
 Body Placement: Its Alignment and Dynamics
The Body as a Whole
You might have noticed that when you correct a
students placement a number of things can happen:
The correction throws another area out of
placement;
Within a short time the student acts like
you never said anything to them;
They interpret your instructions
incorrectly.
This is a common occurrence for most teachers. What is
usually missing is knowing what to correct when, and what not to correct. Yes, I said "not
to correct". By this I mean there are certain dynamics to body placement and
alignment that cannot be achieved through a direct approach, but must grow through the
students development in other areas. Teachers usually do not like this approach
because they do not have direct control over this type of work. With any true organic
maturation there will be many things that seem to happen naturally, though when you look
closely you will see that this growth has come about through an indirect approach. (We
will discuss what not to correct in another article in the near future).
When a student is having a difficult time mastering body
placement, it usually comes from a disorganized set of rules that they have come by
through a hit or miss strategy. Now this could be the way they understand the
teachers instruction, the way the teacher delivered their instructions, or, more
probable, the foundation which was laid in the beginning of their training does not
adequately support future technical advances.
What we will look at in this months issue is how to
enable students to build superb body placement. But before we can begin we must develop
between us a common terminology so that the information below can be used effectively.
After you briefly review the terminology we will begin with the basic structure and
dynamics that will make all other body placement much simpler and easy to accomplish.
The Terminology
I have found it easier to teach body placement by grouping parts of the body into
three major areas: The Upper Torso, The Lower Torso, and The Legs. Here is what I include
in each of these areas (the Latin terminology is provided in case you (or I) need to refer
to more specific areas):
The Upper Torso consists of the upper back (trapezius,
spine of VII cervical vertebra -neck), the lower back (sacrospinalis), the
shoulder blades (teres major, latissimus dorsi), the arms (biceps, triceps,
deltoid, extensors & flexors of the forearm), the upper rib cage (serratus
magnus) and the stomach (external oblique, rectus abdominis).

The Lower Torso consists of the lower stomach (rectus abdominis, aponeurosis of external oblique), the hips (gluteus medius), the buttocks (gluteus maximus, trochanter major), the inner buttocks (abductor magnus).

