optimisticalities: (( le corsaire ))
2027-08-23 05:31 am
Entry tags:

info.

full name Claude Laurent Bérubé
profession Ballet dancer
age 27
d o b Feb 13
zodiac Aquarius
pronouns He/him
hometown Marseille, France
Residence Luxembourg City, Luxembourg
Claude Bérubé
Claude Bérubé is a French ballet dancer, formerly a prominent sujet at the Paris Opera Ballet, now principal dancer with the BG Ballet in Luxembourg. Bérubé took up ballet at the age of 8, after several years of dancing ballroom and was accepted into the prestigous Paris Opera Ballet School at his first try-out three years later. Throughout his late school years, he became a national household name as one of the subjects of the documentary, "Little Rats" following the life of two POB school students, a boy and a girl.

After being accepted into the company as an apprentice at age 17, he quickly rose in rank, receiving a corps contract only a year and a half later. Between the ages of 19 and 22, he moved through first a quadrille and then a coryphée promotion swiftly, until finally being named a sujet at the age of 24. In this capacity, he started dancing leading roles in both modern and classic works.

His repertory with the Paris Opera Ballet includes roles such as Armand in John Neumeier's La Dame aux Camélias, Basilio in Rudolph Nureyev's Don Quixote and Rothbart in Swan Lake by the same choreographer. He has also danced several works in the contemporary auspices including lead roles in Harald Lander's Études, Neumeier's Le Chant de la Terre and several Jiri Kylian choreographies.

After a prolonged period of stagnation at the Paris Opera Ballet and a fall-out with a ballet critic at Le Journal du Dimanche, Bérubé accepted an invitation to join the relatively newly founded BG Ballet in Luxembourg as a principal in 2010, headed by former Hamburg Ballet soloist, Benjamin Girard. His debut performance with the company was as Armand in La Dame aux Camélias in the late spring of 2011, a performance which received raving reviews.

BG Ballet's repertory is mainly neo-classical and contemporary, though Girard is slowly beginning to add some classical elements. Some of Bérubé's main appearances with them have been as Theseus/Oberon in Neumeier's A Midsummer Night's Dream and as the Prince in his The Little Mermaid, the male lead in Jiri Kylian's Kaguyahime, Gennaro in Nikolaj Hübbe's Napoli, Onegin in John Cranko's Onegin and several leads in smaller Balanchine works. Roles created on him include Don José in Benjamin Girard's Carmen Cast Away.
personality
+
friendly, good-natured, open-minded, confident
=
idealistic, argumentative, hardworking, dedicated
🔥
stubborn, opinionated, bitter, proud
appearance
A medium-height man with dark, curly hair and a smile on his face. Brown eyes. Mediterranean complexion. Long-limbed and athletic. Big feet that look nasty in the nude. Generally goes for a casual, relaxed wardrobe, when he isn't in dance gear or costume.
height 6'0"
build Athletic
eyes Brown
hair Dark brown, curly
abilities
dancingBoth a prolific ballroom and ballet dancer, Claude has motor skills that can beat most people's. He loves moving to music and interpreting melodies with his body. He also likes the raw show of strength that dancing is and possesses a fair amount of it.
choreography Although he hasn't taken it up yet at his current default point in the timeline, Claude will eventually begin choreographing his own pieces and become relatively well-known as a modern choreographer, think Neumeier-inspired. His choreographies tend to be male-focused and have LGBT themes.
piano As part of his ballet schooling, Claude also took up an instrument and picked the piano. He's no maestro and he would never claim that he is, but he enjoys playing simple things on the old upright he has at home in his apartment. Plus, playing the piano has made him a more lyrical dancer.
background
(CW: abusive relationships and physical domestic abuse)

Claude has never been good at being alone. He was born as the youngest child out of three, growing up with his two older sisters (Céline and Catherine) doting on him as the baby of the family. After his Canadian father left the family for his new wife and moved back to Canada, Claude furthermore developed a close bond with his mother, being seen as the man of the family now. She nurtured his interest in dance, mainly because it curbed his hyper-activity and made him calmer and more sufferable to be around. Until he was eight, he danced only ballroom, but a scout from the local ballet school saw him at a tournament and asked him and his mother whether he'd be interested in trying out ballet. Not knowing what exactly she said yes to, Claude's mother agreed 'as long as Claude is happy'. Claude took to ballet as a fish takes to water and showed great promise, something his teacher was very aware of and when he turned ten, she referred him to the Paris Opera Ballet School's yearly try-outs, telling Claude's mother that he could no doubt get in on a full scholarship. And he did. However, suddenly the choice was between not letting the boy pursue his dreams or allowing him to travel to Paris, to live in dormitories alone without her. Heart-broken at once more having lost the man in the family, Claude's mother agreed. Claude left for another life.

