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The Australian Conservatoire of Ballet
was founded in 1991 under the name Christine Walsh Dance Centre. Co-founders
Christine Walsh AM and Ricardo Ella brought to the school a wealth of
experience from their own dance careers. With both possessing a desire
to pass on knowledge and having adventurous and entrepreneurial spirits,
the school developed rapidly.
From the outset, the aim of the School
was to provide quality training in classical ballet and other dance styles,
giving honesty, care and individual attention to the students. A training
program based on the Russian method, was devised to cater for all ages
and this program grew and developed along with the school itself. This
method was named the Australian Conservatoire of Ballet and is now in
demand by many teachers in Australia and overseas.
Within the first two years of the school
being opened, Christine and Ricardo choreographed and produced The Nutcracker,
which was the first of many major productions for which the school has
become well known. As the school grew new productions followed - Hansel
and Gretel, Coppelia, Sleeping Beauty, La Sylphide, A Midsummer Nightfs
Dream, Paquita and Le Corsaire.
With the growing reputation of the school came new
opportunities in the form of the Melbourne Youth Orchestra and the Australian
Pops Orchestra inviting the school to perform with them, the first of
which was the Nutcracker in 1995 with the 90 musicians of the Melbourne
Youth Orchestra.
The bringing together of young aspiring musicians
and dancers in rehearsals and performances was a memorable and beneficial
experience to all. It was decided that this experience should be repeated
on an annual basis. Consequently further productions with the collaboration
of Melbourne Youth Orchestra have followed, such as the full-length production
of Swan Lake at the Arts Centre and Melbourne Town Hall and Romeo and
Juliet at the Melbourne Town Hall. The success of these full scale productions
has led to extensive public following for all the schoolfs performances
and events. Since 2000, the school has been invited to tour and perform
regularly with the Australian Pops Orchestra.
Always with the quality of the training as a priority,
Christine Walsh and Ricardo Ella made a decision to move the school to
an inner city location in 1999. The school was intentionally scaled down
in the number of students to retain only the most dedicated to train in
a Specialized Coaching Program. From that time entry to the school has
been by audition only. In the same year, the School was renamed The Australian
Conservatoire of Ballet to reflect its international reputation and to
consolidate the headquarters of the widely used training and assessment
program.
In 2001, the full-time Diploma of Dance course was
nationally accredited and the reputation of the school was spreading internationally.
Realizing the need for bridging the gap between the part-time school Specialized
Coaching Program and the full-time Diploma of Dance, a new half day program
was introduced where students were able to train on a daily basis whilst
continuing at their academic schools. In 2005, this program was accredited
as Certificate 3 & 4 in Dance and has proven to be highly successful.
The Australian Conservatoire of Ballet is now one
of the only schools in Australia to be able to offer comprehensively designed
dance training from 6 years of age through to professional age with a
strong basis in classical ballet and enhanced with the additional styles
of Character, Contemporary, Jazz, Drama and Music. |