QUOTE (Estelle @ Mar 27 2006, 03:18 AM)

I'll have to look up "hokey conceit" in a dictionary, but I wonder whether those images of Monique Loudières walking on the roof of the Opéra Garnier are a reference to a TV miniseries "L'âge heureux" (The happy age), written by the actress Odette Joyeux (who had studied at the POB school as a child), which took place in the POB school. I've never seen it but it was very successful in the 1960s (several dancers mentioned it as their initial motivation to take dance classes), and from what I've read some parts took place on the roof of the Opera (which was of course a forbidden place for the "petits rats" of the POB school, and so even more attractive...)
That certainly explains the references: the opening is a great slow shot of the ornamentation on the roof, which turns into Loudières slowly walking up the rake of the roof, and then walking along a ledge.
I'm not sure a dictionary will be completely helpful on "hokey conceit" without the right context, and I may just be more confusing in an attempt to explain it, but I'll give it a try: "hokey" is similar in meaning to "corny" (or "cornball"), but I'm not sure that's any clearer. The closest I can describe it is being a combination of something that is out-dated and sentimental, but is done seriously. "Conceit" in this sense is "theatrical conceit," which is a technique used in the theater where a non-naturalistic element is used as a recurring theme that "frames" the drama, but the audience accepts it, even though it's completely different from the core of the play that is supposed to be accepted realistically. A common one is an angel or dead person who narrates (or in the movie
Truly, Madly, Deeply, watches TV and eats crisps). In
Autour the slow-motion that Delouche uses at the end to make the dancers more unworldly would be a film version of a theatrical conceit.
QUOTE
What does "Autour de la Sylphide" look like ? And how long is it ? I've only seen photos of this (one of the first dance-related books that caught my attention was a book about Michael Denard, and it included some photos of it).
It is about 8.5 minutes long, not including closing credits. It opens with a portrait of the dancer who might have been the original, with the opening credits, and a metronome in the background. A man's voice is heard giving barre instructions. The camera then shows Lacotte giving a barre exercise in a studio to Thesmar, Denard, and Stephant for about two minutes. From the barre the dancers go immediately into a studio rehearsal, with piano accompaniment. Thesmar is wearing a leotard and Sylph skirt, Denard blue leotard, sweater, and tights, and Stephant a leotard with short skirt.
Thesmar and Denard dance, with the cameras at normal level, and there are occasional cuts from a ceiling camera to Lacotte coaching and partnering Stephant. There are several closeups of the three dancers, including one particularly beautiful one of the Sylphide coming between the couple. This changes to the overhead camera filming the three, with a whispered voice-over -- alas I don't speak French, and there are no English subtitles -- a few whisps of fog rising, and to a string quartet playing Beetheoven's op 130 string quartet (according to the closing credits.) The camera switches to back to ground level but with the same dark lighting, and the pas de trois is filmed in slow motion.
The film ends with a scene in which Denard is shown from chest up walking and reaching forward, which switches to the Sylphide walking and gesturing backwards, until finally Denard's arm is shown reaching towards her as her image fades into the background, leaving only his arm reaching as the music ends.