theatre
ABT Associação Brasileira de Telemarketing
ABT Abort
ABT Availability Based Tariff
 dancers of the future. Born in Italy and raised in Belgium and France, De Vito combines a Gallic effervescence ef·fer·vesce  
intr.v. ef·fer·vesced, ef·fer·vesc·ing, ef·fer·vesc·es
1. To emit small bubbles of gas, as a carbonated or fermenting liquid.

2. To escape from a liquid as bubbles; bubble up.

3.
 with a no-nonsense approach to teaching. His European sensibility was nurtured as a professional dancer in Germany and France. Upon retirement, De Vita acquired the Enrico Cecchetfi Diploma and received the highest teaching degree from the Accademia Nazionale di Danza in Rome. Before coming to the JKO JKO Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis
JKO Joint Knowledge Online
 School, he served as the dean of faculty and curriculum for the Boston Ballet History
The Boston Ballet is a professional ballet company based in Boston, Massachusetts. It was founded in 1963 by E. Virginia Williams and was the first professional repertory ballet company in New England.
 School. De Vita spoke to DANCE MAGAZINE about his perspective on teaching and his priorities in starting a high-profile ballet school from scratch.

WHAT ARE THE CHALLENGES OF ESTABLISHING A SCHOOL FOR A COMPANY LIKE ABT? In a way it's easier to start something than to take over an institution that has been established for many years. A long time ago, there was a school at ABT. Now we begin with a new school. I can start with my ideas, and there has been no precedent.

I want to teach very pure classical ballet Noun 1. classical ballet - a style of ballet based on precise conventional steps performed with graceful and flowing movements
ballet, concert dance - a theatrical representation of a story that is performed to music by trained dancers
 because I think this is the need of the company. It's exactly what [artistic director] Kevin McKenzie Kevin Alexander McKenzie (born July 16, 1948 in Pretoria) was a South African cricketer from 1966/67 to 1986/87. He never got to play Test cricket like his son Neil due to South Africa's apartheid ban but became a successful batsman in first class cricket.  wants. The thing I really like--and I saw it the first time I came to America-is that everybody here has such incredible energy. Everybody wants to work in a very positive way. The port de bras port de bras  
n.
The technique or practice of positioning and moving the arms in ballet.
 is sometimes difficult for these dancers. I would like to see more quality in the port de bras and use of epaulement-it's so beautiful. It's important, also, when doing modern dance, the use of the weight of the body. The company is doing such a range of repertoire. When a dancer is trained in a very pure, classical way, it's easy to switch to different styles. I want this to be a school that produces dancers for ABT and other companies. My first goal is to produce beautiful dancers who can dance Sleeping Beauty Sleeping Beauty

sleeps for 100 years. [Fr. Fairy Tale, The Sleeping Beauty]

See : Enchantment


Sleeping Beauty

enchanted heroine awakened from century of slumber by prince’s kiss.
 and ballets by William Forsythe William Forsythe can be:
  • William Forsythe (actor) (born 1955)
  • William Forsythe (dancer) (born 1949)
 and Antony Tudor.

SOME SCHOOLS REQUIRE THE GIRLS TO TAKE THE ENTIRE BALLET CLASS ON POINTE. HOW DO YOU FEEL ABOUT THAT.9 Sometimes I like the barre on pointe--but not every day. When you do it every day, you never really work on the full articulation of the feet. Once a week, I like the girls to do the center in soft shoes because you can feel a different way of balancing. You need to do both because you work the feet differently.

CAN YOU EXPLAIN THE CONNECTION OF FIRST AND FIFTH POSITIONS, WHICH YOU STRESS IN YOUR CLASS? For me, first position is so important. It's the first position! When you establish a first position cleanly and correctly and then just close into fifth, all the work is done. I work with first position in the top-level classes. Do some exercises and go back and feel the first position, feel the rotation, because it's so basic. When you do tendu ten·du  
n.
Any of several Asian ebony trees.



[Hindi tend
 from first to fifth to first to fifth, you feel the position. I am a big fan of first position!

YOU WORK A LOT WITH ACCENTS AND PHRASING. DO YOU ENCOURAGE THE STUDENTS TO FIND THEIR OWN PHRASING WITHIN A COMBINATION? Yes and no. You need to respect the phrasing, but when you hold your balance a little longer, you can accelerate the next step and still be in time. I think it is good for a student to try different phrasings and play with the qualities of faster, a little slower, and suspension. But it has to be on the music. It's all about listening to the music. The music gives you exactly the quality of the movement. Sometimes I try to help with the use of my voice. I worked with a fabulous teacher, Alla Osipenko. She used to say, "Don't just listen to the music. Sing the music." Because when you sing the music, it's in your body.

