Culture Ballerinas of color renew the call for pointe shoes in every shade - On Black skin, the traditional European pink pointe shoes break those lines at the ankle, creating disharmony when the intended effect is grace.

By Kaitlyn Schwanemann, CNN
Published 6:30 AM EST, Wed December 27, 2023

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A ballerina performs in a shoe that has been "pancaked," or dyed with make up and paint to match her skin tone.
PeopleImages/iStockphoto/Getty Images


(CNN) — Although Robin Williams has been a ballet dancer for more than 60 years, she experienced a first during her performance of The Nutcracker this December.

Williams said when she danced the Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy, it was the first time she didn’t have to slather pink pointe shoes in paint or foundation to get them to match her brown skin.

The practice, known in the dance community as “pancaking,” has become a painstaking ritual for dancers of color because traditional ballet attire is designed to match fair complexions.

Although ballet has diversified and changed over the decades, many ballerinas of color still struggle to find pointe shoes and tights to match their complexion.

Williams said last month marked the first time in six decades of dancing she was able to purchase brown pointe shoes – complete with dyed ribbons and elastics – to match her complexion.

Williams said she couldn’t imagine purchasing brown pointe shoes when she began her career in the 1960s because she was the only Black ballerina in her company.

“We weren’t accepted in ballet classes and there were few choreographers,” she said, adding while her very presence stood out, so did her attire.

“My teacher happened to mention that we had on pink tights because the tights, and the shoes, were supposed to match our skin tone,” Williams recalled. “I thought about it when she said that because I was like, ‘Well our skin isn’t pink.’ And I never forgot that.”

In ballet, the pointe shoes are supposed to be an extension of the dancer’s lines, or the illusion of length running from their head to their toes.

On Black skin, the traditional European pink pointe shoes break those lines at the ankle, creating disharmony when the intended effect is grace. Ballet is also traditionally uniform, which has led some company directors to make dancers of color wear pink tights to blend in with the predominantly White company.

Although some dancewear brands began selling ranges of shades of pointe shoes in 2020, many ballerinas of color still “pancake” their shoes.

In a recent TikTok that received over 1 million likes, Misty Copeland, the first Black female principal dancer at the American Ballet Theatre, showed how she pancaked a pair of baby pink pointe shoes with a sponge and a bottle of drugstore foundation.

Despite her fame, Copeland explained that the lack of ballet shoes matching her skin tone has made her feel excluded.

In September, she started a petition called, “Let’s Make a Pointe!” to encourage Apple to provide different shades of its pointe shoe emoji, writing that the lack of shade matching in the emoji – and in real life – was a “constant reminder of the subtle ways dancers of color have not been included.”

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Courtesy Cortney Taylor Key

Cortney Taylor Key, a Black ballerina and teacher at the Misty Copeland Foundation told CNN she studied ballet at the University of North Carolina School of the Arts and danced in pink tights.

“I hadn’t woken up yet,” Taylor Key said. “It wasn’t until I graduated that I even had ventured to New York and got to see the Dance Theatre of Harlem and I saw [flesh-toned tights] and understood.”

The Dance Theatre of Harlem, known as the first Black classical ballet company, first debuted flesh-toned tights in 1974 under the direction of the company’s founder, Arthur Mitchell.

“There’s no amount of money that would make me disrespect Arthur Mitchell” by wearing pink tights, Taylor Key said. “If it was up to me, I’d burn every pair of pink tights I could, because European pink is a tradition, and it can change.”

Taylor Key said she appreciates the new choices in shades for pointe shoes and dancewear that some companies have made available, but to get a better match to her own skin tone, she still pancakes her shoes.

“I learned pancaking from my DTH sisters at Harlem, where I’m from, and really for me it was a rite of passage, but I understand that it is also equally frustrating … to have to do it, it’s tedious,” she said.

The process can take several hours, and the cost of supplies adds up. Pointe shoes, which generally cost upwards of $100, only last for about 10 hours of dancing, Taylor Key said. The makeup makes the shoes die, or wear down, faster, she added.

Because of the cost of modifying the shoes, Taylor Key said she spent much of her early career dancing on “dead shoes,” hindering her performance.

However, she acknowledged, the field has made strides, even if the shades available are lacking in options.
Taylor Key said Copeland’s petition is “incredibly and extremely necessary.”

“It sucks that nobody came before her, but she’s definitely deserving and what she’s doing for the community right now … I couldn’t be more proud to be working for her organization,” she said.

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Wipipo don't season they ballet shoos.

Isn't the whole point to be able to see the outline against the backdrop/stage? I am always happy to see the stuck up elites get hit with the woke mind virus when it infiltrates their little world (probably not too many average lucky loos going to ballet performances).
 
