Jumping back in: Top tips on jump conditioning after quarantine

Did you know that dancers, on average, jump 200 times per class? But after a year away from the studio, we won’t just be jumping right back in. While you may have managed to maintain turnout or clean up your port de bras, everyone’s leaps have lowered a little without the space or flooring to safely practice them.

Dr. Emily Sandow, DPT, OCS, a physical therapist through the Harkness Center for Dance Injuries at NYU Langone Orthopedic Hospital and partnered with Gibney, taught a class on how to work up to your pre-pandemic jump height. Before bursting into the studio with your grandest grand allegro, look through some of these tips and tricks to jump conditioning. In addition, you want to be sure you have the proper footwear and dancewear to keep your body healthy and your mind confident, so read on for some great shoe and warm-up suggestions from Só Dança.

#1. If you have access to a sprung floor, fantastic. If you’re still dodging furniture in the living room or garage, wear sneakers to moderate the stress on your bones with each impact – it’s also a favor to any downstairs neighbors. These Só Dança Adult Split Sole Dance Sneakers could be a great alternative to ballet slippers while you’re getting back to jumping at home, or even when you first return to the studio. They promote foot health through arch support and tendon protection.

Photo courtesy of Só Dança.
Photo courtesy of Só Dança.

#2. Work at a 5-8 out of 10 range of intensity, and take breaks when you need. When you’re resting, and before or after class, keep your feet warm with these Elastic Laced Ballet Warmup Booties. They offer maximum support with its criss-cross elastic lacing, so you have everything you need to warm up confidently.

#3. Start in parallel and first to refamiliarize yourself with landing alignment before tackling a trickier fifth position. Be sure you’re wearing ballet shoes that fit properly as well. Só Dança’s SD16 Stretch Canvas Split Sole Ballet Shoe will hug your foot and offer the perfect amount of protection. They come in a handful of different colors and are even available in a vegan version!

#4. Pacing is important! Choose music that has a bouncing or springing beat, and slowly add airtime from there. We might wish our grand allegro was slow and soaring, but it isn’t helpful to start at the slowest tempo if we’re just sitting into our jumps. “If we sit in our jump, we lose energy,” Dr. Sandow says. “And then you have to regain energy every time you lift up. So you want jumping to be like a bouncing ball.”

#5. Another reason to start with small jumps is to train your type II fast twitch muscle fibers. This is a different kind of engagement from the slow strength of adage, and is achieved through a different physiological mechanism. Your fast twitch fibers have been deconditioned, and it’s important to mindfully reactivate them.

#6. Find full length in your jumps. Jumps move from concentric engagement in the prep, eccentric in the air, and back into concentric in the landing. This means that your muscles start shortened, then lengthen, then shorten again. Remember to be kind to those hard-working muscles, too. Warm up and cool down in these Unisex Warmup Pants, which are stylish and comfortable. Your legs and muscles will thank you.

#7. Make sure you keep your landings quiet. By keeping your muscles engaged in their elongated position in the air, not only are you creating a dynamic line, but you’re also ensuring they’re ready to absorb impact upon landing.

#8. Once you’ve got your alignment stabilized with parallel and first position jumps, test it with lateral jumps (like hopping sideways over a puddle with one feet or two) and rotating jumps (turning 180 degrees in a parallel fourth jump, for example.) This teaches your feet, knees, hips and trunk how to align and catch your weight coming out of tricky leaps. In a turning jump like a saut de basque, you want your body to remember to keep your knee from over-rotating past your toes on the landing.

#9. Don’t forget to stretch it out afterward. Calf, quad and glute stretches are a must! Get comfy in some stretching clothes – the Stirrup Warm Up Ballet Pants from the Sara Mearns Collection, “Trash Bag” Warmup Pants and Tie-Dye Zip-Up Jacket are all comfortable and perfect for warming up at home or in the studio.

#10. Take days off! While your reconditioning needs to stay consistent to see progression, days off are just as important. Let your body recuperate and digest all the sensory information you’re feeding it. Your body is smart, but give it time to think!

When working through all of this, a helpful concept to keep in mind is periodization. Periodization training is training at intervals and intensities that match up with where your baseline currently is, then slowly progressing to expand your limits. After a year of de-conditioning and Zoom classes that end before allegro, be prepared to start small. From there, you can rewire alignment, gain stamina and build strength to prepare you for the impact of jumping. As a rule of thumb, the progression of difficulty of jumps goes like this: two feet to two feet, two feet to one foot, one foot to one foot.

Periodization is a concept from sports medicine and sports therapy. “Dance research borrows a lot from sports medicine, our wealthy older sibling,” Dr. Sandow explains. “We’re at the cutting edge of a lot of dance medicine research, but there’s a lot that’s been done in sports that we’ve adapted.”

