Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do the kids still continue their regular classes and rehearsals at their regular ballet schools, while doing this? I don't see how the time commitments would work out. My daughter is 10 and dances at Classical Ballet Theatre. She already has dance classes four nights a week, 6:30-8:00 pm, and then two classes on Saturdays: 9:00-10:30 and then 11:00-12:30. On top of that, they are preparing for their own Nutcracker which is the weekend after Thanksgiving at the Ernst Theater at the NOVA Annandale campus, so she is usually doing ballet all day Saturday until about 5 pm. (Granted, since our Nutcracker is Thanksgiving weekend, things calm down after that. We just have the regular class schedule.) But, I assume most good dancers have a similar schedule wherever they take lessons. How are they finding time to do Washington Ballet Nutcracker too? Can someone please explain the logistics to me? (?)
We are new to this, but I believe all the kids who audition are from the Washington school of ballet. The rehearsals are on weekends (usually in the afternoon) and don't conflict with the classes which are during the week or Saturday morning. The kids in ballet 1A and 1B have class twice a week. If one of those classes is on Saturday, then they only have three days of ballet total with both class and rehearsal on Saturdays.
Anonymous wrote:Do the kids still continue their regular classes and rehearsals at their regular ballet schools, while doing this? I don't see how the time commitments would work out. My daughter is 10 and dances at Classical Ballet Theatre. She already has dance classes four nights a week, 6:30-8:00 pm, and then two classes on Saturdays: 9:00-10:30 and then 11:00-12:30. On top of that, they are preparing for their own Nutcracker which is the weekend after Thanksgiving at the Ernst Theater at the NOVA Annandale campus, so she is usually doing ballet all day Saturday until about 5 pm. (Granted, since our Nutcracker is Thanksgiving weekend, things calm down after that. We just have the regular class schedule.) But, I assume most good dancers have a similar schedule wherever they take lessons. How are they finding time to do Washington Ballet Nutcracker too? Can someone please explain the logistics to me? (?)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:ummmm....usually, if your child is assigned a role, you accept it. with a glad heart. you don't turn it down bc it's not good enough.![]()
Why? It's a huge commitment. Isn't paid. So if your child
Doesn't get a desired role, why do it?
Anonymous wrote:Op here. Thanks everyone for the feedback. DD got cast so I guess we are in for it. I can't wait to tell her in the morning! She will be a cherry blossom.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid isn't a dancer, but an actor. I find this all fascinating bc my kid gets paid to appear in commercials and other theater shows after auditioning and getting selected. So this is odd to me, that it's a professional production with 1000s of people who attend, and brings in a ton of money (the tickets are expensive and it costs a family of 4 about $300+ to seentjr show). And yet these kids aren't getting compensated in any way. Parents don't even get free tickets to a show and have to pay several hundreds or dollars along with bringing their kids to rehearsals 3 days per week. And paying for the ballet classes.
What is the appeal here? My kid works and gets paid!
Do you live in the DC area? My daughter loves to act in local theatre plays and be on stage for just about anything. If there are paid opportunities in the area, we would love to learn about them. thanks
Anonymous wrote:My kid isn't a dancer, but an actor. I find this all fascinating bc my kid gets paid to appear in commercials and other theater shows after auditioning and getting selected. So this is odd to me, that it's a professional production with 1000s of people who attend, and brings in a ton of money (the tickets are expensive and it costs a family of 4 about $300+ to seentjr show). And yet these kids aren't getting compensated in any way. Parents don't even get free tickets to a show and have to pay several hundreds or dollars along with bringing their kids to rehearsals 3 days per week. And paying for the ballet classes.
What is the appeal here? My kid works and gets paid!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:ummmm....usually, if your child is assigned a role, you accept it. with a glad heart. you don't turn it down bc it's not good enough.![]()
Why? It's a huge commitment. Isn't paid. So if your child
Doesn't get a desired role, why do it?
Anonymous wrote:ummmm....usually, if your child is assigned a role, you accept it. with a glad heart. you don't turn it down bc it's not good enough.![]()