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Monday, July 23, 2012
The History of Tutus and Tutu dresses
Although ballet has been around since the 15th century, it's most associated icon, the tutu, has not. It took some time for it to develop into what it is today.During the early days of ballet, people were generally more conservative. Long skirts and heavy costumes worn by the first ballet dancers made it difficult to move. Marie Camargo tried to ease the ballerina's life by taking off no more than the very bottom of her skirt, just exposing the ankles. Marie Salle used a greek dress that offered her more freedom to dance in. Keeping with their modest side, many women put on extra petticoats to prevent anything from showing when more turns started to be incorporated in dances.
One of the most famous dancers of her time, Marie Taglioni, wore the first tutu in 1832. Although, it looked more like a tutu dress. It was shorter than what dancers previously wore, going past the knees and stoping somewhere along the calf. It revealed just enough to show the advancing footwork that ballet dancers were starting to be expected to do. Not only was it created to show off the dancer's feet, but it was made to be etheral looking. The Ballets being danced at the time, such as Giselle or La Syphilde, had supernatural beings. To appropriately portray these characters, the ballerinas needed to look as if they were floating across the stage and the flowing tutu helped to achieve this.
The need for an even shorter skirt brought the debut of the first classical tutu in the 1880's. An Italian ballerina named Victoria Zucci was the first dancer to wear one. It was shorter than the romantict tutu, although it didn't go up much higher than the knees, and it hung loose. This was taken a step further when the classical tutu was made stiffer, enabaling it to stick straight out in order to show the entire leg. It became known as the pancake tutu. A more extreme version of this had a completely flat top, and was called the platter tutu. This is what is commonly thought of today when picturing a ballerina costume.
The famous choreographer George Balanchine, needed a new design when he realized the classical tutu wasn't suited to his dances. Karinska, a trained seamtress from Russia, came to his rescue when she originated the powder puff tutu. Although it was still short and stuck out from the hips it hung down more than the rigid pancake or platter tutu, giving it an overall softer look. (http://ktyler.hubpages.com/hub/The-history-of-tutus-and-tutu-dresses)
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