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    La Scala dancers deny anorexia emergency

    MILAN (AP) — Repeated statements by a former prima ballerina that anorexia is rampant at Milan's famed La Scala theater has startled the dance corps, which issued a statement Wednesday denying the eating disorder was an issue.

    The dancers wrote that they were "flabbergasted and embittered" over Mariafrancesca Garritano's statements in media interviews and a book that anorexia is widespread, affecting as many as one in five dancers.

    "There is no emergency of anorexia, and whoever is part of our reality knows it well," the dancers' statement said.

    The 33-year-old dancer was fired last month after continuing to make statements that the theater considered false and damaging to its reputation, La Scala spokesman Carlo Maria Cella said Wednesday.

    Anorexia is typically characterized by an extreme fear of becoming overweight. People with anorexia severely restrict how much they eat and can become dangerously thin.

    Garritano first raised the issue of the eating disorder in a book that came out in January 2010. That was followed by media interviews before the season opened last December in which she said she dropped to 43 kilograms (95 pounds) as a teenager after teachers called her "mozzarella" and "Chinese dumpling" in front of other students.

    Garritano, who joined the theater at age 16 and had recently been promoted to soloist, was initially suspended after interviews, missing a performance with the Bolshoi Ballet in Moscow in December.

    Theater management fired her 10 days ago after she kept repeating the statements, Cella said.

    The dancers said they were surprised by the theater's "drastic" position, but said they did not have all the information about the theater's procedures to draw conclusions.

    "At the same time, we do not feel that we can support a campaign against the theater and the world of dance in general, which we do not agree with and of which we feel victims," the dancers said.

    "To read certain newspapers, and even some internal union statements, it seems that there is one courageous heroine who is fighting solitarily against a hell where many girls suffer in silence with the complicity of everyone else. This is not the case."

    The theater's ballet school put out a separate statement saying that all incoming students receive medical exams to ensure that they are fit for a professional dance course.

    The school said it does not employ an in-house dietitian because there have been no critical cases, but it does have three specialists that it refers students to in the case of weight gains or losses "due to an unbalanced diet, or in the case of weight gain due to adolescence, but always from the point of view of the correct intake of carbohydrates, proteins and sugars for the athlete."

    The ballet school has 200 students, while the dance corps is comprised of about 90 dancers, including nine female soloists and six male soloists.

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    13 comments

    • bctallis  •  3 months ago
      Honestly, one in five seems like a low estimate in a ballet company...speaking from experience. They just don't call it "anorexia," doesn't mean it's not! Almost no one menstruates...
    • Hoopin' Hottie  •  3 months ago
      Not a problem my arse. It's real and it's rampant. My daughter is trying to recover from Anorexia/Bulemia picked up while trying to become a professional ballerina. We pray that she can slay this dragon before it slays her.
      • Joseph 3 months ago
        I hope she does, H. But don't blame it all on an art form.
    • Kevin John  •  Norfolk, United States  •  3 months ago
      The United States Methamphetamine Club said the same thing.
      Poor Chinese Dumpling.
    • Jenn  •  Bethlehem, United States  •  3 months ago
      It's true, this is a world that is most definitely prone to triggering eating disorders in its participants. That's not debatable. It really should stop being treated like a dirty little secret. Anyone who knows anything about the world of dance knows that there are many factors within the sport that are prime for developing and feeding this problem. And there are also many companies where it certainly appears dancers are rewarded for this unhealthy behavior. If this dancer was fired for speaking out against this issue, that is truly disgraceful on the part of the company.
    • John  •  3 months ago
      I admire her courage to fight the management of the ballet companies and bring to light the terrible situation that exists in that artistic world.
    • Mark  •  3 months ago
      Black Swan
    • Joseph  •  New Orleans, United States  •  3 months ago
      I'm afraid that ballerina Mariafrancesca Garritano sat through the sadistic, ballet-hating film, "Black Swan" too many times.....which means she saw it ONCE!
    • A.  •  King of Prussia, United States  •  3 months ago
      Ballet is a very graceful type of dance, but it demands insanely a lot from a dancer. I saw a documentary on Russian ballet school. It was brutal. I am convinced that there is an issue of anorexia in those schools... However, it's the choice that the dancers make for themselves.
    • Merideth  •  San Diego, United States  •  3 months ago
      comprised of... good work AP
    • DIREINDEED  •  3 months ago
      I believe it is an unwritten and unspoken understanding that if you want to be a prima ballerina you have to be on the super slim and fit side, eh? Can you imagine some two ton Tessie up there on stage. Please.
      • Joseph 3 months ago
        Yes--- see the film "Fantasia" and you will see the best!
    • tim  •  3 months ago
      send them to mcdonalds for some pink slime laced big mac super size meals!
    • tim  •  3 months ago
      or a couple triple whoppers
    • Richard  •  3 months ago
      Like it or not, some women are naturally skinny, and balancing while dancing is easier for the skinny. Stop hating yourselves for not being as pretty, skinny, sexy as the average model or dancer, and you'll stop hating them. Other things are more important.
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