Anonymous wrote:How old are PB3? Saw the show yesterday and was super impressed with the kids - especially the clowns!
Anonymous wrote:How are 4A and 4B different from, say, 3 and 3EX? My understanding was the EX class was for the most skilled students at that level but that the A and B could be taken in successive years with the material building on itself?
Also ... what Nutcracker roles could be expected at each level?
Anonymous wrote:level 3 is too old/too tall for party scene?
Anonymous wrote:I think the Nutcracker roles are likely to be mushroom or bee for the youngest students, then snow angel, cherry blossom, mouse for 1A/1B. Then party scene or soldier for level 2 and 3? Clown level 4? Little butterfly level 5, 6, and frontier girl for level 7?
Anonymous wrote:I think the Nutcracker roles are likely to be mushroom or bee for the youngest students, then snow angel, cherry blossom, mouse for 1A/1B. Then party scene or soldier for level 2 and 3? Clown level 4? Little butterfly level 5, 6, and frontier girl for level 7?
Anonymous wrote:On an unrelated note, can anyone tell me what the difference between Level 4A and 4B are?
Do level 3 kids always go to 4A, or do they sometimes skip 4A and go to 4B if they are more advanced?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Other studios will move faster, but it doesn't mean better technique. TWSB is slow and not for everyone, but their students are very well trained and better able to tackle harder moves without injuring themselves or it looking like a hot mess.
I don't think this is true. My daughter was the best in her level at TWSB. She audition for SAB and did not get it the first time. The second time she got in. I was told it was because she not do center work, combinations, leaps, turns....all things she had never seen at TWSB. She was not able to tackle harder moves until moving to another studio and getting better training.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, diagonals refers to movement across the floor, not just center work in one spot.
It’s telling that the PTP dancers, especially in the A section, are generally not from TWSB. I wonder whether the in-house students are just not up to that standard, but why are they strung along for so many years?!
No one calls it diagonals. It is crossing the floor or across the floor. And, duh, not everyone is meant to be a professional ballerina. TWSB offers kids who love it a chance to dance throughout high school. There is no promise of joining the company.