I was confused until I saw it wasn’t in the U.S. We are more boisterous during a performance. When we see something we know is difficult, we express ourselves letting the dancers know we appreciate all the effort and hard work they’ve put in for us. I know other cultures express themselves in different ways. I just neglected to read it. Amazing how did you
It’s probably because audiences in Alicante, Spain aren’t all that ballet-literate. So they don’t know what they’re watching, nor can they tell that what’s going on in front of them is all that difficult. I remember a South African lady watching her first live ballet performance in Johannesburg, headlined by a top-flight prima ballerina imported for the occasion, being asked for her reaction to “Le Corsaire”. Her answer, “I found it relaxing”. In other words she didn’t know what she was watching, and she was tits-bored out of her mind.
I too found the reaction at the intervaks poor. On the other hand what you call the "boisterous" Americans DURING a performance ruining the music I find very annoying
@@avesraggiana Wow! It really does have to do with exposure. I can’t imagine being bored during a ballet unless the choreographer was just OUT there! Even then, not bored but maybe confused. That has happened.
Если танцовщик выбрал пластику некоего раболепия,то должен был этот вариант утрировать,т.е. больше полупреклонённых позиций,поменьше героических поз...
Чудесно!! Браво!!!!!
These dancers are principals of the Dutch National Ballet. Well done, the both of you.
Good. Both. And I think he is very good.
A pure marvel. 💙💙💙💙💙💙💙💙💙💙💙💙💙💙💙💙
BEAUTIFUL!! BRAVISSIMO! 🌹🌹🌹🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟
Maravilhosos❤❤
Fascinating! ❤❤❤
Bravissimi❤
♥️
the stage too short.and small. the korean guy is super super good
I was confused until I saw it wasn’t in the U.S. We are more boisterous during a performance. When we see something we know is difficult, we express ourselves letting the dancers know we appreciate all the effort and hard work they’ve put in for us. I know other cultures express themselves in different ways. I just neglected to read it. Amazing how did you
It’s probably because audiences in Alicante, Spain aren’t all that ballet-literate. So they don’t know what they’re watching, nor can they tell that what’s going on in front of them is all that difficult. I remember a South African lady watching her first live ballet performance in Johannesburg, headlined by a top-flight prima ballerina imported for the occasion, being asked for her reaction to “Le Corsaire”. Her answer, “I found it relaxing”. In other words she didn’t know what she was watching, and she was tits-bored out of her mind.
I too found the reaction at the intervaks poor. On the other hand what you call the "boisterous" Americans DURING a performance ruining the music I find very annoying
@@avesraggiana Wow! It really does have to do with exposure. I can’t imagine being bored during a ballet unless the choreographer was just OUT there! Even then, not bored but maybe confused. That has happened.
...only technology, which will certainly still be fine-tuned... ...nur Technik, an der sicherlich noch gefeilt werden wird...
Если танцовщик выбрал пластику некоего раболепия,то должен был этот вариант утрировать,т.е. больше полупреклонённых позиций,поменьше героических поз...
Dude, you’re over-thinking it. It’s not that complicated. It’s just ballet.