Between the age of 10 and 18, he lived alone in Paris in the dormitories belonging to the Paris Opera Ballet School with other children from all over France, and received rigorous ballet training, having to pass tests and exams every school year to advance. He aced through every test and was seen as one of the next big stars of the ballet. Claude just loved dancing.

Once he'd passed his final exam, Claude became an apprentice with the main company and after a year in that position was hired into the main corps of the ballet. He quickly caught the eye of many ballet fans and was propelled into named roles relatively quickly, his big break coming when he was made understudy for the principal who danced Armand, the male lead, in Neumeier's The Lady of the Camellias. He rehearsed the role, but of course didn't expect to get to dance it on stage, when suddenly the principal got injured and had to pull out of the rest of the run suddenly. Claude was given two days notice to prepare and then, danced the whole ballet for a full audience. To raging applause and shouts of bravo.

Not only did this bring him in the spotlight with the administration of the ballet, but the prominent ballet critic, Rainier, also took a shine to him and when they met a couple of months later at a benefit, Rainier immediately set out to seduce him. Only 23 years old, Claude was still naive enough in love not to question his motives and although the man twice his age showed signs of problematic behavious early on, he made up excuses to stay in a relationship where he was doted on and praised in every possible way. However, after some months, Rainier began acting very jealous around every man he perceived a threat and Claude began feeling increasingly uncomfortable with him, but shrugged it off until, one day, it escalated and Rainier was threatening and violent towards him. Then, Claude backed off and broke up with him, but the other man started a smear campaign towards him, giving all his performances bad reviews and letting it reflect on his opinions on the dancers who danced in Claude's casts. The Paris Opera Ballet began showing reluctance in casting him in prominent roles and after a couple of years, Claude had to realize his career had hit the wall.

Needing to get away from Rainier, Claude started looking for work elsewhere but it wasn't until the artistic director of the BG Ballet in Luxembourg reached out and invited him to become principal dancer with them that he was finally ready to give up his dream of dancing in Paris. He accepted and was ready to move out a couple of months later, when the season ended. Over summer, he prepared to start with BG Ballet and rehearsed much of their repertory, including The Lady of the Camellias which became his return to the stage. Although it wasn't what he'd envisioned for himself, Claude is happy in Luxembourg and happy with his new company where he's currently making a new start and a new name for himself.
player S.
pb Robert Sheehan
contact PM; [plurk.com profile] thewriteway
timezone CET/CEST
optimisticalities: (( swan lake ))
2025-01-09 07:59 am
Entry tags:

permissions.






ic preferences.
contact: PM to this journal. Can also be found on plurk (thewriteway).
thread-jacking: Be my guest!
fourth-walling: I'd rather not.
backtagging: My RP life depends on it.
avoided topics: N/A.


ic characteristics.
physical description: Claude isn't very tall, 184 cm, and stoutly built. His most notable features are his brown curls and his wide, friendly smile. All in all, he's a very attractive man, his features are symmetric almost to a fault and he keeps his body in shape due to his ballet training. His feet are ugly as hell, though.
demeanour: Keywords: Friendly, warm, humorous. Also keywords: Argumentative, obstinate, idealistic.
abilities: Ballet, mainly, but he's not a lost cause when it comes to academics either, he just never pursued that trail.
offensive subjects: His first serious boyfriend, Rainier, was abusive, both physically and emotionally. If this is a trigger for you, let me know and I'll make sure to not have him bring it up.


ic permissions.
mental: Ask first.
violence: Ask first.
debate: Always!
physical affection: Go ahead.
shipping: M/M only.



optimisticalities: (( paquita ))
2025-01-08 10:40 am
Entry tags:

repertory.








With Paris Opera Ballet -
Lady of the Camellias, Armand Duval
Orpheus, Orpheus
Don Quixote, Basilio
Swan Lake, Rothbart
Études, Male Soloist


With BG Ballet -
Lady of the Camellias, Armand Duval
A Midsummer Night's Dream, Theseus/Oberon
The Nutcracker, Cavalier
Swan Lake, Prince Siegfried
Napoli, Gennaro
Onegin, Onegin
Carmen Cast Away, Don José

Leads in Les Bourgeois, Theme and Variations, Tchaikovsky Pas de Deux, Other Dances, In the Night, Afternoon of a Faun, The Moor's Pavane and Six Dances, among others.



optimisticalities: (( études ))
2022-08-23 05:22 am
Entry tags:

open.






OPEN


somehow, i've got lost / i have no idea where i'm going / standing with my little suitcase / here at the champs-élysées / suddenly you speak to me / hi, what are you looking for / i say, pardon me, i'm sorry / unfortunately i don't understand


How to play -

1. Leave a starter; texting, pic prompt, quote prompt, dialogue, etc.
2. PM me and have me write a starter for you of my own choice.


optimisticalities: (( swan lake ))
2022-08-23 04:47 am
Entry tags:

visuals.

ALT TEXT
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tell me what you prefer / if you could make a choice / would you rather be / the prey of a pervert / or never be in love
optimisticalities: (( études ))
2021-06-07 03:12 am
Entry tags:

music.






petit à petit, arcadian ( x )
if i could tell a secret / to the kid of the time that i was / who wanted everything in a hurry / but without ever loving himself rather, oh / little one, you'll see if you believe in yourself, little by little / little one, you will love, you will grow

la vie est belle, nassi ( x )
my banker thinks i might need somebody to help me / whereas my therapist says i actually need somebody to love me / the passing time always leads us to face ourselves / if it's not me, who'll resolve my problems

balance ton quoi, angèle ( x )
one day maybe things will change / there's no respect now in the streets / boy, you know when you're out of line / denounce your what / denounce your what / let me sing to you / go fuck yourself

ton visage, fréro delavega ( x )
i want walks on the beach / oh, a little humanity / less concrete, more truce / a life of quality / less concrete, more dreams / in my reality

pourquoi on s'aime, lola dubini ( x )
oh, oh, oh / i don't know what foot to dance on / oh, oh, oh / but i tried too hard without winning / everyone knows its name / we get drunk with its tunes / sometimes yes, sometimes no / always to know why we love each other

acrobates, l.e.j ( x )
tell me what you prefer / if you could make a choice / would you rather be / the prey of a pervert / or never be in love

allez reste, boulevard des airs ft. vianney ( x )
you, the smile of my childhood / you, the scent of my school / you, my beforehand lost love / i'm afraid that you go away / so stay, so stay again a little bit more / you and i will get old / so stay, so stay again a little bit more / you and i doing our best

ainsi valse la vie, black m ( x )
i ain't screaming but i'm explaining / you would rather listen to me / one day you can perform at the zenith / then on the sidewalk the day after / that's the way the ball bounces

qué vendrá, zaz ( x )
in everything i do / rage and love embrace each other / be it mine or be it yours / life goes beyond us / what will come, what will come / i write my path / without thinking, without thinking / where it's going to end

je ne parle pas francais, namika ft. black m ( x )
somehow, i've got lost / i have no idea where i'm going / standing with my little suitcase / here at the champs-élysées / suddenly you speak to me / hi, what are you looking for / i say, pardon me, i'm sorry / unfortunately i don't understand



optimisticalities: (( carmen ))
2018-06-24 07:34 am
Entry tags:

reviews.






The Cultural Coupe, November 20--.
Blog by Rainier Coupe, senior correspondent.
The New Lover
The Lady of the Camellias by John Neumeier, Paris Opera Ballet
“Quite extraordinarily, I’m reporting on a mid-run performance, but equally extraordinarily indeed the story’s very heart was Friday performed by Valère Eustis’ substitute when Monsieur Eustis himself succumbed to injury in company class the week before. Claude Bérubé, a sujet who has previously danced leading roles in various contemporary pieces as well as a promising, if still unpolished Basilio in Don Quixote, took on the massive challenge of a last-minute Armand Duval with a technique that fully matched his explosive dramatic talent. In Bérubé’s still youthful shape we saw Armand believably portrayed as a sensitive boy lost in a storm of emotions, emotions that eventually led to his tragic loss, along with the lonely demise of his beloved. […]

Although Bérubé made a fine partner for seasoned veteran Josephine Segal’s Marguerite, it was on his own that he truly shone. So rarely the case, the tragedy that night unfolded less in the wuthering nature of their relationship, less in Marguerite’s decline and death than in the rawness of Bérubé’s solo at the end of act one which remained the absolute highlight of the evening. Here Armand’s character was painted sharply and unapologetically, the seeds of his later bitterness and despair sowed in breath-taking leaps unlike any the Palais Garnier has seen in a long, long time. By no means is Bérubé a tall danseur, but the broadness of his chest didn’t weigh him down in the slightest, adding rather to the fullness of his accomplishment. I predict that this is not the last we’ve seen of this great talent and if it is, one can only say: Shame!