“There’s no amount of money that would make me disrespect Arthur Mitchell” by wearing pink tights, Taylor Key said. “If it was up to me, I’d burn every pair of pink tights I could, because European pink is a tradition, and it can change.”
A little honesty buried halfway through this pile of word-vomit. Ultimately it's still not about anything resembling actual fairness, cultural exchange, or even making sheboons feel more comfortable being ballerinas. Just another case of soulless, sadistic deconstructionists filled with spite who wouldn't know beauty if you took them back in time to observe Michelangelo painting the Sistine Chapel, wanting to take yet another thing from mean ol' whitey and destroy it.
 
Y'all do realize that the article is about Misty Copeland's petition to Apple have different colored ballet shoe emojis, right? It's not about there not being other colors of ballet shoes. The first half of the article explains that some do exist now. The second just talks about pancaking as a method to get a skin tone match on standard ballet shoes. The rest is just filler on some aspects of ballet attire, not a complaint.

But why should they? White ballerinas don't wear shoes and tights which match their skin tone, they wear white. Black ballerinas can likewise wear white. Black brides in wedding photography at least (Bing image "black woman bride") wear white. Why can't ballerinas?
Traditional pointe shoes and tights were originally white (undyed), but became light pink specifically to more closely match dancers' skin tones. Ballet was European, recall. Standard shoes and tights - the uniform - are light pink, not white.

That's in the article.

The reason for flesh-colored was to see an unbroken body line, for a ballerina to look as lithe and graceful as possible. Tights and shoes that are body-colored adheres to that tradition.

I'd wonder if they were getting secondhand shoes but I believe these ones tend to have a short life at the best of time making it unlikely.
As mentioned in the article, pointe shoes do not last long. They break* and lose structure in as little as 10 hours - or even less - if you're a professional dancer. There is no secondhand market for used pointe shoes.
*also, in order to be usable to begin with, dancers have to abuse the shoes before dancing in them. I mean - hammer the shit out of them or pound them on a concrete curb level break. Then you dance on them for awhile until they get too broken

FYI to all: the reasons dancers pancake their shoes includes a few things:
  • multiple tones of shoes and all the stuff that goes with it (thread, elastics, etc. - dancers buy all separately then literally sew them together) are available but relatively rare, and in limited models. Serious dancers are very particular about shoes and there are many variations in details - from the width to the type of box at the toe, to stiffness, shank, vamp, etc. The fit is critical.
  • Given the potential specialization, buying off the shelf in non-standard tones is harder. So wat do?
  • you can't soak ballet shoes (the box is made of layers of fabric, cardboard, or cotton, that are glued together), so immersing in a dye could ruin the shoe and would also be chemically, time-intense, messy, and requiring time and space.
  • DIY "dyeing" is done with fabric paint, typically, which requires drying time and is more complicated swabbing on foundation
  • even if you could dye them, getting the perfect shade and an even color is a lot harder than using a bottle of makeup that matches your skin and is easy to touch up and correct as needed.
  • finding a shade of foundation that's just right is also a lot simpler (more available), easier, and cheaper than finding the same range in fabric paint. That said, there is at least one company that has created flesh-colored fabric paint. There are 7 tones. Each bottle of paint costs $15 and will color one pair of shoes. That's on top of the average $115-180/pair for toe shoes, plus any needed elastic, ribbon, thread, gel inserts, etc.
  • As mentioned, dancers sew on the ribbon/elastic, etc. If a piece breaks or comes apart/needs replacing, you now have another item to color and sew on again, so again pancaking is a lot faster than dyeing
  • A pro ballerina might go through a hundred - or 200 - pairs of pointe shoes in a season. Some will only last one performance. Coloring them and each piece of thread or fabric or elastic you put on them needs to be fast, cheap, easy, and able to be done sitting on the floor in a studio.
 
This is stupid because ballerinas don't dance with their bare legs, but wear pink tight that cover the color of the leg. Or should do so:

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If the costume requires them to have their legs in any other color, both the tights and shoes should match. It's really not complicated.

Funny how only one is allowed to wear different tight color because of course, it's all about their skin tone.

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I remember a couple Christmases ago, one of our fine kiwis had posted a video detailing a Black ballerina troupe that was "diversifying" ballet. As I'm watching these morons go on pointe then shaking their asses, all I could think was, Why do nogs ruin everything and claim it's better?
That'd be me, but was already posted above.

The "dance" is called "Hiplet". Hip Hop Ballet because these people are so original. They just can leave good enough alone, they need to "blackenize" everything they're part of otherwise they won't be involved.

Aren't pointe shoes and the ribbons satin? What's to stop them dying the shoes whatever color they want? Using makeup meant for skin seems dumb. Get some fabric dye.
Not only they can dye them, the process of using a shoe involves basically breaking it until it gets your foot's shape.

As I said about, this is about blacks needing to be the center of attention of everything.
 
