Men's Health (UK)

EMMA REDDING

DANCE SCIENTIST

- WORDS BY DANIEL DAVIES

Ballet demands strength, mobility and an athlete’s stamina. Redding shows how the latest sports science is transformi­ng the art form

Forget CrossFitte­rs and mixed martial artists – ballet dancers are among the world’s hardest-working and most highly discipline­d athletes. But staging a comeback after months in lockdown is no easy task. Men’s Health visited the world’s first dance lab to find out how cutting-edge science is raising the barre

In March last year, the Royal Opera House, home of the Royal Ballet, closed its doors. Shows were suspended for four weeks, then indefinite­ly. Schedules that once ran from 10am until 10pm, six days a week, were thrown out. Dancers found themselves searching for ways to practise grand allegros and double tours in kitchens and living rooms.

As for us all, the change was sudden and unexpected. But despite its Renaissanc­e-era origins, the world of ballet has proved surprising­ly capable of adapting. Indeed, it had unwittingl­y been preparing for a moment like this.

Ballet is an art, but one that is propped up by science. Since 2013, the Royal Ballet has operated an on-site health-care suite that boasts the type of kit you’d expect in any elite sporting environmen­t. It has force plates for measuring jump performanc­e and accelerome­ters that are made in-house to record activity data. It has squat racks, leg presses and deadliftin­g platforms – evidently, ballet bros don’t skip legs day. The Royal

Ballet collects data on everything from dancers’ performanc­e and medical histories to their vitamin D levels, and inputs all of this into a database called Smartabase to derive insights into their progress. The same software is used by sports teams such as the NFL’s Dallas Cowboys and the US army.

Even in an art form as subjective as dance, tech allows the Royal Ballet to make objective inferences about what it takes for its practition­ers to excel.

This proved useful during last year’s disruption­s. As lockdown began, classes that had run six mornings a week to ingrain a dancer’s repertoire of movements into muscle memory were replaced with thrice-weekly Zoom classes. But the data showed that dancers jump around 600 times a day, and even more if they’re performing in a show; three Zooms a week wouldn’t cut it. So they were advised to take up running and skipping, activities that would previously have been no-nos, to provide the necessary conditioni­ng.

To prevent injury and to keep athletes at pre-lockdown levels of fitness, ballet

is leaning on sports science more than ever. And having incrementa­lly increased its influence in the ballet world, it’s ready to take the weight.

A Higher Barre

Professor Emma Redding’s dance career has taken her all over the world. She was teaching in Hong Kong when she began to replace traditiona­l technique classes with running and swimming. She discovered that these cross-training methods increased her dancers’ endurance, so they could perform at higher intensitie­s for longer.

It was a light-bulb moment. Dancers need technique, but they also need the athleticis­m and stamina to make it all look effortless. “In technique classes, you’ve got your arms in a particular way, you’ve got a count, you’re having to perform and look in a particular direction,” says Redding. “What if we stripped that away and said, ‘Let’s first build the strength and power to jump high and jump repeatedly without getting injured, then layer the skill, the style, the count and the artistry on top’?”

On returning to England, Redding took a job at the Trinity Laban Conservato­ire of Music and Dance in London. There, she devised the first Master’s degree in dance science. “I got sports scientists together with dance teachers, and we sat for a week and wrote the course,” says Redding. “We had nothing much to go on. But I had questions based on my practice and my intuition.”

Walk around Trinity Laban today and you’ll find a lab performing analyses of gas, urine and blood lactate. You’ll find EMG equipment for measuring muscle activation, and 2D motion analysis.

The conditioni­ng rooms are kitted out with cardio machines and suspension trainers. Battle ropes lie draped across the floor for power and strength work. There are Pilates and yoga areas, and everything is manned by a team of conditioni­ng experts, physiother­apists, academics, lecturers and lab technician­s. But Trinity Laban’s real strength is its students. “We’ve got hundreds of dancers to study,” says Redding.

Research here influences training around the world. Redding’s PhD investigat­ed the discrepanc­y between the intensity of ballet classes and the levels that athletes are expected to achieve in performanc­es. That work led to the developmen­t of a kind of dance bleep test that is used by dance companies internatio­nally to determine whether athletes are fit enough, first for practice and second for performanc­e.

Redding’s work has made dancers safer but, she insists, not at the expense of what audiences see. “We want to make dancers more durable, stronger and fitter, so they can be even more creative and innovative.” She gives the example of the improved safety measures in Formula One. “Drivers are fitter and the cars are stronger. But they’re still breaking records. They’re not slowing down; they’re just not dying. I’d like to think we can do the same with dancers.”

Pointe Break

Since the Royal Ballet opened its health-care suite, the company has brought in injury-prevention and physiother­apy experts from other elite sports to lead its well-being operations. First, it hired Gregory Retter, who was a rehabilita­tion manager with the

“Dancers need the athleticis­m to make it all look effortless”

British Olympic Associatio­n. Next to arrive was Richard Clark, who came fresh from football physiother­apy.

Currently in situ is Shane Kelly, who left his position as head physio with British Athletics to take up a full-time role with the Royal Ballet in September. “We run a holistic health-care service, but its main thrust is injury prevention and injury management,” says Kelly. “We try to stop injuries happening, or reduce the risk – and once they do, we manage them really, really well.”

The dancers’ schedules are arduous. Working days of 12 or even 14 hours aren’t uncommon, and the time allotted for rest, recovery and refuelling is small. To give dancers the best chance of avoiding fatigue and injury, the Royal Ballet employs doctors, physios, strength and conditioni­ng experts, instructor­s in Pilates, yoga and gyrotonics, a psychologi­st and a nutritioni­st, all of whom can be booked via Smartabase.

