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=== United Kingdom ===
The Cecchetti teaching method was vital in the development of Classical Ballet in the United Kingdom and contributed heavily to modern-day British teaching methods. Enrico Cecchetti and his wife opened a ballet school in London in 1918, and his pupils included some of the most influential names in British
[[Dame Marie Rambert]] was a former pupil and colleague of Cecchetti, who also established a professional ballet school teaching his methods. This led to the formation of the UK's first ballet company, which survives today as the country's oldest established dance company, although it is now known as [[Rambert Dance Company]] and specialises in [[contemporary dance]]. The school also remains and is known as the ''Rambert School of Ballet and Contemporary Dance''. [[Ninette de Valois|Dame Ninette de Valois]] was a colleague of Cecchetti during her professional career with the [[Ballets Russes]]. She established [[The Royal Ballet]] in London, with many of the companies early dancers being pupils of Cecchetti. The Cecchetti method was also favoured by de Valois when she formed the [[Royal Ballet School]]. [[Phyllis Bedells]], another Cecchetti pupil, would also play an important role in the teaching of ballet in Britain, as a founder member of the [[Royal Academy of Dance]], which today is a classical ballet teaching examination board.
The British writer and dance historian Cyril W. Beaumont was a close friend of Cecchetti and, in 1922 he collaborated with Cecchetti to codify the training technique into a printed syllabus, ''The Cecchetti Method of Classical Ballet'', which has become the foremost reference for Cecchetti method teachers worldwide. Cecchetti also gave Beaumont permission to
Today, the [[Imperial Society of Teachers of Dancing]] promotes the Cecchetti method as a syllabus-based series of dance examinations, which are taught by registered teachers around the world in both pre-vocational and vocational dance schools.
There are a few ballet teachers, such as Gavin Roebuck, who can trace their knowledge of the Cecchetti method in a direct line from pupils of Enrico Cecchetti, including generations of dancers trained at the Royal Ballet School, the Rambert School and Canada's National Ballet School.
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