As you watch the Black Swan Coda and the regal Prince Siegfried enters the stage to begin his sequence of turns you realize that in a matter of seconds the Black Swan will come to perform the legendary sequence of thirty-two fouettes. Butterflies flutter in your own stomach at the thought and you can hardly fathom how the ballerina about to perform the amazing feat must feel. You lean forward in your seat as the audience applauds Prince Siegfried and the Black Swan takes the stage, opening her sequence with a double pirouette and whipping out triples in between every few rotations.
In order to make a top spin continuously, its proportions must be constructed just so, so its features are capable of maintaining balance and momentum. The situation is no different with a pirouette. In order to maintain your balance your standing side must be perfectly aligned or, like an unbalanced top, you'll fall right over.
What I mean by keeping your "standing side aligned" is that your shoulder, ribs and hip must all come into the proper alignment to maintain a stable position. Here are a few examples of some successful turners:
Although the identity of this phenomenal turner is unknown , this woman is the star in the YouTube video with over two-million views called Super Pirouette. Please watch it below, this is one of the most amazing turning sequences I've ever seen:
In the picture above you can see the vertical and horizontal lines that I have drawn over her body. It illustrates how her shoulders are perfectly even with each other and her hip, ribs and shoulder have all come into alignment. Although very few of us can turn just like her, it's important to know where that "sweet spot" is. The photo of her above would be her "sweet spot" aka: the position where your body is well aligned and you can feel yourself in balance.
Aside from finding that sweet spot, fouettes also require something else in order to improve them... Practice. Fouettes are one of the most difficult movements in ballet. You've just got to work at them again and again, receiving corrections from a teacher and memorizing the feeling of that sweet spot until you find yourself spinning just like a top. Everyone has a different body so there isn't one universal position that every ballerina strives to find. The sweet spot that balances out all of a person's features will be slightly different. Even if you're standing at the kitchen counter, talking to your parents as they make dinner, go into passe and find that sweet spot, then hold it for as long as you can. Ballet is all about muscle memory so find that sweet spot and don't let it go!
Post your thoughts and questions in a comment below!
Ballerinablogger~