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DuCon, Summer 2023

First, I wish I’d tracked down the dates for this year’s DuCon before I scheduled the SI that I teach, because I would have loved to have been here for both weeks.

Second, I got sick, so I couldn’t attend classes today and won’t be able to perform tomorrow, but even still it’s been entirely worth the investment.

First, the instruction is excellent. The instruction offered by not only Mr. Du, but his entire teaching staff, is worth the price of admission, and the other dancers in attendance have been uniformly kind, generous, and incredibly hard-working.

For me, at this point, a lot of what I need is refinement of what already exists, and I’ve received a ton of that over the course of this week.

I’ve also had the opportunity to learn three variations, a pas de deux, and a lot of character dance elements (which is great, because character dance is now the biggest missing piece in my ballet skill-set).

Learning that much choreography is huge. I’ve often struggled to pick up while working with SPDC. Presumably, that mostly comes down to the difference in vocabulary and our struggles to stabilize a regular rehearsal schedule, but I’ve secretly worried that maybe I’d somehow lost my ability to pick up.

It took about 30 or 45 minutes to learn the pas de deux, some details notwithstanding. We learned two variations on Monday and a third on Tuesday, and I didn’t feel like I was at sea in the least.

So, in short, my balletic brain is still working. Likewise, my body is still willing and able to do the work.

Likewise, I’m feeling pretty solid in terms of partnering skills.

Mr Du paired me with a dancer from Alaska for pas de deux, and she’s been a delight to work with. We’ve danced well together from the word “Go,” which always feels like a lovely gift from the universe, but which also says a lot about us as dancers.

Partnering is entirely relationship-based. You can know how to execute the steps, but if you don’t listen to your partner, that doesn’t mean a thing.

So the thing I’m happiest about is that my PDD partner thanked me for being a good partner, because that means the world to me. She has been a great partner, and I really hope we’ll get a chance to work together again.

When I began dancing with LexBallet, I was missing a lot in terms of partnering skills and experience. I think knowing that was helpful: when you know how much you don’t know, it’s easier to take instruction and learn.

Every dancer I’ve partnered since then has taught me a lot, and I’ve been lucky to have some great coaching, and every time I have the opportunity to partner somebody, I try to live up to the gift that my coaches and partners have given me.

It’s wild to look back on my earliest efforts, which in the grand scheme of things were only a few years ago (adjusting for Pandemic Time, since pas de deux was less accessible during the height of the pandemic), and realize how far I’ve come.

Partnering, it turns out, is the thing I enjoy most in all of ballet. I’m forced to admit that I might even enjoy it more than grand allegro.

I’m immensely grateful to find that I’m becoming rather good at something I love so much; that I’m evolving into someone who my fellow dancers regard as a trustworthy partner.

A couple weeks before I headed to DuCon, my friend T and I were playing around in the studio, improvising and inventing weird contemporary partnering stuff. They wore pointe shoes through much of this and trusted me with all kinds of weird and unusual lifts and weight-shares and melds.

A from Alaska trusted me, en pointe, with some big lifts and a tricky sequence involving a series of chaînes directly into an attitude promenade that in turn went directly into a penché in which I employed a sliding arabesque à terre to make room.

It’s hard to explain how sacred it feels to be given that trust.

A dancer’s body is both their precious instrument and the locus of their artistic voice, and to be trusted to care for another dancer’s body through difficult and complicated partnering steps is an ineffable gift.

It feels amazing to be considered worthy of that gift. It feels amazing to have confidence in one’s own ability in this way.

I’m not a world-class dancer in the sense that I’m never going to make the cut for one of the big companies like ABT or PNB or NBC[1].

  1. That’s National Ballet of Canada, not the TV network.

But I don’t actually care about that.

Fame and renoun have never been my goals. I just want to work in dance, and I’m doing that. I like working in small companies, and I like the sense of camaraderie that grows between dancers who work together.

But I do want to be a good partner; maybe even a world-class partner. I want to be a good enough partner that, somewhere down the line, I’ll be remembered that way. I want to be good enough to deserve the trust of my fellow dancers.

I’ve also made some new friends and I suspect some creative projects might just coalesce out of this group of kind, vivid, and brilliant dancers, along with others I’ve met at other intensives and through my work as a dancer and teacher.

On our last day of high school, my AP English teacher gave everyone in my class a card.

Each card was different and chosen specifically, individually, for the student who received it.

Mine was in the shape of a swan. Inside, my teacher wrote, simply, “Find your way.”

I kept that card for a long time, though I’ve since lost it. But I think about it a lot.

Anyway, I’m incredibly grateful to Mrs. Wachtelhausen for those words of immense wisdom at a time when I was still pretty lost.

And, in short, I think, little by little, I’m finding my way.

Something Good

If you are a dancer, or you have a partner or friend or loved one who is, you already know: we dancers are incredibly critical of our work.

So to watch a video in which I’m dancing and think, before I’ve thought anything else, “That was good!” is a big deal.

Anyway, today I finished a week-long summer intensive session in which I (GASP!) actually talked to people I don’t know and, like, made some friends ❤ This was a really lovely group of dancers, and I would happily dance with any of them again any time.

