Kuwait Times

PARIS BALLET'S 'LITTLE RATS' STAY FOCUSED AS WORLD SPINS

-

The world might feel like it is falling apart but that is no excuse for slacking at the Paris Opera Ballet School. Teacher Wilfried Romoli barks out orders to his final year boys at what is arguably the world’s best ballet school, and certainly its oldest having been founded by the “Sun King” Louis XIV-no mean dancer himself. They are about to face fantastica­lly tough tests that might determine the rest of their careers. The stakes could not be higher. The annual competitiv­e examinatio­n is the holy grail for final-year boarders at the school in Nanterre, just west of the French capital. For the very best, there is the possibilit­y of a place in the Paris Opera’s corps de ballet.

But even for the creme de la creme, there can be disappoint­ment. Some years none are taken on, depending on the ballet’s needs. With the coronaviru­s pandemic following a marathon strike at the Paris Opera, it has been a tough year for the “little rats”, as the students are affectiona­tely known. Exams were postponed and pupils forced to train and rehearse at home, which can be potentiall­y disastrous for such elite athletes and performers.

‘Little rats’ to big stars

“I quickly realized that we were at risk of sacrificin­g a generation,” said the school’s director Elisabeth Platel, guardian of the French style of classical dance. “So I decided to give all the students who were not taken on by the company an extra year” to prove themselves, the former legendary prima ballerina told AFP. Even the lucky few selected for the ballet will not be able to take their traditiona­l first bow at the iconic Opera Garnier until December. For a whole year, “the entire school has not had to face the public, nor stage fright,” Platel noted.

The “little rats” were able to restart classes in June after France’s two-month lockdown, but 20 of the multinatio­nal group were unable to return-blocked in homes from Canada to Australia by travel bans or quarantine­s. The school’s dormitorie­s have also reopened, with just one student per room rather than the usual three. Dance studios are regularly aired out, barres are disinfecte­d and everyone must wear a mask as they move between classes. Folk dance, mime and pas de deux courses have been suspended to minimize physical contact.

Leaping gazelles

Final year student Rubens, 18, did a series of grand jetes, leaping like a gazelle across the room. He injured his ankle before the lockdown and had to start practicing again practicall­y “from zero” at home, he said. “It was a little bit like being in prison but it allowed me to be really concentrat­ed so that I could improve the quality of my work,” Rubens added. Another dancer, Margaux, had fears of “falling behind” during the lockdown. Ballet dancers grow up with warnings to stay in peak condition drilled into them. One maxim goes: “When you miss a class for a day, you notice it. The second day the teacher notices it. And the third, the public sees it.” “It was hard,” Margaux said, “but we have learned to work on our own.”—AFP

 ??  ?? In this file photos dancers rehearse at the Opera Ballet School in Nanterre, a Paris suburb. — AFP photos
In this file photos dancers rehearse at the Opera Ballet School in Nanterre, a Paris suburb. — AFP photos
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait