Rose Alice: Interview With A Rogue Ballerina And Choreographer

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Rose Alice: Interview With A Rogue Ballerina And Choreographer

Rose Alice is an award-winning Rogue Ballerina and Choreographer who cites dance as being her absolute purpose in life. Her career has taken her to stages around the world, including the Palais Garnier, the Royal Opera House, the Lincoln Centre, Royal Albert Hall, Radio City Music Hall, the Sydney Opera House, and more. Rose has also worked extensively on film, which she finds very rewarding. Thus far in, her eclectic, debilitating, rewarding, terrifying, and unexplainably beautiful journey has broken, built, and birthed the artist and human being that Rose Alice is today, and is the reason behind her resilience, grit and staying power. In this article, she talks to us all about her fascinating career and upcoming collaborations and gives us an insight into the creation of her upcoming documentary series.

Michelle Sciarrotta (MS): Hi Rose Alice, thanks for talking with us at TheatreArtLife! How are you doing, and how are you finding getting ‘back to normal’ after the pandemic?

Rose Alice (RA): Thank you so much for having me! It really is a humbling privilege to speak with you and share a bit of my heart and soul with your audience. I am in a bit of a creative hole with immortal-level tunnel vision at the moment—I think, coming out of the pandemic, I have to almost remember to breathe and take a beat every now and then, because there is all of this built-up creativity, and also a subconscious need to make up for lost time.

I feel so grateful to have life back, though I guess that is a bit of a cliché [to say], but when the ability to do my craft was taken away, it almost verified the fact that is not a job; it is absolutely a purpose in life and the reason I exist, which is an overwhelmingly beautiful and confronting thing.

MS: How would you summarise the varied work that you do, and can you tell us a bit about it and how does it differ between projects? For example, what is it like working with professional dancers on a project in contrast to coaching musicians and non-dancers?

RA: I feel like a bit of an artistic chameleon at times: whilst I am in the studio every day doing ballet class to maintain my technique so that I can create physically demanding work for both stage and film, I also have the pleasure of doing Movement Direction with Arlo Parks. What is interesting for me is that, whilst both things are completely different physically, they are both 100% emotion-led.

I think, when I am physically dancing and choreographing on other dancers, there is an unspoken chemistry that forms, and it is something that I am very aware of—I do everything in my power to take a classical ballet foundation and shift it into being something that makes an audience member feel everything it is humanly possible to feel. There is a strength and vulnerability to this that is so powerful, and it is exactly the same when working with Arlo.

It is about tapping into the human side and then letting that come through via the art.

I find myself only working with people now who have the same intense relationship with their craft as I do. And then, weirdly, the fact our crafts are different almost becomes irrelevant—it is a beautiful explosion of synchronicity and authenticity.

MS: When it comes to looking back on your career so far, is it possible to choose your favourite moments or highlights?

RA: My first full-length production in London, ‘Human,’ is absolutely a highlight for me. It was the first time I had risked it all and brought together dancers and musicians to create something. I think it was also the first time I had complete creative freedom and, although there were big stresses attached to it, the adrenaline and out-of-body experience that occurred that night have always stayed very close to my heart.

I also recently filmed a short trailer/proof-of-concept film for my next project, and there was a freedom and catharsis to it that I can’t quite explain. It really did feel like the beginning of forever, and after a really tough few years, I actively felt the growth and change in myself as an artist for the first time.

Photographer: Kiraly Saint Claire

MS: And conversely, what has been the biggest obstacle or challenge you’ve overcome in your work?

RA:  ‘Free,’ my second full-length production from 2019, was one of those experiences where everything that could have gone wrong did, and it was so debilitating that my friends and family were genuinely worried for my life.

I have never experienced stress like that: I lost everything, and now realise I actually gained everything.

I have always been very open-hearted and willing to put everyone’s needs and wants before my own, and this event has strengthened me to the core and made me implement boundaries on the work front so that I can keep creating. I wouldn’t wish that kind of stress, panic, and heaviness on anyone—however, it changed me as a person more than I can possibly explain, and I feel so free (yes, I see the irony) to say “no,” and to push back without sacrificing my kindness and warmth, which I think for longevity in the entertainment industry is an absolute necessity.

