Corinna Trabucco is an AmSAT* certified teacher of the Alexander Technique, a 100 year old method renowned for its unique ability to help people to reduce unnecessary tension while performing everyday activities such as sitting at a computer as well as more challenging endeavors like sports and the performing arts. By increasing awareness of how we hold tension that interferes with natural functioning, lessons in the Alexander Technique help to improve posture, balance and coordination. Corinna has been working with the Alexander Technique since 1979.  In 1991, she completed the three-year training program required to become an Alexander Technique teacher and convey the kinesthetic experience with the hands that is the special craft on which teaching the Alexander Technique is based.   Corinna has an MA in Theatre Education and was an assistant professor and Director of the Dance Department of Emerson College from 1976-1981. She currently teaches in the College of Fine Arts at BU and Stonehill College, Easton, MA. She has taught extensively throughout New England since 1991, has a private practice in Beverly, and has assisted the training of teachers at the Dimon Institute for the Alexander Technique.  Corinna has been an active member of the American Society for the Alexander Technique  (AmSAT) since 1991, has served as a Member-at-Large for the Board of Directors, as chair of the AGM Policy Committee and as a member of the Professional Conduct Committee.

For more information about classes and private lessons contact Corinna at 617-413-3308 or corinna@corinnatrabucco.com.

...the Alexander Technique doesn’t teach you something new to do.  It teaches you how to bring more practical intelligence into what you are already doing: how to eliminate stereotyped responses: how to deal with habit and change.  It leaves you free to choose your own goal but gives you a better use of yourself while you work toward it.”

Frank Pierce Jones, Freedom To Change
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Corinna Trabucco helps a student to release and lengthen his back while in a squatting position.