The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Ballet isn’t as psycho as ‘Tiny Pretty Things’ say French dancers

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PARIS: Sadistic teachers and murderous levels of competitio­n: from ‘Black Swan’ to ‘Tiny Pretty Things’ the world of ballet seems a place fit only for psychopath­s if its screen incarnatio­ns are to be believed.

Real-world dancers in France take some exception to this, however.

“Yes, I’ve seen boys and girls take anti-inflammato­ries to dance and push the pain to the limit, but that isn’t our daily lives,” said Allister Madin, a dancer at the Paris Opera.

“And yes, there’s competitio­n because it’s hard to get signed by a company, but we aren’t killing each other. Peddling these cliches tarnishes the reputation of dance.”

He said he couldn’t make it past the first episode of Netflix hit ‘Tiny Pretty Things’, whose wannabe ballet stars are forever on the point of a nervous breakdown, facing eating disorders, brutal rivalries and ultimately even murder.

“It’s like there’s a checklist whenever someone makes a film or series about ballet,” said Adeline Chevrier-Bosseau, who teaches American literature and dance studies at ClermontAu­vergne University in central France.

“There’s always the physical suffering, with an obligatory close-up of toenails coming off. There’s the fascinatio­n with the masochisti­c relationsh­ip between teachers and pupils, or an ultra-pushy mother.”

Oscar-winner ‘Black Swan’, US series ‘Flesh and Bone’ and even kids favourite ‘Ballerina’ have all recycled these tropes — which Chevrier-Bosseau traces back to depictions in 19th century art and literature, such as the Edgar Degas paintings of ‘les petits rats de l’Opera’.

“The ballerina is always either depraved or sexually repressed and does not think of anything else,” said Chevrier-Bosseau.

Such fantasy about ballet

Hugo Marchand, a star of the Paris Opera, has just released a book, ‘Dancer’ in which he tells of the anguish and passion that drove him from an early age, and the tensions that do exist in companies, especially when it comes to casting.

But he told France Inter radio this week that the popular image of backstage antics is often wildly overblown.

“There’s such fantasy about ballet. We’re a lot calmer than people imagine,” he said.

Some of the reputation stems from Cold War-era tales of cut-throat competitio­n among Soviet dancers — stories of dancers putting shards of glass in their rivals’ pointe shoes, and suchlike.

The acid attack on Bolshoi artistic director Sergei Filin in 2013, in which a disgruntle­d dancer was implicated, suggests the atmosphere has remained rather toxic in the Moscow dance world.

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