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In a recent TikTok that received over 1 million likes, Misty Copeland, the first Black female principal dancer at the American Ballet Theatre, showed how she pancaked a pair of baby pink pointe shoes with a sponge and a bottle of drugstore foundation.

Despite her fame, Copeland explained that the lack of ballet shoes matching her skin tone has made her feel excluded.

Although some dancewear brands began selling ranges of shades of pointe shoes in 2020

ARE YOU FUCKING RETARDED?!?
 
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I'm sure all eight black Ballet dancers will be excited when shoe companies make shoes in their shade. Maybe the people bitching should stop bitching and start making shoe companies?
 
Yep, the 3rd one. Could it really have been 6 years ago? Holy shit.

That'd be me, but was already posted above.

The "dance" is called "Hiplet". Hip Hop Ballet because these people are so original. They just can leave good enough alone, they need to "blackenize" everything they're part of otherwise they won't be involved.
Ugh, yes, that's the one. How ridiculous.
 
I'm tangentially related to the world of dance and never heard anyone bitch about this. CNN is bored and fishing for clicks
It's as retarded as being thankful that bandages are the color of your skin. Actually, this is more retarded. Ballet is way more fucking expensive than bandages. Pointe shoes are probably as expensive as good running shoes, and probably wear out as easily.

You want to complain that your very expensive hobby doesn't 100% accommodate your lack of self-esteem? Fine, vote with your dollar and spend money elsewhere. It's not fucking difficult.
 
If it was up to me, I’d burn every pair of pink tights I could, because European pink is a tradition, and it can change.”
Aaaand there it is! Whypipo aren't allowed to have culture anymore, you've just gotta shoehorn the niggers into everything and everything possible in the name of "diversity". Funny how that only works one way though... I wonder how many Basketball-Americans would be fine with calls for more "inclusive" African tribal dress that was more accommodating to their body types, or calls to "burn every kente cloth" because African tradition can change? 🤔

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The reason for flesh-colored was to see an unbroken body line, for a ballerina to look as lithe and graceful as possible. Tights and shoes that are body-colored adheres to that tradition.
I've never seen a rose-pink skin colored ballerina, or outside of someone like Edgar Winter, someone that's almost completely white. It's almost as if costumes have a purpose, and not everything has to be "FlEsH cOlOrEd" for inclusion. Also, considering the average brillo-haired she-boon is pushing 300# and has about as much athletic ability as the Slaton sisters, how can they realistically aspire to the almost impossible body standards of a ballerina? Could they even make pointe shoes to hold up to the hambeasts like this???

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And the looks on the faces of the people watching this monstrosity is pure kino. :story:
 
They already come in dozens of colors. She's just looking for an excuse because black women's asses are too fat and their tits are to flabby to be good at ballet.
 
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I've never seen a rose-pink skin colored ballerina, or outside of someone like Edgar Winter, someone that's almost completely white. It's almost as if costumes have a purpose, and not everything has to be "FlEsH cOlOrEd" for inclusion.
Read again.

The default colors are what they are for exactly the flesh-colored reason. I don't know what to tell you beyond the actual historical truth of the matter. My comment laid it out exactly: they started out white then went to pink so as to align with ballerinas' skin more closely. That is literally why the default colors are what they are. That's a fact. Take it up with the history of ballet.

Also, considering the average brillo-haired she-boon is pushing 300# and has about as much athletic ability as the Slaton sisters, how can they realistically aspire to the almost impossible body standards of a ballerina? Could they even make pointe shoes to hold up to the hambeasts like this???
You dumb fuck.

1. Stupid and retarded.
2. There are no body standards for entry points for girls who take dance lessons/classes. Walk into any dance studio, and yes, it is mostly fair-skinned girls who are height-weight proportionate (depending on where you live). But even in the whitest, lithest locations, there's always a chubby girl, or a darker girl, or whatever. And oddly, skin tone doesn't seem to impact dance skills negatively. The shoes seem to fit human female feet generally.
3. One of the most famous, and appreciated, ballerinas in recent decades (for a variety of reasons, granted, but those include her ability) is a Black woman.

And I'd think even a thirsty racist can acknowledge the relative concentration of athleticism in Black women.

Ps - Edgar Winter's skin tone is very pink/red. It's darker than his hair, for sure, and even that isn't white-white.
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They already come in dozens of colors. She's just looking for an excuse because black women's asses are too fat and their tits are to flabby to be good at ballet.
Read the fucking article. It isn't saying there are no shades of shoes.

And btw, any individual manufacturer provides 3, maybe 4, tones (I looked at Bloch, one of the largest producers of shoes; they appear to have 3 tones in pointe shoes. Same for Capezio. Grishko shows only pale pink. Gaynor Minden shows 5, one of which is white-white, so 4 flesh-colored.). Not dozens. But no one was carping about it.
 
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