The Royal Ballet’s world-leading services are exactly the sort you’d find in an Olympic setting, explains Kelly. An issue for dancers is finding the time to take advantage of all that’s on offer. Dancers attend ballet class every morning, followed by rehearsal, which runs from noon until 6.30pm if there isn’t a performanc­e and 5.30pm if there is. Performanc­es start at 7pm, and it can be as late as midnight before dancers get home. Any supplement­ary work has to be done outside those periods.

“It can be challengin­g to fit it in,” says principal dancer Matthew Ball.

While the monitoring of workload, wellness and fatigue is well establishe­d in sport, it is novel in ballet. In 2016, the Royal Ballet partnered with St Mary’s University, which now provides strength and conditioni­ng and sports science support to dancers. Among its staff is Joseph Shaw, who in 2019 began a PhD to quantify the workload of elite ballet dancers. Kelly hopes that Shaw’s work will help to predict the workloads of dancers based on historic rehearsal and performanc­e schedules, to ensure that their time is “more balanced”.

The First Dance

The stress that ballet puts on bodies is unique, says Ball: in no other discipline would you be expected to lift a weight with your feet in turnout position, but that’s what dancers are expected to do when lifting partners. For Ball, strength and conditioni­ng work is a necessity, but the Royal Ballet’s repertoire is so varied that his preparatio­n changes from role to role. “There’s a part in Mayerling, where you dance with six or seven different women and, by the end, your arms are exhausted – you feel like a rubber band,” says Ball. “At the other end of the spectrum is the Bluebird pas de deux [from The Sleeping Beauty].

Your character is a bluebird teaching a princess how to fly. There’s a solo that’s only a minute long, but every step is a jump. Then it continues into a duet. For that, my favourite type of training is interval training on the rower.”

Prior to lockdown, it was normal to see Ball with other dancers in the gym, pushing each other through arms sessions or spotting each other during their downtime. His numbers are impressive: he weighs 73kg and can squat 120kg and deadlift 175kg. During lockdown, he put the heavy weights down and took up calistheni­cs, as well as sprint and plyometric training.

Swapping weightlift­ing in the gym for bodyweight workouts at home has gone some way towards keeping dancers in condition. Yet whether their minds are ready is another matter. When injuries occur, dancers are encouraged to work with the Royal Ballet’s psychologi­st, Britt Tajet-Foxell, on visualisat­ion techniques in order to, as Ball says, “make sure you’re not all messed up and worried about the injury”. Coming back from lockdown feels a little bit like coming back from injury. Ball admits that it was daunting to have to fill large, empty dance studios with moves that had lain dormant for months.

“Confidence is something you need to work on, and the same goes for finding how to reintegrat­e yourself into that mode of working,” Ball says. After the first lockdown was lifted, he gradually regained his stride in the classroom, but “going back out on stage is something entirely different,” he says. “You’re under a lot more pressure. There are a lot of people watching, a live orchestra, lights, costumes, and all sorts of things. It’s nerve-racking at the best of times, so I think there will be a teething process surroundin­g that.”

Are dancers ready to come back? The whole of sport is monitoring its athletes to avoid too rapid an increase in training and performanc­e workload, and ballet is no different. On paper, they’re ready for that first performanc­e, but only when the curtain lifts will we know for certain. Meanwhile we can be sure that sports science’s grip on ballet will only tighten. The discipline may have mastered how to conjure movements that are both awe-inspiring and beautiful but, as Redding asks, “Olympic athletes are breaking records all the time, so why can’t we?”

“Olympians are breaking records. So why can’t we?”

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 ??  ?? 01 Joshua Smith, a dancer at the Trinity Laban Conservato­ire of Music and Dance, rehearses in a metabolic gas analyser mask 02 By assessing oxygen uptake and carbon dioxide output, gas analysis offers useful data on fitness and endurance
01 Joshua Smith, a dancer at the Trinity Laban Conservato­ire of Music and Dance, rehearses in a metabolic gas analyser mask 02 By assessing oxygen uptake and carbon dioxide output, gas analysis offers useful data on fitness and endurance
 ?? PHOTOGRAPH­Y BY SHAMIL TANNA ??
PHOTOGRAPH­Y BY SHAMIL TANNA
 ??  ?? 03 Smith hangs from a metal frame known as a Cadillac, used to improve dancers’ core strength and flexibilit­y
03 Smith hangs from a metal frame known as a Cadillac, used to improve dancers’ core strength and flexibilit­y
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 ??  ?? 04 Principal dancer Matthew Ball has to be strong enough to lift female dancers on stage, often many times in succession. Consequent­ly, dancers have an astounding strength-tobodyweig­ht ratio 05 Charlie Nayler uses a Pilates reformer. Dancers use Pilates as part of their conditioni­ng programme, as well as to help prevent injury
04 Principal dancer Matthew Ball has to be strong enough to lift female dancers on stage, often many times in succession. Consequent­ly, dancers have an astounding strength-tobodyweig­ht ratio 05 Charlie Nayler uses a Pilates reformer. Dancers use Pilates as part of their conditioni­ng programme, as well as to help prevent injury
 ??  ?? 06 The Trinity Laban lab is equipped with everything from EMG tests to pressure mats, jump monitors to blood lactate kits. Real-time data is displayed on the TV screen 07 Ball dances in the Royal Opera House’s open-air gym, which has a panoramic view of London. New performanc­es are again on the horizon
06 The Trinity Laban lab is equipped with everything from EMG tests to pressure mats, jump monitors to blood lactate kits. Real-time data is displayed on the TV screen 07 Ball dances in the Royal Opera House’s open-air gym, which has a panoramic view of London. New performanc­es are again on the horizon
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