After all, dancers are athletes, and should have a pre-season training period just like any other athlete would. Working out in a gym and doing exercises tailored to you will not make you bulky; it will make you strong, less susceptible to injury and give your career a shot at longevity.

Photo courtesy of Só Dança.
Photo courtesy of Só Dança.

It’s hard to come back after time off. Anyone who’s ever been injured knows that. It might be especially frustrating if you weren’t a big jumper beforehand. But with focused and mindful conditioning, you can turn any weakness into a strength. Says Dr. Sandow, “Whenever I work with a young dancer with an injury, I say that this is a great opportunity for you to learn how to improve your technique. You’re going to be really smart when you come out of here. You’ll know how to protect yourself and prevent injuries down the road.”

Supplemental conditioning can be the difference between injury and health, both over long-term use and in one unstable moment with a joint in a compromised position. It helps temper the worry of big jumps, and allows us to feel properly free in our allegro. Like Dr. Sandow says, “There’s nothing like jumping, like flying through the air.”

If you’re interested in learning more about dance medicine and the preventive and rehabilitative training it offers, check out the Harkness website for information, courses, or book a free injury prevention assessment. You’re eligible for up to one free consult per year, and it is also available virtually. You don’t need to be from New York, either; dancers across the country are welcome.

By Holly LaRoche of Dance Informa.

The post Jumping back in: Top tips on jump conditioning after quarantine appeared first on Dance Informa Magazine.

Why Blaming Liam Scarlett’s Death on Cancel Culture Is Troubling

Earlier this month, the ballet world awoke to reports of the unexpected passing of the British choreographer Liam Scarlett. He had just turned 35; shortly afterward, his family put out a statement confirming “the tragic, untimely death of our beloved Liam,” and asking that the public respect their privacy.

Social media didn’t tread quite so carefully. For days after, speculation about the circumstances of Scarlett’s death abounded, alongside tributes to his gifts. After a charmed decade as a rising star of the ballet world, allegations of sexual misconduct surfaced in 2019, when The Royal Ballet was alerted to concerns related to students at The Royal Ballet School. After an internal investigation, in March 2020, the company declined to pursue legal action but stated that it would no longer employ Scarlett.

A number of other companies followed suit and dropped his work from their repertoire, including Australia’s Queensland Ballet, where he had been artistic associate. Shortly before Scarlett’s death, the Royal Danish Ballet also announced that his Frankenstein—scheduled for 2022—had been canceled following another investigation, which found evidence of “unacceptable behavior” by Scarlett during rehearsals in Copenhagen in 2018 and 2019.

Suicide is how Scarlett’s death is being discussed, although his family has not confirmed it as the cause of death. I’m not going to hazard guesses based on this chain of events, as only those closest to Scarlett can speak to his state of mind over the years. The American Foundation for Suicide Prevention has sound advice on the matter: “Avoid reporting that a suicide death was ’caused’ by a single event, such as a job loss or divorce, since research shows no one takes their life for one single reason, but rather a combination of factors.”

In that sense, the idea that “cancel culture is killing,” as the choreographer Alexei Ratmansky put it in a widely shared social media post, with dozens of major dance artists weighing in and indicating their approval, is a troubling simplification. First, “canceling” is a vague concept, applied to anything from social media slip-ups to proven assault. While some harmful tropes associated with it, such as essentialism and the lack of forgiveness, have been well analyzed by the vlogger and philosopher Natalie Wynn, among others, it doesn’t mean there should be no consequences in the case of allegations that are difficult to prove, as sexual misconduct ones are by nature.

Statements like Ratmansky’s also place a burden of guilt on victims who may have come forward during the investigations, at a time when the ballet world is finally reckoning with the way it has normalized abuse over time. Based on its press statement, the Royal Danish Ballet identified clear-cut issues. The Royal Ballet’s 2020 statement was carefully worded to say “there were no matters to pursue in relation to alleged contact with students of the Royal Ballet School,” but neither confirmed nor denied the allegations first made public by The Times, some of which involved company members.

Multiple things can be true at once: It is possible for Scarlett to have been a stunningly precocious choreographer and beloved colleague to many, and for him to have been an employee whose behavior led directors to opt for caution. There is no doubt that he was hugely talented. His first main-stage work for The Royal Ballet, 2010’s Asphodel Meadows, immediately stood out as an extraordinary debut, full of sculptural light and shade.

In the decade that followed, he made narrative as well as abstract ballets for companies around the world, and tried his hand at several evening-length productions. Frankenstein, a co-production between The Royal Ballet and San Francisco Ballet, is the most well-known, but I’d argue his Midsummer Night’s Dream for the Royal New Zealand Ballet and Dangerous Liaisons for Queensland Ballet and Texas Ballet Theatre, which I saw in Australia in 2019, were among his finest achievements.

When it came to the misconduct allegations, however, there may have been reasons on all sides to avoid going to court. Parting ways discreetly with an employee without opening a company up to lawsuits is a common corporate strategy, and victims don’t owe us their accounts of abuse.

