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Cuban Ballet Program

Technique and Passion

We are pleased to welcome all classical dance students to the Cuban Ballet Program’s Summer Intensive. This special edition will be held at the prestigious studios of the Royal Ballet of Flanders, a landmark venue that, with its professional and avant-garde atmosphere, offers the ideal space for refining the technical and artistic skills of dancers.

The program is based on the renowned Cuban Ballet School method, famous for its technical excellence and holistic approach to the dancer’s artistic development. This system, characterized by its precision, discipline, and expressive capability, has trained some of the greatest dancers in the world. Through this method, students not only refine their technique but also develop a deeper understanding of the art of ballet as a whole.

The facilities at the Royal Ballet of Flanders are top-notch, with spacious and well-lit studios, equipped with professional floors that ensure a comfortable and safe experience during classes. The environment, perfectly designed for dance, inspires creativity and concentration, fostering learning and artistic growth. In addition, each session will be accompanied live by a pianist, creating a unique connection between music and movement, enriching the participants’ experience.

Our teaching team is composed of high-level dancers and certified instructors who use effective and passionate methodologies to guide students through their training process. The program includes comprehensive and dynamic training, with the addition of special guest instructors and surprises that will add a unique touch to the experience. Throughout the week, we strive to maintain impeccable discipline and organization, ensuring that each student can make the most of this opportunity.


To ensure the participants’ well-being, we offer fresh fruit during breaks to help maintain energy and focus. The facilities also feature spacious and comfortable changing rooms, bathrooms, and a welcoming environment that contributes to the comfort and satisfaction of everyone.

We invite you to join us for this intensive week of training, development, and artistic growth. We look forward to seeing you soon and sharing this exciting experience in such a prestigious setting!

Schedule:

Week of Monday, August 11, 2025, to Thursday, August 14, 2025.

The program includes:

  • Ballet class 1h30
  • Points 30m (Intermediate level)
  • Repertoire 1h15 / 2h
  • Character dances 1h
  • Contemporary 1h / 1h30
  • PBT (Progressing Ballet Technique) 1h
  • Gyrotonic: 1h
  • Masterclass 1h30

Selection process:

  • Intermediate Level: From 8 years old. Send a resume and a short video of you dancing, lasting between 30 seconds and 60 seconds.
  • Pre-professional Level: From 13 years old. Send a resume and a short video of you dancing, lasting between 30 seconds and 60 seconds.

Note: Please note that age is not a determining factor. The pedagogical team will assess the technical level of each participant and determine which group they will be placed in, regardless of age.

There are limited spots available, so all interested parties are encouraged to apply as soon as possible.

Registrations are now open.

Interested individuals should send the information to [email protected]

Note: To submit videos, it is advisable to use platforms such as WeTransfer, YouTube, or similar services.

If selected, you will receive a confirmation email with information on the next steps.

Location:

At the Royal Ballet of Flanders studios
Kattendijkdok-Westkaai 16
2000 Antwerpen
Belgica

Program fee:

550€ for the full program.
500€ for students of Winter Intensive.

Return and Cancellation Policy for Refunds:

To ensure efficient management and provide you with quality service, we have established the following return policy in the event of cancellation:

Advance notice: Any cancellation request with the desire for a refund must be communicated at least 30 days before the scheduled event date.

Cancellation process: To initiate the cancellation process and request a refund, please send an email to [email protected] stating your name, the event date, and the reason for cancellation.

Refund: Once the cancellation request is received, the corresponding refund will be processed. Please note that the refund may take time and will depend on the terms and conditions of your original payment method.

Late cancellations: In the case of cancellations made with less than one month’s notice before the event, unfortunately, no refunds will be issued.

If it is not possible to organize the intensive program, you will be refunded 100%.

We appreciate your understanding and cooperation on this matter.

If you have any questions, please contact us at [email protected].

The Cuban Ballet Program is an intense and professional classical dance training offering the chance to learn and refine your technique with the Cuban ballet method. This globally recognized method has produced world-class dancers who have triumphed on prestigious stages.

