PARIS When Valentine Colasante was called up to replace an injured dancer in the Paris Opera’s “Don Quixote”, a three-hour ballet that she had performed exactly once before, she didn’t even have time to be nervous.“You don’t have a choice, you just go. You have to save the show and you feel yourself growing wings and your strength grows tenfold with the adrenaline,” she told
PARIS When Valentine Colasante was called up to replace an injured dancer in the Paris Opera’s “Don Quixote”, a three-hour ballet that she had performed exactly once before, she didn’t even have time to be nervous.“You don’t have a choice, you just go. You have to save the show and you feel yourself growing wings and your strength grows tenfold with the adrenaline,” she told
When Valentine Colasante was called up to replace an injured dancer in the Paris Opera’s Don Quixote, a three-hour ballet that she had performed exactly once before, she didn’t even have time to be nervous. “You don’t have a choice, you just go. You have to save the show and you feel yourself growing wings and your strength grows tenfold with the adrenaline,” she said.