Ballet Dancewear History
In the early days, when dance was a
social court pastime, people just wore their own clothes when
dancing rather than those specially designed costumes. The men wore
very elaborate, stiff brocaded coats, knee breeches, wigs and swords
belted to their waists. The women, in the otherhand, were tightly
laced in long-sleeved bodices and pannier skirts. These cumbersome,
heavy outfits allowed for little body movement and the steps execute
had to be dignified.
With the establishment of Louis XIV’s
Academia Royal de Danse in 1661 there was an emergence of the first
professional dancers and ballet techniques became complex. When
there were performances on stage, they incorporated quick beats of
the feet and multiple pirouettes into their dances. Whirling skirts
necessitated the wearing of caleons de precaution (precautionary
drawers) so as not to reveal too much of the leg. In the classroom,
the ballet dancewears were so elaborate that it was difficult to
tell whether the dancers were at a tea party or warming up their
bodies. Leotards and tights were not yet invented then.
It was Marie Camargo who was the
first dancer to shorten her skirts. This enabled her audience to
appreciate her intricate footwork. Her rival, Marie Salle, dared
even further by discarding her petticoats to dance in a flimsy
Muslin dress. The French Revolution at the end of the 18th century
also brought about changes in the ballet dancewear. Simple,
lightweight, clinging robes inspired by Greek models became
fashionable both on and off the stage. Also at this time, a man
named Maillot, a costume maker and designer at the Paris Opéra, is
said to have invented tights. These new fashions and inventions
caused great change in the practice of ballet dancewear. They
finally found themselves in clothing that permitted for much greater
freedom of movement and dance technique beyond its previously
limited boundaries.
This was further emphasized by the
great dance teacher, Carlo Blasis, who in 1820 published the
technical manual, Trait Elementaire et Pratique de la Danse. This
included drawings for which Blasis had posed, dressed in nothing but
shorts and ballet shoes. August Bournonville, the great Danish
choreographer, was also an advocate of practical ballet dancewear
and was thrilled with the new Paris Opéra regulations when he danced
there in 1826. The long, loose trousers had been replaced by knee
breeches and silk hose since it had been decided that the long pants
hid too many technical faults and anatomical defects. Bournonville
himself invented the "Bournonville slipper" for male dancers. Still
worn today in all Bournonville ballets, these black slippers have a
white, V-shaped vamp in the front, making for a better-looking, long
and pointed foot.
Victorian sensibilities caused a
return to very elaborate dancewear. On stage in the 1890s, dance
spectacle at its most lavish reigned supreme. Off stage in the
rehearsal room, they wore quite complicated ballet dancewear. The
bell-shaped Romantic dress of the mid-1800s gave way to the tutu at
the end of the 19th century. The new long, floppy, 16 layer tutus
reached to the knee and allowed the female dancers much greater
mobility.
It was in the early years of the 20th
century that ballet dancewear began to change to those that are
commonly used today. Isadora Duncan, one of the first innovators,
was considered to be an extremist when she discarded shoes,
stockings and tutus and danced on stage in bare feet and flimsy
Greek tunics. But soon many classical ballerinas, including Anna
Pavlova, began to wear the practical, uncluttered tunic for
rehearsals.
Modern dancers, on the other hand,
wore the new leotard for their ballet dancewear in practice.
Invented by the trapeze artist, Jules Leotard, the original leotard
consisted of a close-fitting suit of knitted jersey.
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