The Cuban style stands out for its virtuosity, stage confidence, movement freedom, dynamism, cleanliness, and emphasis on jumps.

By participating in the Cuban Ballet Program, you can benefit from the expertise of internationally acclaimed Cuban instructors and distinguished guests with outstanding artistic and pedagogical backgrounds, guiding and motivating your creative growth.

Moreover, you’ll have the opportunity to connect with other passionate dance students.

Cuban Ballet Program combines technique and passion, providing a unique and unforgettable experience to help you reach your full potential as a dancer.

Our mission:

  • Transmit the passion for dance, quality teaching, and artistic vision with a unique and distinctive style.
  • Guide the student to their maximum expression in terms of technique and artistry.
  • Promote the advantages of the Cuban ballet method.
  • Emphasize the importance of body care through physical preparation.

Our methodology:

  • Technical learning from simple to complex.
  • Promotion of a positive learning environment where effort, overcoming challenges, and teamwork are valued.
  • Stimulation of curiosity, imagination, and artistic sensitivity, offering a variety of classes and resources that enrich the educational experience.
  • Teach classical technique rigorously and with quality while not forgetting the enjoyment of dancing.
  • Promotion of values such as respect, cooperation, communication, self-esteem, and constructive criticism, both individually and collectively.

Howard Quintero Photo by Christian Bohnenkamp

Howard Quintero

Founder

Ballet Dancer | Choreographer | Ballet Teacher

Born in Havana, Cuba, embarked on his ballet journey at the age of 8 when he joined the prestigious Escuela Nacional de Ballet in La Havana. His talent quickly garnered attention, leading him to represent Cuba in various international ballet competitions. Notably, he achieved an Honor Diploma in Varna in 1996 and a Silver Medal in Vignale Danza in Italy in 1994.

After completing his education, Howard joined the National Ballet of Cuba under the direction of Alicia Alonso. Over the course of two years, he performed numerous principal roles in classical ballets, including Don Quichotte, Swan Lake, Giselle, Coppelia, La Fille Mal Gardée, Paquita, and more.

In 1998, Howard’s exceptional skills caught the eye of Robert Berthier, the director of Jeune Ballet de France, leading him to move to Paris. This year marked significant achievements, with Howard winning a Silver Medal in the Paris competition and both a Gold Medal and Grand Prix in Luxembourg.

His success in Paris opened doors to ballet galas and collaborations with renowned dancers, earning him the title “Cuban Tornado.” Further accolades came in 1998 when he secured a Gold Medal and Grand Prix in the Joinville competition in Brazil.

At the age of 21, Howard joined the Royal Ballet of Flanders in Belgium, dancing principal roles in classical and modern productions. Noteworthy performances include 3 Mousquetaires, Romeo and Juliet, Bayadère, Carmina Burana, Sleeping Beauty, and Swan Lake.

His career continued to flourish as he explored different choreographic styles with companies like Leipziger Ballett and Dortmund Ballet in Germany. In 2015, Howard transitioned from performing to become an assistant and guest ballet teacher, contributing his expertise to various renowned companies worldwide.

In 2018, Howard ventured into choreography, creating a new classical version of Giselle for the Slovenian National Ballet. The premiere’s success led to invitations to perform at festivals in Italy, Germany, and Slovenia.

In 2021, he created “Alice in Wonderland” for the National Ballet of Portugal, which was broadcast on national TV.

Looking ahead, Howard plans to create a new ballet for the Annarella Ballet School in 2024, showcasing his dedication to nurturing future talents and exploring new choreographic horizons.

Howard Quintero Lopez’s multifaceted journey in ballet reflects his passion, talent, and commitment to artistic exploration and education.

