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BALLET PRODUCTION Theatre History From the 16 th Century - Today.

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Presentation on theme: "BALLET PRODUCTION Theatre History From the 16 th Century - Today."— Presentation transcript:

1 BALLET PRODUCTION Theatre History From the 16 th Century - Today

2 16 TH CENTURY

3 COSTUMING  Luxuriously designed costumes make of cotton and silk  Basic costumes Male: Tight-fitting, short draped skirt and feathered helmets. Female: Abundantly decorated embroidered silk tunics in several layers with fringe Dress was heavily influenced by Rome

4 SHOES  Tightly laced, high-heeled and wedged boots for male and female dancers.

5 STAGING & LIGHTING  From the beginning of the sixteenth century, public theaters were being built in Venice (1637), Rome (1652), Paris (1660), Hamburg  Similar to theatre the staging and lighting was simple as to the underdeveloped technology

6 17 TH CENTURY

7 COSTUMING  Imaginative and fantastical  Decorative with symbols, so the audience can recognize each character  Costumes were often large; restricting movement  Wore large head dresses, and masks to distinguish between the sexes  Only males were allowed to perform

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9 SHOES  Shoes were heeled  Very ornate and decorated

10 STAGING AND LIGHTS  Started off only in courts and then moved into proscenium arch stages  Chandeliers  Candles with reflectors  Oil Lamps  The stage was lit from the sides with candles and up to 6 grand chandeliers

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13 18 TH CENTURY

14 COSTUMES  Around 1720 a hooped petticoat appeared, raising skirts a few inches off the ground.  Everything became more elaborate  Massive wigs and headdresses still restricted movement for dancers.

15 SHOES  In mid-18 th century dancer Marie Camargo was the first to wear non- heeled shoes.  After the French revolution heeled were completely eliminated from the standard ballet shoe.  1795, Charles Didelot, “flying machine”

16 STAGING & LIGHTING

17 19 TH CENTURY

18 COSTUMES  Romantic tutu  Close-fitting bodices, floral crowns, corsages, and pearls on fabrics, as well as necklace and bracelets  The silhouette of ballet costumes became more tight fitting  The Italians contributed to another change--the shorter dancing skirt that evolved into the tutu.

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20 SHOES  Permanently toe-shoed feet  Soft satin slippers that fit like kid gloves. They had a leather sole and some darning on the sides and under, but not on the tip. Would’ve been like standing barefoot.  Russians started the evolution of the harder and stiffer pointe shoe.

21 STAGING  Going to the theatre was transformed from a social event to an experience in observation  Started the evolution of audience comfort and safety  Also improved the audiences sight lines  Started the use of iron to support theatre columns

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23 LIGHTS  Introduction of gas lighting.  Installation included footlights and wing lights, but lacked lighting from above.  Gaslight in the theatre was revolutionary and this new technology influenced both the style and the aesthetics of theatrical lighting.  Gaslight was very bright, it could also be controlled from a distance  For the first time light could be projected onto the stage from new angles,  Colored light was achieved by what was called a 'medium

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25 20 TH CENTURY

26 COSTUMES  Ballet skirts changed to become knee length tutus. Designed to show off the point work and multiple turns  The dancer Isadora Duncan freed ballerinas from corsets and introduced a revolutionary natural silhouette  Ballet dancers became less focused on the costume and more about what would allow movement

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28 SHOES  The birth of the modern point shoe.  Often attributed to early 20 th century Anna Pavlova

29 STAGING & LIGHTING

30 MODERN DAY BALLET

31 COSTUMING  Development of the flat pancake tutus Multilayered skirt that gives the impression of lightness and flight.  Smaller and more compact tutus and bodices  More technology to create costumes faster and more efficiently

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33 SHOES  Pointe shoes have evolved by becoming harder and boxier  Two types of shoes Pointe shoe Soft canvas shoes  Have not changed much since the heels during the french revolution were eliminated, making them a very crucial historical element in ballet

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35 STAGING  Still dance in proscenium arch theatres  Some advances to the way the theatres are set up due to technological advances  Still the same basic model of the scène proscenium from ancient Rome

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37 LIGHTS  Technological advances have allowed for More coloured washes Disc slides with patterns in some lights Intel lights that move on control Dimmer switches Spot lights from above, man powered

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39 MODERN POINTE SHOE

40 CONSTRUCTION

41 BOX  The box is a hard enclosure within the front end of the shoe that encases and supports the dancer’s toes.

42 SOLE  In most pointe shoes, the sole is constructed from a single piece of leather that is attached to the shoe with adhesive and reinforced by stitching along its edges.

43 SHANK  Dancers will sometimes wear different pointe shoe models for different performance pieces  Shanks are typically made from leather leather, plastic, cardstock, or layers of glue-hardened burlap. The flexability of a shank is determined by its thickness and the type of material used.

44 RIBBONS & ELASTIC

45 WORKS CITED  http://www.vam.ac.uk/content/articles/o/origins-of-ballet/ http://www.vam.ac.uk/content/articles/o/origins-of-ballet/  http://www.e-dancewear.com/Dance_Wear_Ballet_History.html http://www.e-dancewear.com/Dance_Wear_Ballet_History.html  http://cassstudio6.wordpress.com/lighting/17th-century-theatre-lighting/ http://cassstudio6.wordpress.com/lighting/17th-century-theatre-lighting/  http://www.pbt.org/community-engagement/brief-history-ballethttp://www.pbt.org/community-engagement/brief-history-ballet  http://www.the-perfect-pointe.com/PointeHistory.htmlhttp://www.the-perfect-pointe.com/PointeHistory.html  http://www.compulite.com/stagelight/html/history-4/history-4-text.htmlhttp://www.compulite.com/stagelight/html/history-4/history-4-text.html  http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/1542181/theatre- design/284390/The-19th-century http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/1542181/theatre- design/284390/The-19th-century


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