Phrase affiliation time: what involves thoughts once you consider ‘dance competitions’?
Maybe films like Step Up (decide a quantity, any quantity) or Work It! spring to thoughts. Or possibly you bear in mind these younger women below route of the notorious Abby Lee Miller in Dance Mothers. And, should you love glitter, you in all probability pictured the celebrities of Strictly Come Dancing – and their skilled companions who’ve dance battled it out for large titles in Blackpool.
However the ballet world has dance competitions, too.
Flashback to 1931, when The Genée (now generally known as The Fonteyn) made its debut.
The Genée / The Fonteyn Historical past
The worldwide competitors for younger dancers educated within the Royal Academy of Dance syllabus started in 1931, when the Adeline Genée Gold Medal was awarded to Felicity Garratt.
The ballet competitors has taken place practically yearly since, because the RAD’s flagship annual occasion — in London and overseas, globetrotting to the likes of Sydney, Hong Kong, Toronto, and Cape City.
Open to certified non-professional dancers aged 15 – 19 on the deadline, The-Genée-turned-The-Fonteyn is seen as a ‘launch pad for knowledgeable [dance] profession.’ Previous winners embody Steven McRae, Francesca Hayward and Harris Beattie.
All through its the years, the ballet competitors has expanded to supply silver and bronze medals, plus further awards: Musicality Award, Choreographic Award, and the Dame Margot Fonteyn Viewers Alternative Award, which all include money prizes. Winners now even have the chance to be thought-about for a wide range of scholarships at numerous faculties.
The Fonteyn Competitors Construction
As Tim Arthur Chief Government of the RAD summarises the custom, “Annually [at The Fonteyn] we convey collectively dancers from across the globe for per week of dance that they’ll bear in mind and cherish ceaselessly.”
The Semi-finals
This Semi-finals happen over three days, throughout which the dancers obtain teaching and are judged on:
- a classical ballet class on stage
- a efficiency of classical ballet repertoire from an permitted checklist
- a efficiency of their ‘Dancer’s Personal’ choreography — a chunk choreographed by themselves, their trainer or a peer
Then a panel of esteemed judges selects the finalists, based mostly on method, musicality and efficiency qualities.
The Finals
Alison Roberts-Tse of Dance Dispatches attended The Fonteyn 2024 closing at His Majesty’s Theatre in London as press. The occasion felt equal elements competitors, showcase and jubilant celebration of dance amongst ballet royalty — in a construction not unfamiliar to The Nice British Bake Off.
First, every of the finalists carried out the solos commissioned particularly for the competitors. Let’s liken this to TGBBO’s ‘Technical’ problem, since each feminine carried out the identical choreography and each male carried out the identical motion phrases. (Albeit, they did obtain steering, in contrast to the bakers.)
It was a captivating 40-some minutes, inspecting the assorted nuances every dancer emphasised in Andrew McNicol’s choreography. (Nonetheless, this will not be everybody’s cup of tea: watching a feminine variation 8 occasions and a male variation 4 occasions… though they did intersperse the female and male dances.)
Subsequent, the finalists confirmed off their strongest fits of their ‘Dancer’s Personal’ choreography, which ranged from ballet to modern dance. Dancers had probably the most freedom right here, which makes it like TGBBO ‘Showstopper’ problem, no?
And at last, the dancers displayed their classical ballet abilities with a ‘Signature Bake’ — er, Classical Repertoire Variation.
The finalist judges (a few of who additionally judged the Semi-finals) took every efficiency into consideration and deliberated, whereas the viewers was handled the balcony pas de deus from Romeo & Juliet by Northern Ballet dancers Harris Beattie and Saeka Shire.
Bestowing awards to the medallists capped off the night, honouring probably the most excellent dancers from the worldwide RAD group of greater than 400,000 college students. What an achievement!
Be aware: Dance lovers can watch The Fonteyn – Finals livestream and replay at medici.television .
The Fonteyn 2024 Judges, Commissioned Choreographer & Producer
Judges:
- Dame Darcey Bussell DBE, President of the RAD
- Alessandra Ferri OMRI, Inventive Director Designate of the Wiener Staatsballett
- Jose Alves, former Senior Artist at Ballet Black (Semi-final solely)
- Kevin O’Hare CBE, Director of The Royal Ballet (Last solely)
Judges for the Choreographic and Musicality Awards:
- Dame Monica Mason DBE
- Ashley Web page OBE
Commissioned Choreographer: Andrew MicNicol
Producer: Lynn Wallis OBE
“The competitors brings dancers from around the globe collectively to share the enjoyment of dance, develop their artistry and to make sensible recollections.” — Andrew McNicol, The Fonteyn 2024 Commissioned Choreographer
The Fonteyn 2024 Winners
- Gold: Antonia Maria Cramb (aged 18, at the moment coaching at Royal Conservatoire of Scotland)
- Silver: Lydia Hough (aged 18 from the UK, at the moment coaching at English Nationwide Ballet Faculty)
+ she received the Margot Fonteyn Viewers Alternative Award — and acquired a vote from Dance Dispatches. - Bronze: Alfie-Lee Corridor (aged 18 from the UK, at the moment coaching at Elmhurst Ballet Faculty)
AND Ernesto Younger (aged 17 from Australia, at the moment coaching at Alegria Dance Studios)
+ he received the Dancer’s Personal Choreographic Award. - Musicality Award: Christie Anderson (aged 20 from the UK, at the moment coaching at Artwork of Movement Worldwide Dance Laboratory)
Congratulations to the entire medallists and members!