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  • Ballet Gets Sexy

    BALLET GETS SEXY

    Arifa Akbar, The Independent - United Kingdom
    Published: Jul 06, 2007

    A chisel-jawed man stares steadily at the camera, a gentle pout
    forming on his lips.

    And if the erotic charge of the image has eluded the viewer, the
    strap-line running alongside it rams the point home.

    It reads: "Meet Ed. Fact: When he's dancing, pound for pound, he's
    stronger than a rhino. Superheroes really do wear tights."

    Ed is not a Chippendale or Hollywood's latest heartthrob. He is
    Edward Watson, the principal dancer at the Royal Ballet and his
    close-up appears on the cover of the Royal Opera House's autumn
    season programme at Covent Garden. It will soon appear in a series
    of newspaper advertisements and on London Underground posters.

    While the bold image may be prompting the keen interest of Mr
    Watson's female following, it has caused some consternation among
    ballet aficionados who see it as a cheap marketing ploy to pull in
    new audiences.

    Mary Clarke, the editor of the Dancing Times, deemed such treatment
    of a serious artist as "tacky". "I think it's appalling and tacky. It
    cheapens the image of the company and it's not what they are all
    about," she said.

    The ROH said its reasons for launching an advertising campaign that
    is "up close and personal" is not only to celebrate the physicality
    of its performers but to challenge people's perceptions of ballet
    dancers as distant figures in tutus.

    Caroline Bailey, the director of marketing at the ROH, said it had
    evolved from an advertising campaign three years ago, which featured
    12 performers beautifully photographed in their home countries,
    which included Mexico, China, Cuba and Armenia.

    This time round, she wanted to deliver something that audiences could
    connect to on a more emotional level, and decided on featuring Mr
    Watson gazing directly at the camera.

    "We wanted to show him as a human being but also to say that he was
    extraordinary. And he is a fabulous looking man so it's not hard to
    get a good photo of him. It's all in the eyes. He is looking directly
    at you and it is so captivating that you can't get away," she said. Ms
    Bailey dismissed the notion that this kind marketing was designed to
    sex up its performers in hope luring greater audiences without regard.

    "I have an imperative to sell seats but a bigger imperative to have the
    right image for the or-ganisation and to change people's perceptions
    so they realise that we are not intimidating but engaging and very
    welcoming. Anyone who loves the Royal Ballet knows we need an audience
    of the future," she said.

    The image is the first of four to be launched over the coming year,
    including the young opera singer Marina Poplavskaya, the ROH's musical
    director, Antonio Pappano, and the Royal Ballet's principle dancer
    Marianela NAAez.

    Mr Watson, 31, from Dartford, Kent, who has modelled in various
    magazines in the past, including a 10-page feature in GQ and Harper's
    and Queen, yesterday told The Independent that he had never regarded
    himself as a "pin-up". He was happy with the advert and said he found
    it witty and innovative.

    "It's a bit cheeky but I don't really take myself very seriously
    and I don't think it was that sexy. I did-n't feel cheap or dirty
    doing it. It's not saying 'come and see the ballet' with images of
    tuttu's. You can see the person so it becomes much more human, which
    I really like," he said. Mr Watson nevertheless revealed he received
    considerable fan mail from women who admired his talents.

    The dancer joined The Royal Ballet in December 1994 and was promoted
    to "first artist" in 1997. His career trajectory since then has been
    a steady climb to the top.

    Yet he is not known so much for sex appeal, but for his astonishingly
    flexible body - performing the splits standing on one leg with far
    more grace than the average male ballet dancer.

    Watson is the first to admit that his red hair, delicate skin and
    fine limbs perhaps do not qualify him as a regular ballet pin-up.

    Growing up, he regarded himself as something of a "ginger freak",
    he said.

    An industry source said it was "surprising" that he was singled out
    for such marketing. This is not the first time the classical arts
    have introduced sex appeal in the marketing of its artists' works.

    The violinist Vanessa Mae was famously pictured in a sexy dress,
    playing her instrument in the sea with waves lapping around her
    figure. The image was a hit and became a turning point after which a
    crop of "sexy" performers were born in her wake, with the operatic
    male quartet Il Divo being the most recent. The group consists
    of unnervingly good-looking singers who have been packaged into a
    pop-opera fusion act by Simon Cowell.

    Similarly, the English National Opera's original campaign in 1989,
    which drew on the sexiness of its performers and behind-the-scenes
    operatives, was seen as highly effective as it energised audience
    figures and revitalised the company.

    But Tony Hall, the chief executive of the ROH, said this was most
    definitively not the Royal Ballet's "Vanessa Mae moment".

    "We are not going down a Vanessa Mae road. It's not what we are about.

    People who come to us a lot know how superb he is. People who do not
    come here might think 'how amazing, he is stronger than a rhino',"
    he said.
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