

Prisoners learning ballet in maximum security? This documentary pirouettes straight into your soul.
In prisons ruled by toxic masculinity, dancing is an absolute taboo. But at Lancaster’s A-Yard, near Los Angeles, a group of young men, willing to take a chance to be mocked in the yard, start a dance class led by French choreographer Dimitri Chamblas. This class quickly becomes an intoxicating escape from their grim reality so they decide to create a dance show. In this exceptional context, the inmates engage with overwhelming sincerity, evoking their childhood, ganglife, the crimes, the prison, and their desire for transformation. Beyond damaged lives and a prison system on the edge of the abyss, DANCING IN A-YARD explores redemption and the capacity of human beings to reinvent themselves, when given a chance. And more importantly, how art and introspection can help see the light.
Direction
Dalle never sensationalizes—just witnesses.
Acting
The inmates' raw, unguarded performances hit different.
Cinematography
Concrete and barbed wire somehow look poetic.
Director
Manuela Dalle
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
Chamblas developed this program through UCLA's prison arts initiative, part of a tiny but growing movement challenging California's historically brutal penal system.
The 'A-Yard' designation refers to Lancaster's specific administrative segregation unit—making dance there not just unlikely, but institutionally subversive.