• Contributors
    • Catherine L. Tully, Owner/Editor
    • Dance Writers
      • Rachel Hellwig, Assistant Editor — Dance
      • Jessika Anspach McEliece, Contributor — Dance
      • Janice Barringer, Contributor – Dance
      • José Pablo Castro Cuevas, Contributor — Dance
      • Katie C. Sopoci Drake, Contributor – Dance
      • Ashley Ellis, Contributor — Dance
      • Samantha Hope Galler, Contributor – Dance
      • Cara Marie Gary, Contributor – Dance
      • Luis Eduardo Gonzalez, Contributor — Dance
      • Karen Musey, Contributor – Dance
      • Janet Rothwell (Neidhardt), Contributor — Dance
      • Matt de la Peña, Contributor – Dance
      • Lucy Vurusic Riner, Contributor – Dance
      • Alessa Rogers, Contributor — Dance
      • Emma Love Suddarth, Contributor — Dance
      • Andrea Thompson, Contributor – Dance
      • Sally Turkel, Contributor — Dance
      • Lauren Warnecke, Contributor – Dance
      • Sharon Wehner, Contributor – Dance
      • Ashley Werhun, Contributor — Dance
      • Dr. Frank Sinkoe, Contributor – Podiatry
      • Jessica Wilson, Assistant Editor – Dance
    • Dance Wellness Panel
      • Jan Dunn, MS, Editor
      • Gigi Berardi, PhD
      • James Garrick, MD
      • Robin Kish, MS, MFA
      • Moira McCormack, MS
      • Janice G. Plastino, PhD
      • Emma Redding, PhD
      • Erin Sanchez, MS
      • Selina Shah, MD, FACP
      • Nancy Wozny
      • Matthew Wyon, PhD
    • Music & Dance Writers
      • Scott Speck, Contributor – Music
    • Interns
      • Intern Wanted For 4dancers
    • Contact
  • About
    • About 4dancers
    • Advertise With 4dancers
    • Product Reviews on 4dancers
    • Disclosure
  • Contact

4dancers.org

A website for dancers, dance teachers and others interested in dance

Follow Us on Social!

Visit Us On YoutubeVisit Us On TwitterVisit Us On PinterestVisit Us On FacebookVisit Us On Instagram
  • 4dancers
    • Adult Ballet
    • Career
    • Auditions
    • Competition
    • Summer Intensives
    • Pointe Shoes & Footwear
      • Breaking In Shoes
      • Freed
      • Pointe Shoe Products
      • Vegan Ballet Slippers
      • Other Footwear
  • 4teachers
    • Teaching Tips
    • Dance History
    • Dance In The US
    • Studios
  • Choreography
  • Dance Wellness
    • Conditioning And Training
    • Foot Care
    • Injuries
    • Nutrition
      • Recipes/Snacks
  • Dance Resources
    • Dance Conferences
    • Dance Products
      • Books & Magazines
      • DVDs
      • Dance Clothing & Shoes
      • Dance Gifts
      • Flamenco & Spanish Dance
      • Product Reviews
    • Social Media
  • Editorial
    • Interviews
      • 10 Questions With…
      • Dance Blog Spotlight
      • Post Curtain Chat
      • Student Spotlight
    • Dance in the UK
    • Finding Balance
    • Musings
    • One Dancer’s Journey
    • Pas de Trois
    • SYTYCD
    • The Business Of Dance
    • Finis
  • Music & Dance
    • CD/Music Reviews

Review – Dance Class 5: To Russia, With Love

September 26, 2013 by 4dancers

by Emily Kate Long

dance cartoonIn the fifth graphic story in the Papercutz “Dance Class” series, we follow dance friends Alia, Lucie, and Julie to St Petersburg, where they and the rest of Miss Anne’s students perform The Nutcracker with a group of Russian dancers. This book is as colorful, funny, and sweet as the first four “Dance Class” graphic novels.

While the Russia trip is the focus of the story, there’s plenty of humor at home before the girls leave. The dance dads have their day in Dance Class 5: Lucie’s dad performs a brilliant sissone ouverte while trying to save a batch of crepes, and Julie’s dad snores his way through a family trip to the ballet, to Mom’s great embarrassment.

Abroad, flirtatious Alia becomes frustrated with the Russian boys’ insensitivity…or is it just the language barrier?  “To Russia, With Love” closes with some casting surprises for Miss Anne before the curtain goes down and the students head home again.

