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50TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE NATIONAL SCHOOL OF BALLET
The
indelible seal of a dance legend
Mireya
Castañeda
THE founding of the National School
of Art in 1962 initiated a cultural explosion which
continues bearing fruits. Ballet, music, dramatic
and visual arts were the first specialties.
Teaching of modern and folkloric
dance was initiated in 1965, circus arts in 1977 and
musical shows in 1993. This system of arts teaching,
at the elementary and intermediate level, was
extended to the university level in 1976, through
the Higher Institute of Art (ISA).
It is fitting to begin celebrations
for this 50th anniversary with one of the most
outstanding cultural events of the last century: the
emergence of the Cuban school of ballet, at the
instigation of the great figures of Alicia, Fernando
and Alberto Alonso, which gave rise to a method of
teaching.
A precision best left to Alicia
Alonso, prima ballerina assoluta, "A school in the
sense of style… of a particular, distinctive form,
which differentiates dancers who have been trained
within the same technical and artistic criteria… Of
course, this has everything to do with the training
centers… with a specific method…" (Paper presented
at the National School of Art in 1976).
A specific method, "here is the
question." It is not possible to give a historic
account of the Cuban school of ballet or its
antecedents here. Just some details: the creation of
the Alicia Alonso Ballet in 1948 and the Academy of
the same name in 1950, where the ethical and
aesthetic bases of this method were developed.
With the triumph of the Revolution
in 1959, the Alicia Alonso Academy ended its private
nature and became part of the National School of
Art.
Who better than one of the disciples
of Alicia and Fernando, a notable figure in the
pedagogy of dance in the contemporary world, and
current director of the National School of Ballet,
Ramona de Sáa, to explain the development of ballet
teaching in Cuba?
The dialogue with the outstanding
maitre in classrooms of the National Ballet of Cuba,
was extensive and detailed.
We are outside the School, based
since 2000 in a beautiful mansion on Paseo del Prado
and currently undergoing repairs.
The Cuban school of ballet and the
School as ballet teaching…
The Cuban school of ballet is a
system, a methodology created by the maestro
Fernando Alonso and prima ballerina assoluta Alicia
Alonso, who has been the inspiration for all of this
method. There has been a total interrelation of
dancer-maestro-maitre-professor. Little by little
they set about analyzing according to biotypes and
including the climatic characteristics of our
country, in order to work out be the most scientific
form of teaching for young people from the age of
nine or even seven years, and then began to create a
method.
Its characteristics?
The first characteristic is that our
years of study are systematically composed of units,
it is not a relation of movements. Teaching is a
spiral, from the simplest to the most complex forms
of execution. We have a first and second phase of
learning, facing the bar, then in profile, and one
very important detail, classes are gender separated.
For that reason, we can give ourselves the luxury of
showing a highly differentiated women’s dance and
the virility of male dancers.
This is also the case in some other
countries where there is a school as marked as the
Russian, and in France and Italy. Ours is always
gender separated, from the first elementary year.
And then we have our own characteristics in
movements, of attack, dynamic. We insist a lot that
we start out from balance, a movement is executed
with balance and we fall with balance. There are a
whole series of technical objectives which is what
distinguishes the Cuban school of ballet as
training, as method and later, in stage
performances. The role we give to pantomime, it
isn’t about moving and showing, but about how all of
the action is interrelated, whether it is Giselle,
Coppelia or Swan Lake. We have a work
table in relation to acting. That’s one of the
characteristics of our school and both Alicia and
Fernando have always been very insistent on this.
I would like to highlight something
very important, what a great honor it is for the
school of ballet to have Alicia and Fernando, its
founders, among us. They are present and interested
in how the pupils are developing, how teacher
retraining is going, how we are teaching such and
such a movement. It is a constant supervision that
we have in relation to the Cuban school of ballet as
a teaching method.
Selection is important. Tell us
about the entry exams.
A lot of emphasis has been placed on
selection. Today (February 17), we are doing the
second selection test; there are three. For the
elementary level, for 9-10 year olds who have
completed fourth grade. First, the physical aspect,
then flexibility of body extensions, level of
jumping; we have them improvise, we measure sense of
rhythm, aspects that they are going to need later
for their development. There is also a medical
check, psychological parameters, because there are
children who have many of the necessary conditions,
but their intelligence quota is not sufficient to
carry the specialty and their general education as a
whole. The children we select don’t usually have
enough time to get home by seven in the evening and
study, they have to assimilate that in the
classroom. It is a career they begin as young
children and which demands a lot of sacrifice. I
should tell you something very important, the
elementary level is vocational; then in the fifth
year, aged 13-14 years, there is an examination for
entry into the half-professional school. Not all of
the students who enter at the elementary level
continue their studies. It’s costing us a lot of
work, because there are 15 places for females and 15
for males at the intermediate level and it’s also
more selective at the elementary level. The fact is
that the country’s need for dancers is already being
met. The best dancers move on to the National
Ballet, those of Camagüey, Santiago de Cuba and
Holguín, and we have provided a good pool for the
Television Ballet.
How many students are graduating
this 2012?
This year is a graduation one for
20-25 students, but last year there were more than
40, and it was difficult to place them. The BNC as
well is constantly more selective, it already has a
large youthful company. They are asking for entry
parameters based on height, biophysical aspects.
