Top 106 Quotes & Sayings by Sylvie Guillem

Explore popular quotes and sayings by a French dancer Sylvie Guillem.
Last updated on November 25, 2024.
Sylvie Guillem

Sylvie Guillem is a French ballet dancer. Guillem was the top-ranking female dancer with the Paris Opera Ballet from 1984 to 1989, before becoming a principal guest artist with the Royal Ballet in London. She has performed contemporary dance as an Associate Artist of London's Sadler's Wells Theatre. Her most notable performances have included those in Giselle and in Rudolf Nureyev's stagings of Swan Lake and Don Quixote. In November 2014, she announced her retirement from the stage in 2015.

If I am out in the street or buying bread or taking a taxi, no one knows who I am.
The problems I had with the Paris Opera Ballet are a thing of the past.
One has to learn to say, 'Wait, there is a pain that is not logical. I will do a scan, and if there is something serious, I will stop immediately.' If the body sends a message, you have to listen to it.
I can't have friends in every port. I have to work very hard and be very clear about what I want to do. I cannot just swallow everything I am told. I have to decide what I want to become part of my luggage - and what I don't.
I think it's going to be the most difficult thing to do, to leave the stage. But if you have no lucidity about it, it's even worse because you don't see the negative side of you still being onstage.
Walking in the mountains helps me unwind, but it also reminds me in a painful way that the real beauty in life is nature and animals, and that the human race, in all its arrogance, is intent on destroying it.
Some choreographers have been cautious about working with me. — © Sylvie Guillem
Some choreographers have been cautious about working with me.
People thought I had no feelings, that I was hard. But really, I was extremely sensitive to everything.
I had never a thought of training to be a ballerina. I was a normal child. I never dreamed of the tutu.
I don't think you can ever leave the stage easily.
It is strange: I love to be in front of the audience, but I have this opposite side that is afraid of meeting people, that doesn't want to talk. I feel it's like having a little hard stone inside me of problems, doubts, and shyness.
When you start, you have no brain; you are a kid. It's fine. But then I started to be scared. I was scared of judgment - not as a dancer, but as a person - and I was really uncomfortable with people. And it lasted for a very long time.
When you do one more 'Cinderella' or whatever, what is there to learn? Every part in the repertoire has a good side and a bad side, and the more often you do the same ballet, the more often the bad side comes out. If you want to give dance life, you must give it fresh food, not keep going back to the garbage to look for old scraps.
'Romeo and Juliet,' 'Manon,' 'Giselle' - they are not stupid stories. They have fantastic characters. They have a big package of emotion.
Things that make me angry and sad, I cannot hide. It's not because I want to be a rebel; it's my instinct. When something touches me deeply, I really have to react.
There's a picture of me as a little girl, and I'm waiting to go onstage, and I am biting the last bit of nail I have left on my finger.
If we keep on destroying fish, there won't be any left. If the oceans die, we all die. It's as simple as that. — © Sylvie Guillem
If we keep on destroying fish, there won't be any left. If the oceans die, we all die. It's as simple as that.
Working with a new style of choreography is always a period of adaptation.
As a professional ballet dancer, I have to accept that weekends are about work. The notion of a leisurely break with all the buzz and excitement of a Friday night simply doesn't exist for me.
While I enjoy it, I will continue to go onstage. While I contribute something, fine. I don't want to be dragging my feet. I don't want to become pathetic, but I think I will be lucid enough. I'll know when to stop.
I was afraid when I came to the Royal Ballet that it would be easy to have everyone walking all over me if I didn't stick up for myself.
Dancers are not like movie actresses. People look at our bodies, not our faces. They only recognise me when I sign my name on something and they say, 'Ah yes, Sylvie.'
I do not want an animal to die for me.
I am a bit of a boss, even when it's about the composting. This goes here! This goes there! Don't do that! Maybe for the sake of others, I should let go a bit.
I like creation even if the process is always a bit difficult.
When I was doing gymnastics, I was playing. It was fun. The ballet was not fun at all. Yes, I agree you must have discipline, but you don't need to be a witch. You can't teach a child like that. Three times a week, I went back to train as a gymnast. Then I was happy.
