The Bedells Bursary 2025

2025 十月 31, 星期五 – 2025 十一月 1, 星期六

Events Competition The Bedells Bursary 2025

Booking Deadline:

2025 九月 22, 星期一

Event Date:

2025 十月 31, 星期五 – 2025 十一月 1, 星期六

Location:

Available Online?

No

Who’s it for?

Dancers age 17 and under, who have achieved Distinction for the RAD Advanced 1 Examination

Fee:

Candidate entry: £96
Audience tickets:
Member £15
Non-Member £18.50

The Bedells Bursary is the RAD’s annual competition to recognise young dancers’ excellence in artistic and technical achievement, providing opportunities for creativity.

The Bedells is a stepping stone towards The Fonteyn for young people trained in the Royal Academy of Dance syllabus. It is dedicated to promoting and rewarding standards of excellence in young ballet dancers internationally.

Recognising the RAD’s 100 year legacy, the Bursary is named in honour of Phyllis Bedells, a founding member and former vice president of the RAD.

The Bedells provides coaching sessions, a masterclass and a final performance opportunity during which an overall winner is selected, with separate awards presented for musicality and choreography, by a panel of judges.

  • Candidate applications open: 10 April 2025 (10:00 UK time)
  • Candidate applications close: 22 September 2025 (18:00 UK time)
  • Candidates will be notified: 29 September 2025
  • Masterclass and coaching session: Friday 31 October at the RAD’s global headquarters, London, SW11 3JZ
  • Final performance: Saturday 1 November, Aud Jebsen Studio Theatre, RAD’s global headquarters

Audience tickets will be available in June.

The judges

Jeanetta Laurence

Born in Oxford, Jeanetta trained with June Christian and later at The Royal Ballet Schools.

In 1969, she joined The Royal Ballet Touring Company under John Field and went on to dance in The Royal Ballet’s New Group (later Sadler’s Wells Royal Ballet), formed under Peter Wright in 1970. She created roles in ballets by, among others, Jack Carter, Ronald Hynd, Joe Layton and Lynn Seymour, and was promoted to soloist with SWRB. She was appointed Assistant Ballet Mistress there in 1978 and left the Company to have a family in 1979.

In 1983, with fellow dancer Rashna Homji, she founded Dance Directory, an agency for freelance dancers and choreographers, which ran successfully for eight years. She left the agency to work for director and choreographer Gillian Lynne before joining The Royal Ballet as Artistic Administrator in 1990. She was appointed Assistant Director in 2003 and Associate Director in 2009, retiring in 2015 when she was awarded an OBE for services to dance in the 2016 New Year Honours list.

Jeanetta has been a Trustee of the Dance Professional’s Fund and the Benesh Endowment Fund. She is also Vice Chair of the Governors of The Royal Ballet and was a founding Trustee of the Frederick Ashton Foundation. Jeanetta succeeded fellow co-founder Tony Dyson as Chair of the Foundation in June 2022.

Paul Liburd

Paul was born in Leeds UK and studied at the London School of Contemporary Dance; he was a member of London Contemporary Dance Theatre, Irek Mukhamadov & Dancers, Rambert Dance Company, and Scottish Ballet.

Paul has danced works by some of the world’s most prominent contemporary-modern choreographers, amongst those are Christopher Bruce, Jiri Kylian, Mats Ek, Merce Cunningham, Wayne McGregor, Twyla Tharp, Hans van Manen, Paul Taylor, Ashley Page, Stephen Petronio, William Forsythe, Richard Alston, Rafael Bonachela, Ohad Naharin, Glen Tetley, Javier de Frutos, Siobhan Davis, Robert Cohan, Robert North, Antony Tudor, Karol Armitage, Trisha Brown, George Balanchine, Jerome Robbins, Krzysztof Pastor, Lindsay Kemp, Martha Clarke, Mark Baldwin.

His awards include the Cosmopolitan/Scholl Award in 1985, Representing Great Britain in the Eurovision Young Dancer 1987, BBC Yorkshire Black Achievers Award 1992, Critic’s Circle Award for Outstanding Male Dancer (2004) (Contemporary), Critic’s Circle National Dance Award (2009), The Dancing Times Award for Best Male Dancer. He was also awarded the MBE in Queens Birthday Honours in 2009 for services to dance.

After a twenty-four-year career, Paul retired from performing and holds a diploma from the British Ballet Organization (BBO DTLLS). He was a guest repetiteur at the Croatian National Ballet for the re-staging of Ashley Page’s ‘Alice’ and has taught at various UK dance schools and internationally, and has also guest taught at the Rambert Dance Company, Phoenix Dance Theatre, Michael Clarke Dance Company, Matthew Bourne New Adventures Company, David Hughes Dance, Rambert 2, Yorke Dance Project, Co Wayne McGregor.

At present Paul is on the teaching faculty at Rambert School of Ballet and Contemporary Dance & London Studio Centre. He is a trustee of the Dancer Professional Fund and Dame Margot Fonteyn Scholarship Fund, and a patron of KS Dance.

Further information

Who can enter?

Venue

Royal Academy of Dance, 188 York Road, London SW11 3JZ.
View helpful information for planning your visit to our global headquarters.

Schedule

Candidates will be required to attend over 2-days:

Friday 31 October – All candidates to participate in a masterclass taught by a leading dance professional and be coached on their chosen Classical Repertoire variation and the Dancer’s Own variation. Approximate timings, 12-5pm.

Saturday 1 November – All candidates will perform an on-stage class and their two solos in front of our esteemed judges and public audience. The day will finish with the announcement of the winner of The Bedells Bursary, Choreographic Award and Musicality Award. Approximate timings, 10am-4pm.

Dancer’s Own Variation

This may be created by the candidate, their teacher or a peer to a piece of music of their choice. However to be eligible for the Choreographic Award the variation must be choreographed by the candidate themselves.

Guidelines for candidate created choreography:

Music Guidelines:

The music:

Things to think about:

Awards

The Bedells Bursary
A prize of £1,000 will be awarded to the winner of The Bedells Bursary generously supported by The Mary Kipps bequest.
Choreographic Award
A prize of £250 will be awarded and is made possible by a generous bequest from the estate of the late Dr Ivor Guest.
Musicality Award
This will have a monetary prize of £100 and is funded generously by the Lynn Wallis Bursary Fund.

Dress

For Masterclass and Bedells Bursary Class
Practice Ballet attire should be worn and the leotard may be of any colour. Tights should be regulation exam colour. For class, candidates should wear soft pointe shoes or flat ballet shoes and for the pointe work section, pointe shoes with ribbons.

Classical Repertoire Variations
The costume is the candidates’ choice but should be appropriate to the variation and a headdress may be worn; alternatively, a leotard with, where appropriate, a tutu or appropriate skirt of any matching colour may be worn.

If you are performing en pointe you must wear pointe shoes with ribbons.

Dancer’s Own Variation
Candidates may wear a simple costume that must not depict any copyrighted characters, storylines, or films. Handheld props may be used if appropriate but masks may not be worn.

Criteria for assessment

Overall Bursary Winner

Candidates are assessed on the work they show and not on any prediction of future promise. The following criteria are followed across both the class work and variations:

Technique
Incorporating:

Music

Performance

Dancer’s Own Choreographic Award

This award recognises and promotes choreography in The Bedells Bursary and gives an opportunity to explore creativity and imagination.

Criteria for Choreographic Award
The recipient of this award is the candidate choreographer who in the judges’ opinion demonstrates the highest standard of choreography within the variation based on the following assessments:

Musicality Award

Introduced in 2024, this Award recognises and promotes musicality and will be judged across the class work and variations.