YOU SPEAK A LOT ABOUT RECOVERING FROM A POSITION BEFORE MOVING TO ANOTHER. CAN YOU EXPLAIN THAT? My first training was in the French school. Every time we did a step, it was very important to feel the centralization before going on to another. It gives you a lot of speed and you can change direction very easily. Every time you go from one position to another, you establish the center, and then you go. It resolves so many problems. You see it at the barre when a student does a grand battement--you have to feel being on both legs in fifth before going back on one leg. The younger students in the French school do a lot of exercises with a stretch and plie pli·é  
n.
A ballet movement in which the knees are bent while the back is held straight.



[French, from past participle of plier, to fold, bend, from Old French; see pliant.]
 in between. Like brise, stretch, plie, brise. It makes you centralize your weight.

When you are on balance, you are on your legs and there is no pressure or tension. It gives you tranquility. When a student stays on balance, her face changes. It's a beautiful feeling Track listing
Side A.
1.Political Destruction
2.Not Guilty
3.Adolescent Death
4.Beautiful Feeling


Side B.
1.Why?
2.Tell Me The Truth
3.
. At the same time, you rest. It's an easier way of dancing. When you can feel the balance of the center of your body onstage and something wrong happens, you can save it with that sense of balance and control.

WHAT DID YOU TAKE FROM THE CECCHETTI SCHOOL? What I really like is some of the speed and allegro, which is similar to the French school. Cecchetti has a beautiful use of the port de bras and epaulement--and very specific. When you do cruise devant, you place the bottom arm a little lower. It gives you a presentation of the chest and upper body. When you are slightly inclined, your arms react, and again it gives you a presentation. I also like the work with the upper body in the Russian school. I take what is best from everybody. We are doing classical ballet, which involves a tradition. Picasso, before doing cubism cubism, art movement, primarily in painting, originating in Paris c.1907. Cubist Theory


Cubism began as an intellectual revolt against the artistic expression of previous eras.
, was an incredible technician.

Do YOU ADVOCATE THE REPETITION OF STEPS OR COMBINATIONS IN CLASS? I try working on two or three particular movements within a one- or two-week period. And I change the exercise, but I go back to that same movement. We did renverse Ren`verse´   

v. t. 1. To reverse.
Whose shield he bears renverst.
- Spenser.

a. 1. (Her.) Reversed; set with the head downward; turned contrary to the natural position.
 on Friday and I repeated it today. Your body memory needs it. Sometimes I repeat exactly the same step and I see a big difference because the student can work more on the detail of the correction. I bring it back until I get what I expect.

IS THERE ANY CURRICULUM YOU WOULD LIKE TO ADD? My first dream is to have a dance history class. When I was in Belgium, I attended the royal state conservatory. To do our last ballet exam, we had to take a dance history exam. If you failed the dance history exam, you had to repeat the whole year in dance. I remember we were so upset then, and now I say, "Thank you," because it changed my life. If you plan to have a career in dance, you have to have a notion of dance history. Sometimes I speak in class about Serge Lifar, Diaghilev, Pavlova, and everybody looks baffled. It's so important to know this!
COPYRIGHT 2006 Dance Magazine, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2006, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Title Annotation:being interviewed
Author:Carman, Joseph
Publication:Dance Magazine
Article Type:Interview
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jan 1, 2006
Words:1208
Previous Article:Virginia School of the Arts.(appointed Tyrone Brooks and Martha Faesi)(Brief Article)
Next Article:Victor Quijada: this director/choreographer/ dancer mixes hip hop with concert done, with electrifying effects.(On the Rise)
Topics:



Related Articles
Learning Styles, Culture, and Inclusion Instruction in Multicultural Classrooms: a Business Management Perspective. (Among The Periodicals).(Brief...
Oleg Tupine.(Transitions)(Brief Article)(Obituary)
Teacher's wisdom.(This month: Jorge Esquivel)(Ballet Nacional de Cuba)(Interview)
Guru Simonson.(Letter to the Editor)
Gelsey's sense.(Letters)(Letter to the Editor)
HK Group.(Connecticut)(Brief Article)
American Ballet Theatre's Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis School.(New Assignments)(Franco De Vita principal)(Brief Article)
Curtain up.(Gelsey Kirkland)(Editorial)
Quote of the month.(Letters)
Cecchetti's choices.(TECHNIQUE)

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