We learned and performed (via livestream and for a small audience outside the big window of our studio) a brand-new piece choreographed by Ashley Thursby-Kern and Theresa Bautista, and when I watched it, I found myself thinking, “That was good!”

Not just their choreography, or the performance of my fellow dancers–but for once I was able to look at myself and think that.

It wasn’t perfect, of course, but ballet never is. And I think that we did rather a fine job learning and polishing it in the span of five days.

Anyway, for the moment, you can catch it here, with an introduction by Ashley, who is a thoroughly lovely human being:

https://fb.watch/5WCH2vkM6_/

I’m trying hard not to list the shortcomings I do see in my own performance here. It’s enough to know what I could have done better and will do better next time. It’s enough to look at myself dancing and say, for once, “That was good.”

Pilobolus: Initial Thoughts (on Day 3)

Just a couple of wee thoughts. We’re working so much and dancing so much and talking so much and just living together so much that I’ve been spending my alone time just reading and breathing.

Anyway, this intensive has been amazing for so many reasons, not least because it has put me in touch with feelings I haven’t really addressed in a long time.

First, it has forced me to very directly face my difficulty approaching people. Every day this week, we’ve spent the morning doing exercises with one partner or set of partners, then repeating or iterating them with another, then another.

I hadn’t realized how much it still freaks me out to choose partners. Yesterday I got seriously rattled by it—but I actually mentioned it to the person who chose me, and they helped me through that moment. It was amazing.

I realize I’ve been feeling like, “This person or that person probably doesn’t want to work with me,” which isn’t fair either to them or to myself. That’s their call. I shouldn’t try to make it for them.

Second, I’ve realized that one of the things I love so much in dance, and especially in this kind of dance, is the giving and receiving of touch in an atmosphere of deep trust.

To do the work we’re doing here, you need to touch your partners and you need to trust them. Somehow, the process we’re working with creates an atmosphere of immense trust. We are all safe here in each-other’s arms (or feet, or whatever).

I came to this understanding by a circuitous back route. There’s one guy here who I kept desperately wanting to work with—to dance with. I wanted to feel his arms around me and his body against mine, but in a way that wasn’t about sex [1].

  1. Or, well, mostly wasn’t.

I kept trying to figure out why (leaving out the fact that he’s beautiful in a very unique way) and finally I realized that it’s the way he partners: he’s solid and steady, and when he holds anyone—anyone—in his arms, you can feel the power and the tenderness of that connection from across the room.

I’ve worked with him a couple of times now. In one piece, I caught him and sank to the ground holding him in my arms (in that particular dance, he had just died). 

It was an incredibly powerful moment. I’m not sure how to explain it, except to say that in that moment he trusted me with his body, and that trust felt like a sacred thing.

But also it just felt so damned good: just a human body touching my human body, which is so strangely important, without any need to be afraid or guarded or aggressive. 

Rather the opposite: the dance involved me catching his wrist as he took a slow backwards fall, pulling him into my arms and collapsing to the ground with him. I couldn’t be afraid or guarded or aggressive; I had to be fast and strong, but soft. I had to get both of us to the floor without anybody getting hurt.

I don’t know how to explain how that feels, but it’s pretty incomparable.

Today there was a dance in which a girl trusted me to catch her mid-flight, redirect her momentum, and throw her halfway across the room; in which I trusted her to pull me straight to the ground out of an arabesque as I pulled her to her feet. That felt incredible. There aren’t many places where you get to feel that kind of thing.

Anyway, that’s it for now. The creative process here never ceases to amaze me. Groups of dancers who had, for the most part, never met a few days back are, each afternoon, creating dances I’d happily pay to see, working in groups as small as two and as large as six, with only minimum input from our teachers.

That, too, is an amazing thing.

LexBallet Intensive 2017, Day 1: The Onliest Boy Rides Again

…A giant registration system SNAFU almost scuttled the whole thing! But! A bunch of us showed up anyway, and N, the director of the school, called us in for a huddle after class and said, “We can still make this happen!”

So we’re back on.

Tonight, whilst everything was up in the air, we just did the Intermediate/Advanced Open Class. It was a really good class, though!

After a tough morning in class at home which I couldn’t keep brain and body together (seriously, we did an awesome manège which I managed to screw up by losing track of which cycle I was on–did an extra on the first side, left one out on the second), it was a relief in to not go full Baby Giraffe tonight.

Tonight I apparently mostly remembered how to dance. W00t. There was one combination I didn’t pick up right, but I got it on the second run.

Also, heckin grand jetés across the floor. Evidently, I haven’t forgotten how to fly.

Tomorrow it’s back to the regular intensive schedule.  We have, in essence, three days to learn variations o_O’

I have no idea what we’re doing, but Friday night we’re showing them, G-d help us!

Honestly, though, if I can dance like I danced most of tonight’s class, I’ll be fine.

In other news, C opted out this year, so I’m the Onliest Boy again. I guess it wouldn’t be right to make it through a summer without that?