Le Journal du Dimanche, May 20--.
Culture in Paris by Rainier Coupe, senior correspondent.
Dreaming Big
Orpheus by Gage Wray, Paris Opera Ballet
”[…] What saves Wray’s first full-length work from slipping into fragmentation is undoubtedly Claude Bérubé in the title role, a role envisioned and obviously created on his person. Orpheus, in Bérubé’s form, is not the lean mythological figure to which Balanchine introduced the western ballet tradition at the beginning of the last century through Apollo, but instead a softer and more dreamy character fully embodied in his heavier frame. Like the inspired singer as an archetype, Bérubé is a natural centre of attention and commands the stage not by force, but by beauty and a soft grace. […]

Particularly striking was the final scene when Orpheus turns around before Eurydice has entered the upper world, watching immobilised while Gaudin’s Eurydice bourrées backwards down the Kingdom of the Shades-inspired slopes, into the darkness enveloping the main stage. To the delicate melody of a single harp, Bérubé follows, a white light growing around him once he strikes his first pose off the ramp, an unwavering arabesque, hand gripping thin air desperately in the direction Gaudin has vanished. The final solo follows the simplistic scheme of Wray’s easily identifiable choreography, but carries greater impact as Bérubé’s very body is often the source of the rhythm, the thuds of his landings and his laboured breathing at times drowning out the harp and becoming his sole instrumental accompaniment.”


Le Journal du Dimanche, October 20--.
Culture in Paris by Rainier Coupe, senior correspondent.
Saved by the Masses
Swan Lake by Rudolph Nureyev, Paris Opera Ballet
”Nureyev’s Swan Lake is a staple in the POB’s repertory and, when danced authentically, the best example of a contemporary revision of the classics in the ballet world today. Unfortunately, the ballet’s essence wasn’t released as one might have hoped on opening night when the first cast took the stage in a row of debuts. […]

Whereas Gaudin’s Odile might grow out of her nerves and Eustis’ Siegfried regain stamina as the dancer behind eventually recovers fully from his injury earlier in the year, one can only hope that Bérubé won’t be so utterly miscast again as was the case last night in the role of Rothbart. This part, in Nureyev’s interpretation, is a true danseur noble endeavour that requires subtlety above all. In the pivotal pas de deux between Siegfried and Rothbart, before Siegfriend is sent out to hunt, Nureyev’s own homosexuality must lie latent enough in the choreographic execution not to offend, yet potent enough to create a cohesive, dramatic story. Bérubé, instead, aimed for a tasteless, predatory approach, perhaps a demonstration of his lacking maturity, every touch lingering a moment too long and his lined eyes always unreadable, rather than mysterious. […]”


Le Journal du Dimanche, March 20--.
Culture in Paris by Rainier Coupe, senior correspondent.
Paying for Classes
Études by Harald Lander, Paris Opera Ballet
”[…] Seeing how Bérubé’s first major part on the Palais Garnier stage was as one of the male soloists in Études and considering especially how remarkable a debut it had been, it was a disappointing performance he presented the audience with Saturday. Although his small stature and strong legs make him an ideal turner, his speed and precision came at the cost of a constantly constipated look that ruined the effortless feel of this tremendously impressive piece of choreography which suits the POB so well. […] It is a sad thing to witness the rapid decline of such a promising dancer who could otherwise easily have been the next great danseur of the French tradition, but who seems now to be stumbling in the face of the challenge rather than climbing towards its peak.”


Le Journal du Dimanche, May 20--.
Culture in Paris by Rainier Coupe, senior correspondent.
The Belle of the Ball
The Sleeping Beauty by Rudolph Nureyev, Paris Opera Ballet
”[…] As the Bluebird, Claude Bérubé lacked the all-important lightness and fluidity for the role. He doesn’t possess the tall, long-limbed build that would make the choreography’s flight-like nature believable and his landings were too heavy, distinctly audible even above the music. Unfortunately, the unforgiving costume and the powdered wig also made him look out of shape, if not as such overweight.”


Le Journal du Dimanche, September 20--.
Culture in Paris by Rainier Coupe, senior correspondent.
Transcendence in the Classic Sense
La Bayadère by Rudolph Nureyev, Paris Opera Ballet
”[…] The Golden Idol was, in the second cast, danced by Claude Bérubé who is usually quite famous for his powerful jumps and strong tempo, but who struggled with musicality and stamina in his final, circling leaps. This rising star is obviously losing momentum and showing undeniable signs of fatigue. What a shame.”