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At 16, a student from Philly’s Rock School has leapt into three career milestones this year

Blake Metcalf has competed at the Prix de Lausanne in Switzerland, won the senior men's category at the Youth America Grand Prix Final, and is now headed to England’s prestigious Royal Ballet School

Blake Metcalf in class at the Rock School for Dance. He won first place in the senior men category at Youth America Grand Prix Final.
Blake Metcalf in class at the Rock School for Dance. He won first place in the senior men category at Youth America Grand Prix Final.Read moreTom Gralish / Staff Photographer

At 15, Blake Metcalf had little left to prove.

In February, the ballet student at Philly’s Rock School for Dance was one of only 38 boys (81 dancers altogether) from around the world selected to compete at the elite Prix de Lausanne in Switzerland.

He didn’t win a prize at the Prix, but he made the final and got something else very valuable: a scholarship to finish his studies at England’s prestigious Royal Ballet School.

But that’s not all. Metcalf had also qualified to compete in the Youth America Grand Prix Final in May in Houston.

YAGP, a much bigger competition, attracts thousands of students from 50 countries competing in locations all over the world for months leading up to the final.

“There was a moment prior to YAGP [Final] where Blake and I spoke,” said Rock president and director Peter Stark, who coached Metcalf, “and I said to him that he didn’t have to do YAGP as he had his plans secured for next year.”

But Metcalf, who grew up in in Lake Mary, Fla., and attended many competitions with his mother Sheri’s dance school, Xtreme Dance Studio, wanted to finish out that chapter.

He wound up winning first place among the senior men, ages 15-20, with a variation from the first act of Swan Lake and a contemporary solo choreographed by Chase Peterson.

But winning wasn’t in his sights going in.

“I was like, ‘Let me just have fun, I don’t care what happens, just have a good week’,” said Metcalf, who recently turned 16. “And then I made it to the final round, I was like, ‘Awesome, that’s great, first year senior.’”

He was then invited to perform in the gala that closes out the competition, “and that was mind-blowing to me,” he said.

“I was like, ‘Oh my gosh, I’m surrounded by so many people, like professionals I look up to, that I never thought I’d even see in person, dancing on the same stage.’”

When the awards were announced, Metcalf was named among the top 12 senior men. His name was the first announced, because he was the youngest, he assumed.

But he had won first place while, he later added, dealing with a cyst in one hip and a muscle strain in the other.

“I look to my right and it’s just these super tall men,” he said.

The YAGP Final turned out well for Metcalf’s classmates as well. In addition to his win, students from the Rock received three second-place awards.

“It was an extraordinary week for the Rock School,” Stark said. “For the second year in a row, we advanced more students to the final round than any other school in the world, and we ended up being the most awarded school at the competition.

Metcalf, Stark said, “was in a different zone at the finals and it showed in his performances,” Stark said. “Some of the same judges [at the Prix and YAGP final] were especially impressed with his growth.”

“Mr. Stark warmed me up every day for competition, and he took it very slow, didn’t force anything,” Metcalf said, explaining how he succeeded despite the injuries. “I kind of kept it calm and clean, and then saved myself for stage.”

So what changed between February and May?

“I think at Prix de Lausanne, I saw so much incredible talent,” Metcalf said. “I was really inspired, I subconsciously pushed myself more. I came back to Rock, and I was like, ‘all right, let’s do it, like let’s work,’ and I started improving more.”

“Blake has an extraordinary instrument for dance physically with excellent proportion and line with great flexibility and strength,” Stark said. ”However, what really makes Blake special is both his intense focus in class coupled with heartfelt artistry on stage.”

Next year in England, Metcalf expects to work on “my power, my bigger jumps. It’ll come with age,” he said, “it’ll come as I get more muscle. But yeah, I definitely need to work on my strength and my power.”

Metcalf started dance when he was 5 or 6, after watching his sister Ash (now a New York-based actress) dance and compete with his mother’s school.

“I really wanted to be a dancer, and my mom was like, ‘All right, Blake, we’ll see, we’ll see.’”

His mother, he said “tried to get me to go into sports because she wanted me to ... go to a college, go the academic route. But I would beg my mom every day, because I looked up to my sister a lot as a kid. Ever since then I just started getting more and more classes, and then I left all the other worlds behind.”

At first, he started with hip-hop. Classical dance didn’t come until he was about 11, when someone at his mom’s studio noticed that he had good feet for ballet.

Soon enough, he’ll get that degree as well. The three year program at the Royal Ballet School not only prepares its students to join a ballet company, but it also awards its students a bachelor’s at the end.

Metcalf had never studied anywhere but his mom’s school when Stark invited him to train at the Rock School two summers ago. He enjoyed it so much that he begged to stay for the year, even though it meant leaving his family and his Boston Terrier, Cannoli.

It was Philly where he really began to shine, said Metcalf, who also enjoys drawing, crocheting, knitting, and reading.

“Rock has really refined me as a dancer,” he said. “Rock has also helped me mentally, it has helped me mature, have my own mindset, not worry about what else is going on and just focus on myself.”