Ballerina
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Anna Pavlova by John Lavery
Ballerina Irina Baranova
A ballerina is a name given to a female ballet dancer. Only very good female ballet dancers were called ballerinas. A ballerina was a principal dancer in a classical ballet company; today they are simply called 'Principal dancers'.[1] Dancers in a company are ranked by the company, and paid accordingly. They had to prove themselves in lesser parts before they could get promoted. The topmost female dancer in a company was usually called the prima ballerina.
Example of the ranks in a modern dance company:[2]
- Corps de ballet (these do not dance named individual parts)
- Coryphées (minor soloists)
- Principal character artists (dance roles with significant acting)
- Second soloists (dancers who take named solo roles)
- First soloists (one rank up from the previous)
- Principal dancers (ballerinas if female; dance leading roles)
- Principal guest artist (a well-known and sometimes famous dancer, usually from abroad)
[change] References
- ↑ Crane, Debra and Mackrell, Judith 2000. The Oxford dictionary of dance. Oxford University Press. p40
- ↑ From the progamme of the Mariinsky Ballet at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, 2011.