Dancing the difference between white and black swans
Darren Aronofsky's soon-to-be-released movie . There has been criticism about its lack of authenticity and for being riddled with ballerina-as-a-paranoid-neurotic clichés as Deborah Bull (an ex-principal dancer at the Royal Ballet) and I .
Deborah ends by suggesting you don't take your young daughter to see the film if she wants to learn about ballet (it's cert 15). Well, perhaps she could look at my short film instead, in which the Royal Ballet's wonderful Zenaida Yanowsky shows me how a dancer becomes a good (white) swan and a bad (black) swan with little more than a head gesture and arm movement. She is terrific.
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You can see more of Zenaida Yanowsky at the later this month where she is dancing the lead in Swan Lake (the role that Portman takes on in the movie).
PS. Frankly I think the ballet world is being too literal; Black Swan is as much about ballet as the King's Speech is about royalty. Yes, the film's story is framed around a ballerina and the ballet Swan Lake, but only as a device for a melodramatic physiological thriller, with a bit of werewolf-like action thrown in for good measure.
Comment number 1.
At 13th Jan 2011, SheffTim wrote:Yanowsky is a wonderful dancer (her mine of flapping swan’s wings is so fluid and natural) and a fabulous teacher too. Even I (a complete philistine ballet wise) could understand perfectly how important small changes in posture and movement are.
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Comment number 2.
At 14th Jan 2011, uksmart wrote:absolutely wonderful. loved every second of this video :)
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Comment number 3.
At 15th Jan 2011, LittleGen wrote:Beautiful. She looks like she's floating. Amazing.
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Comment number 4.
At 19th Jan 2011, pyan wrote:Can anyone explain to me how a film that hasn't been released yet can be nominated for 12 BAFTAs?...
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