I am only interested in being famous for my dancing. For me, the concept of the sacred monster is only about the stage - it is not about image.
I had no sense of having reached some goal because I was an etoile at the Paris Opera. My ambition, if you can call it that, was to discover and learn and be excited by what I was doing. If I didn't have that, I would find it elsewhere.
I am not nice. That has gotten me into a lot of trouble.
As much as I love my work, I do appreciate my rare days off. Even then, I can't afford to let the dancing go. I need at least an hour just to keep in shape, so wherever I am in the world, I'll grab the door or the furniture and do some serious exercise.
Between what I know I can do and want to achieve and what the audience expects, it's a lot of pressure, and it's always adding up.
I have learned a great deal from the theatrical side of Covent Garden. The Paris Opera Ballet is more concerned with technique. It's perfect. It's beautiful. It's well done. But it lacks the theatrical tradition that is so important in England. At the Royal Ballet, absolutely everyone on stage seems to be caught up in the plot.
It's true I have a side of me that isn't very adult. I can get very emotional about things. I can become crazy, act the clown.
There is a false idea that I am stubborn and do only what I want, but really, I am like a sponge.
There are some ballets you can do for a long time. With others, you have to know when to stop. Some are very destructive. Forsythe's choreography pushes dancers to the extreme. That's why it's best to vary. That way, you break your body a little bit in different places, but not a lot in one place.
Ballet is hard enough when you go with it; when you have to force your body to do things, it is so much harder.
I'm not the kind of person who is on television and in magazines every five minutes selling clothes or washing machines.
It would be nice to wake up and be able to walk to the bathroom. But even when I was 20 and at the Paris Opera, I had to crawl down the stairs; it is only when I start to work and stretch that my body begins to recover again.
To be free on stage, you need to have been disciplined.
The best times are when the time on stage becomes much slower and the movement much bigger - in that case, everything seems to flow. This state does not happen very often, but when it does, it is a magic kind of pleasure.
I just don't like authority. I do like authority when I respect it.
My mother really pushed me when I was young. I didn't want to go to dance classes, but for some reason, when I was there, I didn't want to come back. — © Sylvie Guillem
My mother really pushed me when I was young. I didn't want to go to dance classes, but for some reason, when I was there, I didn't want to come back.
Terrorism is not a small problem.
I've learned to listen to what's going on with my body.
I love nature like nothing else. Before I moved to Switzerland, my home was a flat in London with a garden. In those snatched moments away from dance, I did typical weekend things like pruning, planting, and weeding. I planted fruit trees and even had a vegetable garden, but I wasn't around enough, so it was a disaster.
My reputation precedes me all the time, but I'm not the monster people think I am.
It is in my nature to be a little shy. It takes time for me to talk to people and trust them.
When a real artist creates something, it has to be a necessity, the only way he can say something.
I cannot stand unfairness.
I judge myself severely.
If an idea comes and I am attracted to it, I will do it.
As a child, I was afraid of everything. My parents were shy, the kind of people for whom it is an ordeal to go and buy some bread or whatever. — © Sylvie Guillem
As a child, I was afraid of everything. My parents were shy, the kind of people for whom it is an ordeal to go and buy some bread or whatever.
A performance is like a boat. You really want it to arrive at port. So when something goes wrong and it doesn't get there, that touches me a lot.
At the Paris Opera Ballet, they were always making choices for me.
I like creation even if it is a bit difficult. It is always very exciting.
No one person can change the world, but one and one and one add up.
Most producers who want you to dance are not looking at the long term. They see their evenings, the box office, whom they have to repay, whatever.
Dance should touch people.
The Palais Garnier was part of my childhood, my pseudo-adolescence, my life.
I am very interested in nature.
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