The Waipawa Dance Centre was fortunate to host international contemporary dancer Natalie Ayton for a two week workshop during January. While the first week was taken up with potential future stars and those who wanted to improve their current skill level, the second week was all about the advanced dancers.
These young ladies are all advanced ballerinas who are looking at turning their chosen sport into a full-time career. So you may wonder just what interest these girls could have in a workshop in contemporary dance.
The first thing that you have to realise is that this is not so much about being a contemporary dance workshop, but a workshop with Natalie Ayton. Ask any of the dancers and they all agree that it is Natalie that draws them from as far a field as Invercargill to the village of Waipawa in the middle of their summer break.
These ladies worked from 10 am to 4.30pm as Natalie tried to give them an understanding of what life as a professional dancer would be like. “I wanted them to learn what it was like building the bricks to becoming a ballet company” Although the day’s routine comprised of warm-ups, contemporary classes and creating their own choreography the theme running through each day was about being a part of a group and learning to trust in that group as well as trust in yourself.
“The workshop this year was really about catching and falling and trust” explains Natalie. “To really learn to trust your own body and other people you have to put that trust to the test. So we have learned about really letting go and knowing that either we can catch ourselves at the last minute or that other people in the group will do it for us”.
The relationship within a group of dancers, whether they be a professional company or a casual class, is so important.
Dancers need to be instinctively aware of where they are in the room, but also where other dancers are and what they are doing. Although this makes it a far safer environment it is this connection with each other that creates the group essence and magic for dancers and spectators alike.
There is no-one better to teach these dancers these essential intricacies of working in a company than Natalie. After more than 10 years touring with dance companies (including the outstanding Gecko Theatre company), working with pop stars and being involved in Opera performances and Olympic ceremonies Natalie has become one of the most sought after contemporary dance teachers for those just starting out and professional dancers alike.
When I asked her advanced group what made her so special they all replied at once with massive grins on their faces “she is fun!” Other comments started flowing from the dancers but it was evident to all that these students were completely entranced by the passion, intensity and pure joy that Natalie has for her craft. Through this passion she makes her students want to push through and go further.
Natalie works with her students and becomes a part of their team, guiding without overtly instructing. With Natalie-isms like ‘seaweed shoulders’ scattered throughout the classes and using phrases like ‘sausage and mash’ to verbalize a rhythm Natalie certainly got her company relaxed and focused. They visibly transformed from young, elegant, tightly framed ballerinas, who still liked to talk about the latest Twilight instalment between sessions – into contemporary dancers telling their story and doing incredible things with their frames.
Which is another of the reasons that Natalie’s contemporary workshops are so popular.
Classical Ballet is performed in such a tight and limited framework that achieving the extremes of movement while also expressing the depth of emotion is really hard to achieve when you just focus on the classical ballet curriculum. By learning contemporary dancers can push through physical and psychological barriers and reach those classical limits.
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