An elementary ballet lesson
Jeff Benson
Third-graders got their first real-world lessons in ballet,
choreography and set design, while watching a festive production of
“The Nutcracker” Friday at the Irvine Barclay Theater.
Ballet Pacifica staged an abridged, one-hour matinee Friday solely
for third-grade classes from Newport-Mesa, leaving the curtain open
so the students could see scene changes.
Conservatory founder and director Gillian Finley lectured on
ballet’s French origins and demonstrated choreographic steps with
Ballet Pacifica dancers.
In any other circumstances, a tombe, pas de bourree, glissade or
grand jete would sound like desserts at a fancy French cafe, but
they’re not. Finley explained these fundamental ballet maneuvers in
terms the students could understand -- in sentence construction.
“You can make a sentence out of these steps,” she said, as a
dancer performed glides and leaps in sequence.
“When we hook them together like that, it makes it very beautiful,
and all of these sentences hook together to make a story like ‘The
Nutcracker.’”
“The Nutcracker” begins its marathon run tonight at The Barclay,
with performances at 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. through Wednesday. The show
will wrap up with a 2:30 p.m. Christmas Eve performance.
Students watched intently as the Nutcracker transformed into a
prince and led another main character, Clara Stahlbaum, from the Land
of Snow to the Land of Sweets and danced with the Sugar Plum Fairy.
“It was good,” said Max Thornell, 9, of Newport Heights Elementary
School. “I liked the Nutcracker guy and how they lift up the girls
too.”
Julia Frei, 8, shared Max’s sentiment.
“I thought it was great because everybody was doing all those
dances and stuff,” Julia said. “And the music was good.”
Since the normal production is more than twice as long as the
one-hour matinee the students watched, a narrator filled them in on
what they were missing between scenes.This is the second year the
Newport Beach Arts Commission has held the event for Newport Beach
students at the Barclay Theater, but earlier this year, Newport-Mesa
district Trustee Tom Egan suggested they invite Costa Mesa students
to participate.
“This is consistent with [the district’s] Strategic Plan, to put
more emphasis on the arts,” Egan said. “We jumped on it because it
fits. They’ve been doing it a number of years, and they’ve figured
out what they can do to educate the kids.”
* JEFF BENSON covers education and may be reached at (714)
966-4617 or by e-mail at [email protected].
FYI
WHAT: Ballet Pacifica’s 38th annual performance of “The
Nutcracker”
WHEN: 2:30 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. through Dec. 23 and at 2:30 p.m.
Dec. 24
COST: $25 to $35 for adults and $20 to $30 for children and
seniors
INFO: (949) 851-9930
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