Recommended for Grades 4-12
In this resource, you’ll:
- Discover what makes a ballet working rehearsal different from a regular performance.
- Read tips for what to watch for during a rehearsal.
- Explore prompts to reflect on after a rehearsal.
In this resource, you’ll:
A working rehearsal is the last time the dancers, artistic director, musicians, and stage technicians work together before a performance. It is a critical time for solving problems.
Working rehearsals are rarely open to the public. You have the unusual opportunity to watch professional dancers working hard to solve problems, get used to being on a new stage, and perfect their performance.
During the rehearsal, you may hear the artistic director give corrections to the dancers about spacing, technique, and dramatic interpretation. Since stages in different theaters are often different sizes, dancers sometimes need to make changes in spacing—adjusting their distance from other dancers, the size of their movements, or the location of their entrances and exits.
Rehearsals also provide a last chance to ensure that the dancers execute their steps properly, with the appropriate timing and energy, and that they move exactly as the choreographer planned. Usually, dancers perform full-out just as they will in the performance. If dancers have injuries, however, or if a show is particularly demanding, they may mark steps in order to save their strength.
Finally, a working rehearsal provides an opportunity to solve problems with music, scenery, lighting, and costumes. Many people are hard at work backstage making sure that the performance will run smoothly.
Since it’s a rehearsal, the company may start and stop the ballet at various times. Watch carefully during these breaks and think about the full elements of a production—from story line to choreography—practice, practice, practice—and finally, performance. Is there something in your life that matches or is similar to this process?
Here are some specific things you can watch for during the performance:
Read our Ballet Basics resource as a quick guide about the history and features of the artform.
Here are some prompts to reflect on and try after you see the performance:
Learn the basics of Ballet, a type of performance dance that originated during the Italian Renaissance in the fifteenth century, developed into a concert dance form in France and Russia, and has since become a widespread and highly technical form of dance with its own vocabulary.
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Want to understand how dance works? Learn the five elements that make up the foundation of this art form: body, action, time, space, and energy.
The Nutcracker is arguably the most popular ballet of all time. It is often performed during the holiday season, and has inspired countless variations, especially in the USA. Ever wonder why?
In this 3-5 lesson, students will choreograph a sequence of ballet movements to tell a story. Students will explore conceptual and practical elements of classical ballet and learn basic ballet vocabulary through demonstration.
In this grade 3-5 lesson, students will analyze how ballet dancers in The Nutcracker act out the story/character with movement instead of words. Students will emotionally and physically tell a story through dance and pantomime.
What does ballet have to do with the Russian Revolution? What's a plié or a jete or cinquième? How do ballerinas condition their bodies to perform like athletes? Delve into an art form with a language all its own and a rich history interwoven with cultural revolution, political rebellion, and artistic innovation.
Contributing Writers
Producer
Tiffany A. Bryant
Updated
November 9, 2023