The Legs consists of the outer thigh (vastus
externus, ilio-tibial band, rectus femoris), the inner thigh (semitendinosus,
semimembranosus, abductor longus, satorius, gracilis), the knee (ligamentum
patellae, head of fibula, popliteal fossa, tibia and femur lateral condyle), the calf
(gastrocnemius), the achilles (tendon achilles), the inner foot (sole
pad, abductor hallusis), the ankle (or top of foot) (tendon - tibialis anterior
& extensor digitorium, extensor hallicus brevis), the outer foot (abductor
digiti quinti).
The Basics: First Things First
The first consideration when beginning to establish a firm foundation for the
dancers body placement is how the upper torso, buttocks, inner thigh and inner foot
interlace and connect to make the body strong and supple.
First, the inner foot must be lifted off the floor by
pressing down the large toe. This should shift the weight of the body more towards the
outside of the foot and distribute the weight equally across the sole pad. As the student
gains strength they should be encouraged to slightly shift their weight from their heel to
the ball of the foot. This technique will take some time for the student to accomplish.
Its accomplishment, though, needs to become automatic
that is, they must become
unaware that they are doing it. Without this basic and difficult control of the foot, all
other body placement will suffer.
If the foot and ankle wobble, or roll in, the
dancers hips and inner thighs will have no stable support to push against and
turn-out will suffer. A solid turning out of the legs is crucial for all technical
achievement. Without the strength to turn-out, the upper torso will have to take much of
the burden of balance and will never gain the aplomb the dancer is trying to achieve.
Second, the inner thigh must press forward and outward.
This is done by pressing the large toe against the floor, lifting the inner foot off the
floor, and squeezing the buttocks in towards each other by a rotation movement. Deep
within the lower part of the buttocks and upper inner thighs there is a muscle called the abductor
longus. The dancer needs to press forward and together this muscle on both legs to
enable the inner thighs to pull forward. This takes some skill to accomplish and but
imperative for any step that requires the dancer to leave the floor, such as large allegro
movements.
To assist the inner thighs, the buttocks should press
together with moderate strength. This has a two fold effect. The upper section of the
buttocks place a firm pressure around the sacrum (the section of bones at the base
of the spine), which gives the dancer a solid connection between the torso and legs. The
lower section of the buttocks, the closest near the abductor longus, assist the
inner thighs in their forward rotation movement. This action is usually referred to as turn-out.
(Below I will give you my short definition of the term turn-out).
Third, the lower torso must be held erect from the hips
to just below the sternum, and the upper torso arches slightly up and backwards. If this
position is new to a dancer, they may complain that it feels as if they are falling or
leaning backwards. Of course it will seem as if they are falling backward. For most people
the alignment desired for walking, or even sitting, is to lean the shoulders forward. This
may be O.K. for normal movement, but for a dancer who requires great physical control over
their movements it is inadequate.
The upper body and upper back are where much of the
dancers movement control will come from. This is especially true for both female and
male engaged in partnering. The upper back, more specifically the teres major and latissimus
dorsi must expand away from each other, the trapezius flatten and press
downward, and the teres major must roll underneath the shoulders. When doing this
the VII cervical vertebrae should press back and upwards. At the same time the rib
cage must compress downwards and together. This action is simulated by the action of
exhaling air from your lungs. All these movements combine to give the upper body a
slightly arched effect, as if the chest was seemingly facing the ceiling. During all of
this, the lower back must stay erect and flat without any arching. In fact, the arching I
describe should start no lower than where the shoulder blades are.
Dance movements are primarily isometric in nature. The
floor can be used to push against and to steady the body. But when a dancer is in the air
there is nothing external to push against -- the stability must come from within the
dancer's own body. This becomes more apparent when large allegro movements are introduced.
Thus, the three main body areas discussed above, with proper strength and conditioning,
will be the foundation from which the dancer builds all their future technical strength
and grace.
For the beginning dancer it is enough if they first learn
how to lift their inner foot and squeeze their buttocks together. Concentration on the
upper torso can be tackled only after they have acquire enough mastery and strength to
stand comfortably on one foot. Once a beginner can stand on one foot easily they have
reached a point where the teacher can start to apply more details in the upper body work.
Until then, their upper body strength can be built by giving exercises using all the
épaulement positions - croisé, effacé, and écarté, (in the pose - pointe tendue),
both en arrière and en avant.
Turn-out: Verb or Noun
Students, dancers and teachers often speak of a dancer being turned-out
as if the position was static (or otherwise refer to it as a noun). By this I
am sure they are referring to the action of the legs being rotated outwards. I have also
heard a great many dancers complain about how much turn-out is needed, and that some
dancers have an easier time with this difficult aspect of dancing. I consider turn-out to
be more of a verb, by that I mean an action as opposed to a static position. This view
places emphasis on the active engagement of the muscles to achieve leg rotation rather
than on the actual degree of rotation achieved.
What a dancer is trying to achieve with turn-out, beyond
the aesthetics of the art, is the stability this provides (especially when executing turns
or jumps). What is important, though, is not the degree of turn-out, but the strength
required to keep the action of turning out a constant one. I have known dancers who have
extraordinary turn-out but cannot execute turns or jumps with the same level of
extraordinariness. Why is that? It could be that since they have great turn-out they do
not feel the need to be engaging the muscles needed to turn out the leg. When a dancer is
not constantly turning out the legs, they lose the tensile strength needed to control the
hip area, and thereby lose mastery of the upper torso where all movement control resides.
Some dancers do have a hip structure that allows a
generous amount of leg rotation, whereas other dancers, especially males, have much less
rotation. The key is how well one uses the turn-out available to them. When I demonstrate
this by doing 6 to 8 pirouettes ( they can see how very little natural turn-out I have) my
students begin to understand this point. Not only do they begin to understand, but one
more I-am-not-good-enough conversation is eliminated and they begin to
develop powerful body dynamics.
Remember - it is not how much turn-out you have,
but how you use what you have. Turn-out is a constant action that must be
instilled throughout a dancers technical training.


Anthony answers some of your
questions in this special section. You may email him at coach@danceart.com
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