Can I Make a Living with a Dancing Career?

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By Marisa Wright

Can you make dancing a career? The answer isn't straightforward. Yes, you can make a career of dancing, but unless you're very lucky or very talented, you're unlikely to make your living at it.

Photo art copyright Pat McDonald
Photo art copyright Pat McDonald

Most dancers have what we nowadays call a "blended career" - they don't rely 100% on dancing to pay the bills. That's why it's so important to develop alternative income sources while you're training.

You may be tired of hearing people say you need to train for something else, just in case you don't make it in dance. But the fact is, you're likely to need that other job, even if you do make it in dance. Like it or not, most dance companies can't afford to pay their dancers a full-time wage.

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Every Dancer Needs a Backup Plan

Only the major ballet companies, famous cabarets like the Moulin Rouge, or shows like Cirque du Soleil can afford to hire dancers as permanent employees with a year-round salary.  Outside those organizations, pay varies dramatically.

Musicals hire for the season - your job lasts as long as the show lasts! Many small dance companies pay by the performance, nothing more - the only other perk you get is free classes.

At the lowest end of the pay scale are the freelance dance troupes and dancers who work clubs and restaurants: they get paid by the performance, and have to pay for their own tuition and even their own costumes.

Many dancers supplement their income as waiters, checkout chicks and other unskilled jobs, because they didn't train for anything else. The trouble is, those jobs don't pay well, so dancers have to work long hours to make ends meet. They end up trying to juggle a full-time job with their dancing - and the dancing suffers.

If you can develop an alternative career while you're training, you'll find it much easier to cope with the lulls in your dancing work. Not only will you earn a higher hourly rate, but your skills are more likely to be in demand - so you'll find it easier to get part-time work when you need it.

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Will You Make It?

No matter how much you don't want to believe it, there's a good chance you won't make it as a dancer.

To be brutal, unless you're the standout student in your class, there's very little chance that you'll be accepted by one of the big companies. The competition is fierce - not to say vicious - so they can afford to cherry-pick only the very best of the best.

That's not to say you can't have a career. Many ballet students make the mistake of thinking a ballet company is the only option. Whereas I know many ballet students who went on to have wonderful careers in flamenco, belly dance, tango, salsa, ballroom and Latin. With a ballet background, you can pick up any of these styles in your twenties or even thirties, and quickly be good enough to dance professionally.

But even if you have outstanding talent, or are attracted to alternative dance styles, there are so many things that can go wrong on the path to fame - a snapped achilles tendon or ruptured cruciate ligament can end your career in a split second. Attention to proper nutrition, stretching, and technique will all help protect you from injury, but you can't make yourself totally safe.

And finally, there's retirement. If you dance ballet, your career isn't going to last much beyond 35. What will you do then? You may not have enough money put aside to fund retraining - so it's better to train for something now, while you have the opportunity.

What Are My Options?

If you can combine study for a serious profession with your dance training, you will be in the best possible position. When I was dancing flamenco professionally in clubs and restaurants, my pay was eaten up by the cost of classes, travel and costumes - but I didn't care, because thanks to my qualifications, I was able to work 20 hours a week as a manager and made more than enough to indulge my passion for performing.

However, there's no doubt it's tough to devote enough hours to qualify in two professions at once. In practice, you may have to choose something less lucrative but also less demanding. The following skills have good potential to get you casual, part-time or home-based work:

  • beauty therapy / hairdressing
  • natural therapies
  • remedial massage
  • book-keeping
  • any trade skills (plumbing, carpentry, electrical)

Of course, you can also supplement your income by using online options such as HubPages, running your own blog or website etc. That can take a couple of years of very hard work to set up, but there is good potential if you're willing to put in the effort to learn.

With the right skills under your belt, you can follow your dream with confidence, knowing you always have something to fall back on. Go for it!

*

All text copyright Marisa Wright.   Images courtesy of Pat McDonald (part of a series of fabulous "photo art" images of dancers on Flickr).

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Comments

Lissie profile image

Lissie Level 1 Commenter 3 years ago

Nice sensible advice Marisa! i get sick and tired of today's culture of no one looses and encouraging kids no matter what. The reality is that only a tiny percentage of wannabes will make it in dance :and some of the others will have a horrible time of it because there is a complete disconnect between what they are told : and sadly sometimes teachers are to blame too; and what their actual level of ability is. You see it it quite often in shows like So YOu Think You Can Dance and Australia You Got Talent. There was a YGT contestant the other week: about 6 or 7 dance/singer cute kid : but very average at both skills for her age. She was beautifully turned out and had huge confidence - but she looked really bewildered when Red said that she really wasn't very good: at least she got told now not in 15 years time!

Paraglider profile image

Paraglider Level 5 Commenter 3 years ago

Dancing, sport, music - all great things to be involved in, but you're absolutely right about realistic expectations and alternatives. By the way, a lot of wannabe flamenco guitarists come a cropper the first time they try to accompany a dancer. They discover it's not about flashy falsetas - it's compas, compas, compas! You'll know this!

Marisa Wright profile image

Marisa Wright Hub Author 3 years ago

So true, Paraglider - but some guitarists would say the same about the dancers!