MS: What advice would you give to your younger self if you could go back in time? What do you wish you knew then that you know now?

RA: I wish I knew that not fitting into a pre-existing mould wasn’t a negative thing. It is hard to not conform to the normal routes of “work” for a dancer. However, if you are willing to risk, sacrifice, and practice staying power, you can thrive outside the box.

If you can’t find the right path, it is probably because it doesn’t exist and you have to create it.

That is how you grow, change, and share your gift with the planet. Not by conforming and feeling like your wings are clipped or chained for the sake of a little security. Instability and discomfort are necessary to level up and leave an original legacy!

MS: I understand you’re currently working on a documentary series on the life of artists and the creative process, which will conclude with a live show at the United Palace Theater in Manhattan. That sounds fascinating, what can you tell us about the project?

RA: My masterpiece and life’s work is in development at the moment. This will be a documentary series about the life of artists and what it really takes to build and create something from scratch. We will be filming it in London and New York, and throughout the series, I will be creating the live show to conclude the series which will take place at the United Palace in Manhattan.

This series is genuinely my entire world right now – I am living it 23 hours a day, and it is all-consuming in every way imaginable. I feel very grateful to the tribe of humans unconditionally supporting me and keeping me grounded along the way. We will be in production by the end of this year and into 2023. However, everyone involved agrees that we need to take our time so that we can create an honest, raw, original, and timeless body of work, one that can help educate and enhance how valuable and important artists are to this planet, especially in the midst of such turbulent times.

Photographer: Kiraly Saint Claire

MS: And what can we look forward to seeing from you next – are you working with any artists that we might know on any upcoming shows?

RA: As well as my documentary series, I am working with Arlo Parks on her upcoming support shows of Billie Eilish, Harry Styles, and the Glastonbury Festival.

MS: Any final words from you, Rose Alice, what would you like to say to our readers at TheatreArtLife?

RA: I think I would just like to remind artists of any genre to “keep on keeping on” and to have grit and resilience in the most gentle, yet forceful way possible. The world needs you now more than ever, I truly believe. Although it is anything but easy, we are the lucky ones to have a gift and a purpose. That is a force stronger than most humans can comprehend, and that alone is infinitely worth everything!

It is a blessing and a curse to feel so deeply, but to stay fiercely original and true to the core and have unwavering integrity whilst sharing your magic is the most generous, empathetic, compassionate, and beautiful thing, and it really is valued and needed beyond measure.

Website

https://www.rosealice.co.uk

Social Media

@rosealiceofficial

This article was originally published on TheatreArtLife.com. Written by TheatreArtLife’s Content Producer – Michelle Sciarrotta.

Anna Robb
All around the world there are people working in arts and entertainment. They are not in the industry for the money, the fame or the work/life balance. They are there through a sheer driving force; The need to create. From this community, TheatreArtLife was born.
TheatreArtLife.com is a global platform for live entertainment industry professionals. We host a community of creative and technical professionals sharing their cultures, knowledge, experience, passions and challenges. From events to concert touring, to resident theatrical shows, to circus, if it is live entertainment, we talk about it. Created BY the industry FOR the industry. TheatreArtLife hosts jobs, live and recorded webinars, the TheatreArtLife Podcast, articles from a global contributor pool and professional development opportunities.
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Anna Robb

All around the world there are people working in arts and entertainment. They are not in the industry for the money, the fame or the work/life balance. They are there through a sheer driving force; The need to create. From this community, TheatreArtLife was born. TheatreArtLife.com is a global platform for live entertainment industry professionals. We host a community of creative and technical professionals sharing their cultures, knowledge, experience, passions and challenges. From events to concert touring, to resident theatrical shows, to circus, if it is live entertainment, we talk about it. Created BY the industry FOR the industry. TheatreArtLife hosts jobs, live and recorded webinars, the TheatreArtLife Podcast, articles from a global contributor pool and professional development opportunities.