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New York City Ballet journal.


Letters must be signed and should include a phone number where you can be reached weekdays for confirmation. Send your letters to Readers' Forum, Dance Magazine, 33 W. 60 St., New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
, NY 10023. All letters become the property of Dance Magazine, and we reserve the right to edit.

ABT ABT About
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ABT American Ballet Theatre
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 DEFENDED

* I cannot agree with the complaint about the ruinous ru·in·ous  
adj.
1. Causing or apt to cause ruin; destructive.

2. Falling to ruin; dilapidated or decayed.



ru
 cost of attending 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.  performances at Lincoln Center Lincoln Center

New York’s modern theater complex. [Am. Hist.: NCE, 1586]

See : Theater
 [Readers' Forum, April, page 8]. Orchestra seats at the Met cost $65 and $48, not "about 100," and the Dress Circle ($40) is neither uncomfortable nor distant. ABT's prices are the same as last year's; subscribers also received an extra performance free. And $80 for commuting and parking? Try public transportation. The writer would have been more helpful had he specified the "large suburban arena" that ABT could fill to capacity.

AVOIDING PAIN

* In the April Advice for Dancers [page 68], a dancer who wanted to avoid products made by companies that use animals for testing was told by Dr. Linda Hamilton to use Vaseline to keep her hair in place. Wrong! Chesebrough-Ponds, maker of Vaseline, performs tests on animals; also it uses petroleum which is distilled in a process that creates pollution.

Health-food stores carry products that have been made by cruelty-free, unpolluting methods. For a list of such producers, your readers should write People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) is an international nonprofit organization that supports Animal Rights and has spawned a tremendous amount of conflict and controversy from its inception. , P.O. Box 42516, Washington, DC 20015-0516.

I am pleased to report that Maria Bj[phi]rnson's lovely costumes for the Royal Ballet's production of 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.
, which I saw at Kennedy Center on April 6, used neither fur nor feathers. Now if only shoemakers would stop using leather!

DANCE - EXTRACURRICULAR?

* As a dance educator [Hobart and William Smith Colleges Hobart and William Smith Colleges, located in Geneva, New York, are together a liberal arts college. The Colleges adhere to a "coordinate system", which retains some elements of the original single-sex institutions, though the student experience is largely co-ed. ] I was shocked to find Muriel Topaz representing dance as an extracurricular activity ["A Liberal Arts Degree: What Does It Offer the Dancer?" March]. Dance can be considered as such only if students participate in it as recreation, divorced from academic study. It is one integral aspect of a college education. Because so much must go on in the mind of a dancer, many dancers become good students and vice versa VICE VERSA. On the contrary; on opposite sides. .

In a liberal arts institution, dance courses are designed to be "intellectually enriching" and an artistic experience. Although I don't believe it was Ms. Topaz's intention, her article underscored the misconception that these studies are merely activities done in students' free time.

* Muriel Topaz replies: As a former director of the dance department at an educational institution and a longtime crusader to have dance considered worthy of study, I share Dr. Davenport's frustration and goals.

My article, however, was addressed to dance students who want to become professionals and was intended to help them choose institutions best suited to their special needs. A liberal arts college Liberal arts colleges are primarily colleges with an emphasis upon undergraduate study in the liberal arts. The Encyclopædia Britannica Concise offers the following definition of the liberal arts as a, "college or university curriculum aimed at imparting general knowledge  presents particular challenges to the aspiring professional because students are allowed to earn only a third of their credits in their major field. For the dedicated dancer this is usually an inadequate allotment of time to acquire the needed skills. Most serious dance students, therefore, must enrich their programs by adding noncredit non·cred·it  
adj.
Of, relating to, or constituting an educational course that does not offer credit toward an academic degree.
, i.e., extracurricular activities.

I certainly did not intend to imply that dance was unworthy of credit, nor did I assume that only amateur dancers would be attracted to a liberal arts school.

I did, however, present the facts as they are, not as I wished they were. I firmly believe it is important for students dedicated to dance to expand their horizons; liberal arts are one way to accomplish this goal.

BALLERINA MOMS

* I appreciated your May article, "Ballerina Moms." Though not a professional, I have been taking class for sixteen years and found ballet training to be a major aid to stamina, discipline, and creativity. Last February, thanks to ballet class, I became a chum (at age forty-six) to my own baby ballerina daughter, Giselle. Whether she actually becomes a ballerina is not as important as the fact that she is reaching for that fartherest star, to become what she wants to be.
COPYRIGHT 1994 Dance Magazine, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1994, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:Young Dancer; journal entries of an apprentice ballerina
Author:McBrearty, Deanna
Publication:Dance Magazine
Date:Jul 1, 1994
Words:676
Previous Article:Out of Step: A Dancer Reflects.
Next Article:Momix journal. (reflections of dancing experiences with the Momix dance company) (Young Dancer)
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