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About Pointe > History of Pointe

However,
around 1730 danse haute superseded danse basse, dancers
took to the air, rather than just move elegantly from lovely pose to lovely
pose, they began to jump, hop and leap. And women began to rebel against
their restrictive costumes. Marie Sallé literally let her hair
down and donned looser clothes for her ballet d'action, and her
rival, Marie Ann Cupis de Camargo took the heels from her shoes, and Scandale!,
shortened her skirts the better to perform that flashy new steps that
had heretofore been done exclusively by men: entrechat quatre and
cabriole.
The Eighteenth
Century saw an increased prominence of the female dancer and the expansion
of the ballet vocabulary to include more jumps and turns. Among the other
stars of the era were Mlle. Lyonnais, famed for her gargoulliades,
and Fräulein Heinel, who dazzled Europe with her multiple pirouettes--
but on demi-pointe.
Marie Taglioni often gets the credit and the blame for being the first
to dance on pointe. But no one really knows for sure. It is established
that in 1832 Marie Taglioni danced in the full length La Sylphide
on pointe. But almost certainly there were dancers before her who rose
onto the tips of their toes. It's even possible that Mme. Camargo had
done so one hundred years before. There are references in newspaper accounts
of various ballerinas with "fantastic toes" or of "falling off her toes".
Taglioni herself most likely danced on pointe before La Sylphide.
But whoever
was first, it was Taglioni who pioneered and developed the technique and
who revolutionized ballet as a result. She transformed toe dancing. What
had been merely a stunt and a kind of circus trick became a means of artistic
expression, a dramatic as well as a technical feat. Her grace, lightness,
elevation and style earned her an adoring audience and a brilliant career.
In Russia her fans loved her so much that they cooked her slippers and
ate them with a sauce!
©
1998 Gaynor Minden, Inc.
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