Art Chowder May | June, Issue 21 | Page 39

M imi demonstrated the apparent effortless grace of which this art form is capable at class’s end as the crew continued filming. Bright pink feathers waved from her tiny wrists while she moved with liquid rhythm beneath her trailing flame of black hair. She made a face and said, “I am out of shape.” No one could tell. A classicist to the end, she pursues a foundation of measurable excellence and requires that of her students. “I interpret that as knowing fully technique, vocabulary,” she has said. “And once you have that, there is freedom for creating anything you want.” Not every ballet student is destined to become the next Pavlova or Baryshnikov, of course. There are other reasons that parents send children to ballet, however. They become exposed to realms beyond the cultural mainstream. Under a wise mentor, they learn self confidence, mutual respect with others and for their teachers. Mimi related a story of seeing several people loitering outside one day while she was teaching a class. She took advantage of the moment for a lesson in diligence and purpose. “See those four guys outside with nothing to do?” she said to her class. “When they were children they had no discipline from their parents. And this is why they are out there. This is what happens when you have no goals. Do you want to be like that?” “Kids are starving for boundaries,” Mimi said. “They want it and that’s why they poke you. So when you establish the rules, they respect you.” She remembers one girl who kept coming in late, interrupting the class. Mimi sent her out to look at the schedule and report what time class was to begin. When the girl returned Mimi told her, “In ballet, if you are on time you are already late!” “And she was an angel after that,” added Mimi. Photo credit:  James and Kathy Mangis Photography Photo credit:  James and Kathy Mangis Photography Photo credit:  James and Kathy Mangis Photography May | June 2019 39