Saskatoon StarPhoenix

SUFFERING FOR ART

Great effort keeps ballerinas dancing on their toes

- SARAH L. KAUFMAN

“I feel like I’m always in a battle with my feet,” says Lauren Lovette, with a sigh. One of New York City Ballet’s principal ballerinas, Lovette has beautifull­y arched, supple feet. And often, they’re killing her.

After years of sprains and other injuries, she underwent surgery to correct a bone anomaly, but even with physical therapy, daily ankle exercises, ice baths and ointments, the 25-year-old still hasn’t made peace with her feet.

Lovette shares this struggle with many dancers, whose feet take sustained abuse, and in the worst kind of footwear (or none at all). While they may run, jump, squat, leap and pivot like any NBA star, dancers do it without shock absorption, arch support or any foot-comfort features whatsoever.

Athletes get to wear shoes that are protective and kind to their feet. Dancers experience no such luxuries as they speed around the stage barefoot, or in heels, or in thin slippers with a flimsy leather sole — or, if they’re ballerinas, in those tight-fitting torture chambers known as pointe shoes.

Pointe shoes may look dainty, but there’s an Elizabetha­n-corset quality to them, reflecting their seriousnes­s of purpose: equipping the dancer to do what no human is designed to do. “Pound for pound, dancers are just as strong as football players, if not stronger,” says Lisa M. Schoene, a Chicago podiatrist and athletic trainer who treats dancers and Olympians. “Getting up on pointe is one of the most athletic things you can do. They’re exerting 10 to 12 times their body weight, going up and down on that pointe shoe.”

A ballerina has incomparab­le strength, especially when it comes to her toes and what it takes to dance on them.

Dancing on the toes revolution­ized ballet in 1832, when Italian ballerina Marie Taglioni caused a sensation in La Sylphide. In the title role of a highland fairy, she seemed to briefly tread the air, rising on the tips of her satin slippers, which she had reinforced with darning. As her trick caught on, and choreograp­hers began exploring the airy possibilit­ies of steps en pointe, shoemakers started stiffening ballet slippers from the inside with layers of fabric and glue.

Pointe shoes are still made that way, with cotton-lined satin, a rigid insole — or shank — and a cupped portion around the toes that is hardened with glue, canvas and paper. Because the shoe and the foot must work together as one, it’s up to each dancer to customize her pointe shoes. Even the most exalted ballerinas sew on their own ankle ribbons and elastics, which secure the shoes, and, like baseball players breaking in new gloves, they all have rituals to make their shoes pliable and quiet.

Unlike ballplayer­s, ballerinas in the major companies have to sew and break in new shoes almost every day. A pointe shoe’s life is measured in hours of wear. At a cost of around $100 (usually paid by the company), a pair may last a pro for a full day of class and rehearsal, but if she’s starring in Swan Lake, or dancing in a couple of short ballets in an evening, she may go through a few changes of shoes.

In such a competitiv­e profession, rest doesn’t come easily. Ballet dancers have a very high pain threshold, says Washington podiatrist Stephen Pribut.

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