Previously that could fluctuate a little but now
there’s a standard. With these standards, we are
competing with European companies, which select
dancers from all over the world, and we are
selecting them from our schools (11 elementary
schools throughout the country and two at
intermediate level, Havana and Camagüey), which for
me is a fundamental success.
Fernando was the first director of
the school 50 years ago, and then you almost
immediately afterward. Memories?
That era was great. First, when in
1961 Fernando called the founder members, Aurora,
Mirta, Josefina, Laura Alonso, Joaquín Banegas, my
sister Margarita, Adolfo Roval, and me to his office
– I remember it as if it were today – to tell as
about the plan for the National School of Ballet and
that we were going to give classes. We all looked at
each other, we were very young, we were dancing in
the company. First of all came the large selection
of girls. But, for the boys, we had to go to the
Orphanage, because at that time boys didn’t want to
study dance, neither did their parents want them to,
as they didn’t see dancing as a profession. This is
another of the School’s achievements, with
government support. Using educational talks in
schools we began to achieve a larger pool of boys,
but it wasn’t until three to four years ago that
this prejudice was removed from people’s minds. In
that period we had constant seminars and open
classes, both from Fernando and Alicia. Sometimes we
thought that we were doing excellently and they
destroyed that, in a strictly educational way, to
gradually train us. Both of them had a great vision
of the future, to incorporate the study plans of the
Alicia Alonso Academy into the National School, with
structural adjustments, because from the outset the
specialty was planned in conjunction with
comprehensive education studies. That was what made
it possible to have a totally national company with
in such a short time.
How did you come to be director?
I was 23 years old when Fernando
said to me, "You know cherie (as they called
all of us), I’m thinking that you should take over
as director of the School. The thing is, that he was
also carrying the company. I was agitated, ‘I can’t,
I can’t’. They had always helped me and had never
left me on my own. I took it on with fear because of
being unable to say no. We were a family, those were
beautiful times. We gave classes in the Cubanacán
neighborhood, then our own classes in the main
school, we danced, it was all feedback. I would say
that when they told you to lower your arm, you
eliminated that defect when you gave a class. Dance
is purely visual. That is why it’s so important that
the teacher demonstrates well and is inspired in his
or her classes. This is another characteristic, we
have very good teachers from one and the same
school, but with many individual aspects, and that’s
very important for the students, to hear various
voices of command, transmitted experience. That’s a
marvelous phenomenon within our teaching.
Some of your students?
Excellent dancers have passed
through my hands, I have trained them. They always
mention me. Carlos Acosta thinks of me as a mother,
because we did very good work outside of the
classroom. As they did with us. Imagine, he didn’t
want to be a dancer, because of the milieu from
which he came, it was his father who wanted him to
be one. We were very identified with him. Also with
Lorna and Lorena Feijoo, Viengsay Valdés, Anette
Delgado. When Anette went to take the intermediate
exam, she was a little thing and the jury didn’t
want to accept her for that level, I managed to
convince them and they finally took her. She knows
that, she’s always saying so. When we had the 1st
International Competition I trained her and she won
the Gold Medal. They are always affectionately
thanking me.
The importance of competitions?
I think the most important one is in
the classroom, the training they have with their
teacher, as I used to say to Junior (Carlos Acosta),
when I was preparing him for Lausanne, Switzerland,
where he won the Grand Prix and the Gold Medal at 16
years of age. It was a competition for who could
most resist the training with him receiving and
myself giving. It was very nice, I always told him,
we’re training you, but don’t go with the idea of
the prize in your head. Use it as experience. That’s
the most important thing about competitions. I am
saying that when a dancer is well trained, even
though there are sometimes non-artistic criteria
within the jury, his or her indisputable stature
always imposes itself. This can be seen very clearly
in current competitions. Since 1964 in Varna, when
(Arnold) Haskell saw the Jewels [Loipa Auaújo,
Aurora Bosch, Josefina Méndez and Mirta Pla] and
said, ‘We are seeing the phenomenon of the birth of
a new school.’ We are the youngest school that
exists, in continuous development with its living
founders. International confrontation on the stage
is important. There are people with good training
but their legs go weak, they are human beings.
Changes in 50 years?
Yes, many, they have emerged
spontaneously, the technique of turns has shone out.
The secret is balance. Alicia always had very good
balance. Josefina Méndez as well, all of them. It is
a very important characteristic within dance as
corporal expression and domination. This year we
have emphasized interpretation, for that very reason
you were saying, that more importance is given to
technique, but artists have to emerge from their
classes. From the elementary level, we work a lot on
legs and incorporate the port de bras, the
sense of dance, the angles of the room, aspects that
we are reinforcing.
We are coming up to the
celebrations…
We are not going to do the event
that we had planned because of the problem at the
School headquarters. We will have one week in the
Mella, and two (April 1-15) in the Lorca Theater.
The inaugural performance will have the parade of
graduates and then a BNC Gala for the School.
Satisfied?
Yes, I am satisfied. The
achievements lie in the Company, all graduates of
the School. I feel satisfied with the work we have
done, my small contribution to ballet in Cuba, one
of the heritages of our culture and, above all, with
having had Fernando and Alicia as teachers, as well
as spiritual parents. It is an immense satisfaction
not to have defrauded what was handed down to us as
a continuation of the founders.
The Cuban school of ballet, as a
style and academy, has the indelible seal of that
legend of dance, prima ballerina assoluta Alicia
Alonso.
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