Skip to main content

Svetlana Boginskaya - timeless grace

Take time if you can to view this, Svetlana Boginskaya's 1988 floor routine set to Bizet's Carmen.  Boginskaya was not the most powerful tumbler on the Soviet team in those days, and today the value of her tumbling would be negligible, but her grace and artistry is timeless, rare. 

We speak of 'difficulty', understanding it to mean tumbles, leaps and turns contrived to amount to the highest possible start value.  Boginskaya includes only two leaps in this routine, one turn and three tumbles.  All of these moves are integrated into the narrative of the routine; the choreography varied in shape, style and mood, telling a story that matches the music.  Take out the 'difficulty' and a complex performance remains that goes beyond presentation.



Boginskaya was 15 years old at these Games, facing a growth spurt and handling the pressure of her first Olympic Games.  She contributed to the Soviet Union's gold medal in the team event, took two bronzes in the all around and floor exercise events, and grabbed gold in the vault.  The following year she would win both the European and World Championships, despite losing her coach from childhood - Liubov Miromanova - under sudden tragic circumstances, shortly after the Games.  She went on to win more medals at the 1992 Olympics and 1996 European Championships, ending her career at the 1996 Olympics. 

The aesthetic was Boginskaya's metier.  Throughout her career she practiced high level tumbling elements such as the double twisting double back and double layout on floor.  Her double turn on beam elevated the skill to a dance move.  But she rarely showed these elements in competition, preferring to let artistry speak for itself. 

Boginskaya's skill was unique.  While she was able to match the highest difficulty tumbles seen in today's gymnastics, who else could present a floor exercise of such complexity?  At the 2012 Olympics, only Russian Ksenia Afanasyeva could demonstrate mastery of the lyrical legacy of Boginskaya. 

And view here a brief 'fluff' video of Svetlana made at the time of the 1992 Olympics, featuring interviews with Svetlana and a brief shot of her at work with coach Alexander Alexandrov.

Comments

  1. Interesting thanks for posting. I do agree I love the routine, I wonder if they will ever go back to things like this where it was about artistry and presentation.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Nowadays there is simply no time for gymnasts to show off their choreography. They have to perform so many leaps, turns and jumps as well as tumbling passes if they want to get a good D score that there is no time to cram in a story-telling dance as well. To be perfectly honest, I prefer it now. It allows fans to understand the scoring better. In the old days, it was really left to judges personal preference and there was little to back up their judging. Think about it: what chance would a body type like Vanessa Ferrari would have against the great Boginskaia? Although we have lost a lot in artistry, I think the sport has become more open to different types of gymnasts. I like this idea. It seems we needed to lose a bit of one to have the other.

    ReplyDelete
  3. No question, Boginskaya is my favorite gymnast of all time. Honestly, even if her difficulty was considered lacking or whathaveyou, she made that criticism totally irrelevent. She made simplicity faboulous and fascinating to watch.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Speaking of artistry - Here is a new interview with Komova and her mom. I didn't click the video but there are questions underneath - maybe Lupita can translate when she has time :)

    http://vrn.kp.ru/daily/25941.4/2886291/

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Nelli Kim - 'Russian gymnastics has closed in on itself' - Lupita translates

Lupita has translated this ITAR-TASS interview with Nelli Kim.  It's controversial, to say the least. Ed's note : much of the initial response to this interview - both here and in the wider gymternet -  has focussed on the detail of Kim's words and especially her comments about Viktoria Komova, and smiling.  But I think these have to be taken in context, and not too literally. Don't forget that just a day ago Andrei Rodionenko complained bitterly about the judging in Antwerp, calling Kim's behaviour 'aggressive'. Kim is responding to this here, and to the wider current context of Russian gymnastics.  What she is essentially saying to the Russian coach is 'get your own house in order, produce confident, disciplined, well trained gymnasts - stop complaining, do your job, and I will do mine.'   She goes about saying this in a somewhat long winded way and says some things along the way that seem contradictory, unfair, inappropriate even for th...

Aliya Mustafina - 'each medal is very special'

'I'm very happy that everything turned out well today  ... Each medal is very special.  The UK team made mistakes, so there was a wide margin [of victory]... But naturally, [what I did] is not enough for the Olympics.  I prepared well for beam and bars but I am not ready for floor, I stepped up to help the team. ... To be honest, I did not look at the scores [when asked how the team reacted to the 6.5 gap before the final apparatus].  Gelya (Melnikova) is a good girl, she did everything and did not falter ... Seda fell on quite a complex element.  There is more work to do, but everything else went well.' [About a protest taken by the coaches on her beam score]. 'I am used to my protests being rejected, everything is normal!' Via vk.com I n other news , the UEG has confirmed that Spiridonova will replace Melnikova in tomorrow's bars final. No reason is given, but it is generally considered that Dasha has a better chance of gold.  This decision also means tha...

Fact or fiction? The press, gymnastics and pregnancy doping

It was a Sunday morning.  I was drinking my coffee and contemplating the day ahead - a workout at the gym, shopping for groceries, an evening reading a book, or catching up on last night's episodes of crime thriller The Bridge .  How nice it was not to have to think about work for a day. Then I saw it - a story about the history of doping in The Observer .  Interesting reading. Of course, cheating is as old as the hills.  It is, unfortunately, human nature for some people to try to gain easy advantage in any kind of competition.  That is why we have laws, rules, ethical guidelines.  People who cheat should face justice and shouldn't complain when they are found out. But the story about pregnancy doping bothered me.  Hadn't that been found to be fictional?  The author began with Olga Kovalenko's allegations made in 1994 - but the rumours had started way back in 1991 with the documentary series More Than A Game .  The practice...

RRG Archive - scroll by date, from 2024 to 2010

Show more