Marlen Moreno Photo by Olivier Charlet

Marlen Moreno

Founder

Ballet | Character Dance | PBT teacher

Certified teacher and choreographer specializing in classical and character dance. In 2008, she graduated in the Art of Dance from the University of the Arts in Cuba, earning the Gold Certificate qualification. Thanks to this training, she had the opportunity to perform in the most important theaters in Havana.

In 2014, she published a book on the pedagogy and methodology of teaching classical dance by Fernando Alonso, the father of the Cuban ballet school.

As a classical dance teacher and choreographer at the Cátedra de Danza of the National Ballet of Cuba under the direction of Alicia Alonso for 6 years, she achieved the category of ‘first level’ as a ballet master. In 2013, she created a version of the ballet Snow White for the end-of-year performance, involving 300 students.

In 2008, she became part of the faculty at the prestigious National School of Cuba ‘Fernando Alonso,’ where she taught various academic disciplines, worked as a choreographer, and participated in international ballet academy competitions. Simultaneously, she taught classical dance at the Contemporary Dance Company ‘Rosario Cárdenas.’

Since her arrival in Belgium in 2014, she has been a resident teacher at the Brussels Conservatory of Dance under the direction of Menia Martinez, instructing in classical dance, pointe technique, character dance, repertoire, and as a rehearsal director.

Certified in Progressing Ballet Technique (PBT) Level 3, with the highest level, a training method recognized by the Royal Academy of Dance (RAD).

She is a guest teacher in several schools in Belgium and participates in various internationally recognized workshops, preparing students for national and international competitions with success.

Alexander Santana

Alexander Santana

Special Guest

He was born on August 21, 1981, in Villa Clara, Santa Clara, Cuba. He studied at the Olga Alonso Provincial Ballet School from the first to the third year of Ballet and completed his Elementary level studies at the Alejo Carpentier Elementary Ballet School. Later, he graduated from the National Ballet School of Cuba Fernando Alonso as a dancer and teacher. As a student, he won gold (1997), bronze (1998), and silver (1999) medals at the International Ballet Competitions in Havana, Cuba.

He began his professional career as a dancer in the Ballet Company of Camaguey (Cuba) as a Soloist for two years. He then joined the National Ballet Company of Ecuador, where he served as Principal Dancer for four years. He also held the position of Principal Dancer at the Ballet Municipal de Lima (Peru) for eight years and later became the Principal Dancer at the National Ballet Company of Peru for four years. Throughout his career, he danced with renowned figures such as Lorna Feijoó, Rolando Sarabia, Jaime Francisco, among others, and his repertoire included major classical ballets such as Coppelia, Don Quixote, Le Corsaire, La Fille Mal Gardée, Giselle, Harlequinade, Swan Lake, Grand Pas de Paquita, La Sylphide, Les Sylphides, Diana and Acteon, La Bayadère, among other classical and neoclassical choreographies.

After concluding his dance career, he embarked on a teaching career at the National Ballet School of Cuba. He worked in Ecuador as a founding teacher at the Metropolitan School of Dance in Quito and in Peru, where he served as the sub-director of the Crescendo Ballet School in Lima and a teacher at the Rosie Schottland Ballet Clásico School, also in Lima. He was also a teacher at the Olga Alonso Provincial Ballet School in Villa Clara, Cuba.

More recently, he worked as a guest teacher at the Annarella Sánchez International Ballet and Dance Conservatory’s Summer Intensive Course, teaching Cuban Folklore, Ballet, Pointe Technique, Repertoire, and Pas de Deux Technique.

Over the past years, he had the opportunity to work with internationally renowned teachers such as Fernando Alonso, Vladimir Issaev, Ramona de Sáa, Carlos Acosta, Raquel Aguero Mercado, Lourdes Arnau, Carlos Valcárcel, and Maina Gielgud.

He has received awards as a choreographer in national competitions in Cuba, and most recently, students trained by him were awarded at the Barcelona semifinal of the Youth America Grand Prix 2019.

