He captures the Swan at last! Thick rope encircles her legs from ankles to upper thighs. This avian
He captures the Swan at last! Thick rope encircles her legs from ankles to upper thighs. This avian will not be flying away and she quivers in her ropes as she quivered her arms and body on stage as The Swan.Note on “Swan Lake” What is ballet without its lakes full of swans? The enchanted maidens, led by their queen Odette, meld the avian and the human in one exquisite form. Principal Artist Amber Scott says, “My arms and back are always aching after Swan Lake. Wings are powerful on birds: that’s what they use to elevate themselves. I always imagine the wings starting from the center of my spine and coming out. You use your whole body, almost like you’re in water. Your elbows are doing circles, and your arms aren’t going straight up and down – it’s a curved movement.” To Scott, Odette’s fluttering quivers are the bewitched queen shaking the water off herself after her transformation from bird to woman.Beautiful! Bound or not. -- source link