Shelly McRae profile image

Shelly McRae Level 3 Commenter 3 years ago

The Arts are difficult to make a living at, hence the expression "Don't quit your day job!"

oberbreckling 3 years ago

I bet it is very competitive and I bet theres just a small amount of difference in the dancers very hard too pick the best of the best I lived in Baton Rouge La. for a while and seen some of the different arts of dancing very hard on the body very well put Marisa=would you become my fan plz.~cool~ cya!

sixtyorso profile image

sixtyorso 3 years ago

Great sensible advice but another option for wannabee danceres is to be become a dance instructor. Recently a young dancer here in RSA wanted to indulge his passion in African dance and choreography but could not sustain that dream. He was contacted a local talk radio show who was hosting a "birthday wish" slot. Someone 'phoned in on his behalf and he was offered a job as a dance instructor in one of our local Arthur Murray studios. But he was lucky they offerred the dance instructors course to him free of charge with a guaranteed job at the end of successful completion of the course. He can now indulge his paaion and pay back at the same time.

Great hub!

Marisa Wright profile image

Marisa Wright Hub Author 3 years ago

Yes, sixtyorso, being a dance teacher is one option - but it's seen as "second-best" by most dancers, whose dream is to perform on stage. Realistically, though, it's where many dancers end up when they realise they're not going to make it into a company.

dayzeebee profile image

dayzeebee Level 2 Commenter 3 years ago

oh this is sound advice. i also had to find a way to support my passion in theater by designing customized training programs for corporate groups using theater games. thank you for sharing. you've got another fan

guidebaba profile image

guidebaba 3 years ago

Good Marisha. There could have been some Photo. The e-bay capsule in the 2nd para makes this look more commercial than an article. It should be placed somewhere at he botton. This is just a suggestion.

Marisa Wright profile image

Marisa Wright Hub Author 3 years ago

Thanks, Guidebaba. Do you mean you don't like Pat's photo art and would prefer ordinary photos? I love them, personally!

guidebaba profile image

guidebaba 3 years ago

Hi Marisha. Sorry. The first time I read this Hub, the Photos did not get displayed. I truely did not see any Photo Yesterday. Now I can see them. Maybe something was wring with my Internet connection . Now this Hub looks good. Great.

Marisa Wright profile image

Marisa Wright Hub Author 3 years ago

Thanks Guidebaba! That happens to me sometimes. I'm so glad you can see them now, I think they're a bit special!

guidebaba profile image

guidebaba 3 years ago

Most welcome dear. I have one question and would be very thankful if you can plz answer: Do you upload Photos to your Flickr A/C first and then upload them here using the URL ? Does this really helps. Once I did that in my Hub "Top 130 Most searched women" . Alll of a sudden I started getting Huge Traffic From Flickr. Then they terminated my account and I had to open a New A/C !!!

Marisa Wright profile image

Marisa Wright Hub Author 3 years ago

Guidebaba, as the photos don't belong to you, I don't think it's right to upload them to your own Flickr account. That's probably why your account got terminated. I simply save them on my PC then upload from there, but you could use the URL direct from the owner's photostream.

WhisperHer profile image

WhisperHer 2 years ago

sad, but true. lots of down turns in the performing arts biz. takes a special kind of talent to make it work. and alot of trial and error.

figment profile image

figment 2 years ago

I don't professionally dance, but I love dancing. Great Hub!

Bambino 2 years ago

A great Hub..must tell you about my daughter who did make it as a dancer.Laura started dancing at 3 yrs old,attending Ballet ,Tap and Stage classes 2 nights every week,when she was older she also attended Stage school on a saturday afternoon.Laura always wanted to dance and was told that she would need a back up career,and did a Childcare course.When Laura was 11 she auditioned for The Royal Ballet but failed to make the grade as she has a slight Scoliosis which we didnt realise....

Upon leaving school she was lucky and got a job in a dancing Troupe and later as a dancer in a Hotel in Jersey..later returning home to sing profesionally in an ABBA tribute band which she does at the present time....Laura is now 27 and has passed her Dancing Teachers Exams Honours with Distinction...so she teaches Ballet and Tap keeping her hand in along side her singing career.

Marisa Wright profile image

Marisa Wright Hub Author 2 years ago

Bambino, your daughter's experience is a good example of what can happen in a dancer's career. I'm glad she was able to work in dance in spite of the scoliosis.

Bambino 2 years ago

Thanks Marisa..Laura's Scoliosis is only slight and came on later in her life so consultant says it wont get any worse..however it wont get better either,she is only slightly affected in her lower back,but of course the Royal Ballet School saw it straight away and allerted us to it,thank goodness!! It doesnt show much just at waist level she has a waist on one side but not on the other..when dressed it is not noticeable.My friends daughter had a real bad Scoliosis and had to have the operation to insert rods into her back .

Julia 8 months ago

Um, belly dancing is not a dance that "you can pick up...in your twenties or even thirties, and quickly be good enough to dance professionally." I've been studying belly dance for seven years and still am only at the beginning. There's a wide range of props to be mastered (veil, finger cymbals, sword, Isis wings, cane), as well as an entire new set of unique Middle Eastern rhythms to learn (chiftitelli, saiidi, beledi, maqsoum, ayoub). There's more to belly dancing than shaking around and rolling your hips - it's an art form that is on par with Western ballet. You could even say that belly dance (or "raks sharki" in Arabic) is the Middle Eastern equivalent of ballet, only more beautiful and sensual.

Marisa Wright profile image

Marisa Wright Hub Author 8 months ago

Julia, I said that students WITH A BALLET BACKGROUND can quickly be good enough to dance professionally.

Belly dance is like any dance form - you never, ever master it completely, there's always something more to learn and you can always improve. But for students who are already accomplished dancers in another genre, the basics are comparatively easy to learn and fast progress is indeed possible.

I guess I should also define what I mean by "quickly". I certainly don't mean to imply someone can belly dance professionally after a couple of terms, but an already trained dancer can reasonably expect to be doing gigs within a couple of years - which is much, much faster than some other dance styles.

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