Marlúcia do Amaral

Marlúcia do Amaral

Special Guest

Marlúcia do Amaral, born in Porto Alegre in Brazil, left high school at the age of 15 and accepted an invitation and scholarship to study at the Cuban National Ballet School in Havana. Her training in Cuba lasted three years and had a profound impact on her, both technically and artistically. From Cuba she moved to New York in 1995, again with a scholarship in her pocket, which enabled her to study for another year, this time at the Joffrey Ballet School in New York City. When she was offered a contract as a dancer with the Joffrey Ballet to complete her training, she declined and returned to Brazil instead. There she completed her high school diploma and studied dramatic arts for two years at the Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul. At the International Ballet Competition in Brasília in 1998, the German chamber dancer Birgit Keil noticed her and offered her a postgraduate course at the Academy of Dance of the State University of Music and Performing Arts in Mannheim. Thus, Marlúcia do Amaral came to Germany in October 1998, stayed, and found a second home. In 2000, choreographer Martin Schläpfer hired her for his newly formed ballettmainz. She followed him to the Ballett am Rhein in Düsseldorf for the 2009/2010 season. In ten years, Schläpfer created an immense repertoire of his own and created numerous leading roles for her. Two duos by Hans van Manen, which the two have performed in numerous performances and which have been filmed, are a special testament to the Schläpfer-Do Amaral duo. “The Old Man and Me” and “Alltag,” featured in the film “Keep Fire – Don’t Worship Ashes.” From 2009 to 2020, do Amaral, as principal dancer of the ballet of the Deutsche Oper am Rhein, also performed numerous leading roles in works by other seminal choreographers, including Jirí Kylián, William Forsythe, George Balanchine , Twyla Tharp, Kurt Jooss, Léon/ Lightfoot , Brigitta Luisa Merki, Marco Goecke, Jerome Robbins, and Mark Morris, as well as Antoine Jully, Hubert Essakow, Terence Kohler, Natalia Horecna, and Hans van Manen.

Marlúcia do Amaral has been named an “outstanding dancer” several times in critics’ surveys: in 2005 and 2007 in “Dance Europe Magazine,” in 2007 and 2008 in the “Yearbook balletttanz,” and five times in the “Yearbook tanz.” She was honored for the “Most Confident Performance of an Established Ballerina” in the Koegler Journal on www.tanznetz. de, as “Best Dancer” and “Dance Personality of the Year” 2018 in the magazine “Dance for YOU,” and as “Dancer of the Year” 2019 in the trade magazine “tanz.” In 2012, she received the City of Düsseldorf’s Cultural Promotion Prize. In November 2019, she received the German Theater Prize “DER FAUST” in the category “Dance Actress,” for which she was first nominated in 2011.
Following her active stage career, Marlúcia do Amaral completed a master’s degree in dance pedagogy at the Palucca University of Dance Dresden. Since then, she has worked as a guest trainer/coach with various dance and ballet companies, including the Zurich Ballet, Los Angeles Ballet, Leipzig Ballet, Basel Theater Ballet, Oldenburg Ballet Company, Dresden Frankfurt Dance Company, Neuertanz, Seoul Metropolitan Ballet, The Stuttgart Ballet and others. As a répétiteur, she studies choreographies by Hans van Manen and is able to share her extensive knowledge of his works.

Georg Reischl

Georg Reischl

Special Guest

Born in Austria, Georg Reischl began his dance journey in Salzburg, training with Rosa Hartlieb, before continuing his education at the Vienna State Opera Ballet School under Michael Birkmeyer. His professional career took off with Liz King’s company in Heidelberg, followed by four dynamic years with Scapino Ballet Rotterdam.

In 1999, Georg joined Ballet Frankfurt, working directly with William Forsythe, where he not only performed Forsythe’s groundbreaking repertoire but also became deeply involved in his collaborative creative process. He continued this work as a member of The Forsythe Company, further immersing himself in Forsythe’s evolving movement language. He danced in pieces such as “In the middle, somewhat elevated”, “Second Detail”, “Eidos:Telos”, “Artifact”, “N.N.N.N.”, “Decreation”, “Kammer/Kammer”, “We live here” and “One flat thing, reproduced”. In 2003 he was mentioned in the magazine Tanz International as an outstanding dancer for his performance in “Decreation”.

