Northside teen pursues ballet dream

Dublin People 19 Nov 2011
DANCING QUEEN: Kate Finn doesn’t mind the long hours involved in ballet practice. PHOTO BY DARREN KINSELLA.

SHE attends five ballet classes a week, an all-day
rehearsal on Saturdays, and practices dancing at home in whatever spare time
she has, but Northside girl Kate Finn doesn’t mind the long hours.

The teenager from Finglas has wanted to become a
ballet dancer ever since the age of four, and her dedication is starting to pay
off.

A member of the Irish National Youth Ballet, Kate will
be dancing in the Nutcracker Suite and the Snow Queen at what’s expected to be
sell-out performances in Dublin and Dun Laoghaire in December.

Speaking to Northside People, 16-year-old Kate says
she can’t wait for the curtain to go up.

“I always get really excited ahead of each
performance, but I never really get nervous. Ballet is my life, it’s where my
heart is, it makes me relaxed and happy. It takes me away!

It hasn’t always been easy to pursue her passion
however, and Kate went through a few years of being bullied over what was seen
as an

‘unusual’ pastime by her classmates growing up in Finglas.

“When I started secondary school I got a bit of a hard
time. People were slagging and calling me names, things like

‘Who do you think
you are doing ballet?’ They just didn’t understand what it was.

“For the first few years I felt isolated, but then
when I danced at the school talent show, and they saw the shoes and the tutu,
they started to get really interested. Now everything is different, I’m getting
more support.

And although she dances six days a week, with extra
rehearsals coming up to performances, Kate says she still has time to lead a
normal teenager’s life.

“I still have time to hang out with my friends, once a
week anyway! I’m sitting my Leaving Cert this year, and next year I hope to
study at the College of Dance in Monkstown.

Kate is also keen to dismiss the

“crazy ballerina


image portrayed in last year’s hit film Black Swan, starring Natalie Portman.

“I thought the film was really good, but ballet isn’t
really like that, we’re not all mad! I suppose there is a bit of rivalry and
competition for parts in shows, but it’s very friendly, and the atmosphere is
always supportive.

But she said Black Swan did give an accurate depiction
of the amount of hard work involved in becoming a ballerina.

“The work is just like it is in Black Swan. Rehearsal
time is long, and you have to warm up properly or you can get muscle injuries.
In the Nutcracker Suite and the Snow Queen, I’ll be doing all point work, when
you’re up on your tip toes all the time. I started point work when I was 11,
and it was very difficult at the start, but as the years progress it becomes
easier.

One key support for Kate is the Artistic Director of
the Irish National Youth Ballet, Katherine Lewis. A fellow Northsider
originally from Cabra, Katherine was the first Irish person to attend the
prestigious Royal Ballet School in London, and Kate would love to follow in her
footsteps.

“Katherine is a fantastic teacher and so supportive of
us all. I’d like to do further study of dance at Bird College in London maybe
and then eventually become a ballet teacher, but first I’d like to make a
career out of ballet myself!

In the meantime, it’s practice, practice, pirouette
and plié as Kate and the other ballerinas in the Irish National Youth Ballet
Company prepare for their upcoming shows.

The Nutcracker Suite and the Snow Queen will be performed
in the O’Reilly Theatre in Belvedere College on December 2 /3 and in the
Pavilion Theatre in Dun Laoghaire on December 9/10.

Katie explained the roles she will play in each
performance.

“In the Nutcracker Suite, I’m in the snowflake scene,
the Dance of the Reed Pipes and the Waltz of the Flowers. In the Snow Queen,
I’m an icicle, a tear drop and a villager.

“It all makes sense when you see it performed!

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