Was it an ideal basis for companies other than The Royal Ballet to drop Scarlett’s works? No, and not all of them did: He worked with Munich’s Bayerisches Staatsballett in the fall and was due to revive A Midsummer Night’s Dream in New Zealand next winter. But if you were an artistic director in 2020, and had probable cause to worry about a guest artist’s impact on the dancers in your care, what would you do?

Bruno Bouché, the artistic director of France’s Ballet du Rhin, found himself in that situation a few years ago. After initiating talks with one choreographer, he was alerted to the fact that the artist in question had repeatedly harassed female dancers during past engagements. He privately reached out to victims and, after hearing their accounts, declined to hire the choreographer.

“My priority is to protect the dancers and the company,” he says. Bouché, a former dancer with the Paris Opéra Ballet, adds that he had firsthand experience of sexual harassment as a young corps member. “It paralyzes dancers, especially teenagers who are faced with one of their idols. You lose your bearings and wonder: Did that person like me for my dancing, or for another reason?”

Bouché now worries that reactions blaming cancel culture for Scarlett’s death will set back recent efforts to protect dancers and redress power imbalances in the studio. “The end can never justify the means,” he says.

Was Scarlett’s case handled correctly by The Royal Ballet and other companies? It’s impossible to tell without firsthand knowledge of the initial investigation and other testimonies. The lack of institutional transparency here, as in the case of Peter Martins, who left New York City Ballet in 2018 despite the company stating that accusations about him were “not corroborated,” ultimately does everyone a disservice. If a mistake or a failing is never even acknowledged, what path is there to rehabilitation? What’s left instead is a limbo—much like the Asphodel Meadows, the in-between part of the ancient Greek underworld Scarlett once explored so eloquently.


If you are having thoughts of suicide, call the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at

800-273-8255
. Resources for friends and family members, survivors and others are available at SpeakingOfSuicide.com/resources.

The post Why Blaming Liam Scarlett’s Death on Cancel Culture Is Troubling appeared first on Dance Magazine.

Our Favorite #FosseChallenge TikToks

Some things—like Fosse’s iconic choreography—never go out of style. One of the latest trends to take over TikTok is the #FosseChallenge, where everyone from pro dancers to amateurs are taking a stab at moves from Sweet Charity‘s “Rich Man’s Frug.” Even some original Fosse performers have been getting in on the action.

In what seems to be the genesis of the TikTok trend, Ballet de l’Opéra national du Rhin dancer and choreographer Pierre-Emile Lemieux-Venne, known on the platform for re-creating popular movie and music video sequences, posted a clip of himself dancing The Aloof from “Rich Man’s Frug.” He’d been asked to “make this the next TikTok dance,” a request we fully support.

@love_by_pierreemile

C’est tellement un mood! 💎✨ J’ADORE #bobfosse 💙 Ça me fait rire à quel point je me prends au sérieux 😅 #fosse #sweetcharity #richmansfrug #60s

Then Mark S. Hoebee, who danced in a touring production of Sweet Charity and is now the producing artistic director of Papermill Playhouse, did a duet with Pierre-Emile. Of course, then everyone wanted to duet with Mark.

@markstephen60

Reply to @kemtuckey #fosse #sweetcharity #dad #fyp #daddance #duetme

Others jumped in, adding their own twists. Here are a few of our favorites:

This pastor, who took Fosse to the altar. Where the technique is lacking, the incense and the offertory make up for it.

@pastor_g

When the Fosse trend won’t get out of your head. *I’m no professional dancer, btw 😂 #fosse #fossechallenge #progressiveclergy #ForYou

The Rockettes, who traded kick lines for “All That Jazz,” employing their signature synchronicity

@rockettes

Did somebody say #Fosse? 🎩 #FosseChallenge #InternationalDanceDay #Rockettes

This burlesque hoop performer, who’s all of us who can’t wait to perform for live audiences again

@hoopyruby

I’m going to hug every single person in the audience 😩 #fossechallenge

This couple, who found the best way to pass time while baking a pie

@drkritz

what to do when waiting for the 🥧 to cook? Do the #frug ! #fosse #fossedance #fossechallenge #aloof #richmansfrug

Disabled dancer Kate Stanforth, who adapted the choreography

@katestanforth

It’s time a disabled dancer entered the game… #fossechallenge #fosse #fyp #dancechallenge #BRITsMOVER #disableddancer #dance #wheelchairdancer

These flamingos with surprisingly good technique

@ellynmariemarsh

If this fails-I will know you all have no taste #broadway #fosse #fossechallenge

Still, no one can do it better than the original Aloof dancer, Suzanne Charney.

@lauryn_johnson20

Reply to @mafmaf1 The original! #fosse #fossechallenge #bobfosse #fossetok #fossetiktok #richmansfrug #sweetcharity #suzannecharney #jazz

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