Georg later returned to Scapino Ballet Rotterdam as resident choreographer, creating numerous works that blended energy, structure, and emotion. He collaborated to create dance pieces with theaters in Europe and with international groups like the MichaelDouglas Collective, whose piece Golden Trash won the Cologne Dance Theater Prize in 2013. From 2019 to 2022, he led the dance company at Theater Regensburg as artistic director and chief choreographer.

This workshop gives you the chance to explore William Forsythe’s work with someone who experienced it directly, while diving into a choreographic process that values clarity, creativity and individuality.

Henry Rodriguez Photo by Bárbara Gutiérrez

Henry Rodriguez

Special Guest

Choreographer, docent and a performing artist born in Havana, Cuba in 1991. He received his early education in dance at the UAD Ballet Español de Cuba, under the direction of Eduardo Veitia. After graduating at the National School of Dance in 2011, he has since worked with Danza Contemporánea de Cuba and with choreographers Rosario Cardenas, Pepe Hevia, Julio Cesar Iglesias, Theo Clinkard, Lucy Suggate, Iris Reyes, Faizah Grootens, among others.

In 2022 he created Goyes’ka, a dance and physical theatre emergent project- based company and platform for interdisciplinary works and where he is delving into his own music and choreographic practice. His works have been featured in European and international festivals and contests such as Florence Dance Festival, Burgos & New York International Choreography Contest, LGBTQ Unbordered International Film Festival, Bevrijdingsdansfestival, Super Ball Amsterdam among others.Together to his creations, he gives dance lessons and workshops in relation to his creative process and new works.

Emilie Nguyen Photo by Dominik Mentzos

Emilie Nguyen

Special Guest

Born in Belgium, Émilie has been passionate about classical ballet from a very young age. She joined the professional dance program “humanités chorégraphiques” in Dinant at the age of 12. She participated in several competitions across Europe and won various awards during her schooling. At 18, she joined the Royal Ballet of Flanders, which marked the start of her career and gave her her first roles. Seven years later, Heinz Spoerli invited her to join the prestigious Zurich Ballet and offered her a soloist contract, sharing the opera stage with stars such as Paulina Semionova and Natalia Osipova.

Her dancing career led her to Germany, at the Leipzig Ballet, one of the largest companies in Europe, where the famous choreographer Uwe Scholz created his best ballets, most of which she performed in collaboration with one of the world’s most prestigious philharmonic orchestras. She then moved to the Dortmund Ballet, where choreographer Jiří Bubeníček created a ballet inspired by the film The Piano Lesson for her, in which she performed the lead role of Ada. Finally, Jacopo Godani, a choreographer who greatly inspired her career, invited her to join the Dresden Frankfurt Dance Company, formerly known as the Forsythe Company in Frankfurt.

Throughout her career, she has danced many of the most famous classical ballets, collaborated with numerous choreographers, and participated in the creation of many neoclassical and modern works.

Émilie began her professional career at the Royal Ballet of Flanders. Afterwards, she joined the Zurich Ballet as a soloist. Her career then took her to Germany, where she danced with the Leipzig Ballet, the Dortmund Ballet, and the Dresden Frankfurt Dance Company (formerly the Forsythe Company).

Throughout her career, Émilie has collaborated with many choreographers and contributed to the creation of numerous neoclassical and contemporary works.

This time, Émilie will lead a special Gyrokinesis class, a method derived from the Gyrotonic® system — a movement practice that blends dance, yoga, swimming, and tai chi. Gyrokinesis aims to improve mobility, strengthen the core, and release tension — an essential tool for dancers and anyone who moves.

Address:
The Royal Ballet of Flanders studios Kattendijkdok-Westkaai 16
2000 Antwerpen
Belgica

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