Fabrice Calmels, Joffrey Ballet
I know, I know, I reblog a lot of light dudes…so here’s Fabrice Calmels, looking like he was carved out of bronze and burnished.
Fabrice Calmels, Joffrey Ballet
I know, I know, I reblog a lot of light dudes…so here’s Fabrice Calmels, looking like he was carved out of bronze and burnished.
Dancer: Yoav Bosidan
Hello, it’s 4 am ballet reblogs again. Love, love, love, the male body in ecstasy.
Leonid Sarafanov
Madre de dios. I doubt anyone could love this boy as much as he loves dance.
Yes, it’s true that most men that dance ballet get tagged as gay despite the prominent number of heterosexual dancers. Even though homosexuality in ballet is a hot topic, the number of gay ballet productions is actually a pretty small number but they do exist.
In the mid 1990s, Matthew Bourne choreographed a retelling of the Russian ballet Swan Lake. Instead of a princess whom is transformed into a swan by an evil sorcerer and must be saved by her prince, Bourne’s version is more modern. It features a prince who falls in love with a male swan representing his freedom, but the prince is downtrodden by his borderline-abusive Queen and her evil cohort, her Private Secretary, until his mental anguish threatens to overtake him . It’s still a traditional classical ballet with a new jazz scene thrown as well. Over all, it’s very moving; I admit that I cried at the end.
The link above is the first act from a 1996 performance (hence the quality). The second act is HERE. They’re each about an hour long. If you want to actually see these men in flesh and feathers, yes, Bourne’s Swan Lake is STILL actively touring! Most of the tour dates are in Europe or Israel right now, so hopefully they’ll add more.
PS: A more recent trailer in damn good quality is here, and clips from the 2010 season with interviews is here.
My sister was a ballet dancer until about age 12, when she lost interest and went over to cheer-leading. As her older brother, I never had any reason to go into her room…except to gaze at this poster on her wall. I don’t know what his name was, where he lived, even if he was still alive, but at that point in my young adult life it was the most captivating image I’ve ever seen.
It’s erotic, stimulating even, but it’s almost too sacred to sully by masturbating to it. The subject’s lack of body fat combined with the lighting reveals every curve and line of the male body. His legs are engorged from exercise, his arms mere branches of sinew, tendons, and bone. He’s posed himself impossibly on his toes. I always thought he looked more like a fairy in mid-landing than an actual mortal person striking a pose. I later learned that men rarely ever go on pointe, which only heightened my fascination with this photograph.
I came home from community college one day to find my mother and sister cleaning out her room. She was almost a teenager and done with pink, kittens, and polka dots. I checked in on them and nearly screamed when I saw the poster was gone. I was too chicken to ask where it went. I dreaded they had balled it up, folded and creased it beyond rescue, then shoved it into a garbage bag.
I waited impatiently until everyone had gone to bed that night before I snuck outside to the trash waiting on the curb. I lifted the lid on the can and nearly melted in relief. There it was. Rolled, sitting on top of plastic trash bags. The corner was torn and there were pushpin holes through the others. Thank god! I plucked it out, then stole back up into the house and up the stairs with my prize.
Years later, I ended up meeting and marrying a male ballet dancer. When he was gone on a tour of Europe, I found this poster in the back of a closet. I had it framed and hung in our living room. When my husband came home he saw the picture and smiled, “How did you know I was a fan of Stein?”
“Stein?” I asked, “Is he the dancer?”
“No, love, he’s the photographer. He’s one of my favorites.” He kissed me, “Thank you for the welcome home gift.”
I just went along with it. That was my poster and it always would be.
Dance by Vadim Stein
In this corner of Tumblr, we like to see men tied up, tied down, restricted, locked, and just plain kept… but long after this becomes normalcy, watching the full potential of a man in motion unfold is even more breath-taking.