Filed Under: Books & Magazines Tagged With: dance class, dance comic, papercutz

Behind The Scenes With DANCE CLASS

April 24, 2013 by 4dancers

DANCE CLASS offers some fun reading material for young adults, and today we are happy to feature a behind-the-scenes look at this unique series of graphic novels by Papercutz…

dance comic

What inspired you to write this series on dance?

Dance is an ideal subject for writing as it’s a whole world of passions and emotions, but also a hard and difficult universe. Extreme joy and pain are often mixed in dance rooms, and later, in competitions. It’s also a magnificent art form, where movement is at the heart of everything. All these elements make an ideal subject for a comic book, as much for an artist as for a scriptwriter.

How do you come up with the ideas for each issue? 

There are a thousand ways to come up with an idea for DANCE CLASS because dance has as many emotions and surprises as life does in general. Some ideas come to us from reading, from a ballet, or from conversations with dancers. Other ideas come from the characters; they’re teenagers, each with their own little family and school world, their good and bad qualities, and this all gives us some very funny situations. Very often the ballets themselves tell a story, so we can transform those stories a little and find humorous situations that bring our characters to life.

What is the process of writing the issues like? 

Once we’ve gotten an idea we look for how to tell it in the most efficient, original, and humorous way possible. That is to say, the way that’ll let us show the most beautiful routines, to foreground the personalities of each character, and to write the most interesting dialogue. The dynamism of the page is very important in comics.

Once we’ve found the right way to convey the idea, we lay it out panel by panel and work on this cut-out until we have a version that seems the best to us. We then send it to Crip, the series illustrator, who starts drawing it out.

Sometimes ideas remain in the draft stage for several weeks because there’s an element missing. And then one day, everything falls into place, we find what we were missing, and we finish the script.

What part of the process is the most fun? 

It’s magical when the elements we’ve noted in the draft come together and the story appears. It’s very exciting because we know at that moment that the idea can become a page of comics. Then we’re very impatient to start writing dialogue, to find small, amusing details we can add.

Another moment that we love is when we receive the artwork from Crip and then the color version from Maela, our colorist. At that point we become readers again, impatient to turn the page and find out what happens next!

What is coming up next in this series?

Julie, Lucie, and Alia are going to go to Russia for an exchange with the dance school of the famous Mariinsky Theater. Then, in another story, Lucie’s going to realize her dream: to write a ballet for her friends. Our three heroines will next go to London, to participate in a Christmas musical performed only by teenagers. These stories have already appeared in France, but not in the USA yet.

At the moment, we’ve just finished writing a story where they revisit the ballet Snow White in a modern staging. We have lots of other ideas in store for the series, notably a story where the girls are introduced to New York City, but that hasn’t been written yet.

Disclosure: 4dancers receives compensation from Papercutz

Filed Under: Books & Magazines Tagged With: Ballet, dance cartoons, dance novels, papercutz

Review: “Dance Class” Novels

September 25, 2012 by Ashley David

by Emily Kate Long

“Dance Class” Graphic Novels by Beka and Crip (Papercutz)

#1 “So You Think You Can Hip-Hop?”

#2 “Romeo and Juliets”

These two graphic novels are a charming romp into the world of middle-school-aged dance friends Julie, Alia, and Lucie. Some of the content is geared towards that age group, but the stories are easy enough reads to appeal to a younger audience, too.

Each book is a set of 46 page-long episodes. Dance “inside jokes” abound, from the girls using their horoscopes as an excuse to visit the local bakery, to failing a math quiz by forgetting what comes after number 8. Romance and rivalry are present too, as in the life of any preteen.

I found some of the scenarios in the “Dance Class” series far too silly to be realistic, but the girls’ sincere love of dance is at the heart of it all. Every scene ends with a note of humor, even when things go absurdly wrong—Murphy’s Law seems to govern everything that goes on in the world of “Dance Class!” If anything, these two stories set a positive tone for discussion about obstacles dance students face. The lively artwork is a visual treat.

Filed Under: Books & Magazines, Reviews Tagged With: dance books, dance class graphic novels, papercutz

Dance Artwork

Get Your Dance Career Info Here!

Dance ebook cover

Podcast

Disclosure – Affiliate & Ad Info

This site sometimes features advertising, affiliate marketing, or affiliate links, such as Amazon Associate links and others. When you click on these links, we get a small sum that helps to support the website operations. Thank you! There’s more detailed information on ads and our disclosure policy under the About tab in our navigation at the top of the site. We clearly mark any and all posts that contain these features.

Copyright Notice

Please note that all of the content on 4dancers.org is copyrighted. Do not copy, utilize, or distribute without express permission. We take cases of infringement seriously. All rights reserved ©2022.

Copyright © 2025 · Metro Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in