I was so sad to see the lack of gorgeous ballet outfits in the sims 4, so I decided to compile some outfits for any creators who want to take up the task of making some more ballet cc. please tag me if you make this, as I would love to use it in my game!
VELVET: You are 72 now. Did you always know when the end would come?
Prince Theodore:
I probably stayed longer than I should have. A few years longer, if we’re being honest. But I love dancing — I always have. It has never felt like something you simply stop doing because a number tells you to. For a long time, I could still work, still rehearse, still find truth in the movement. When that changes, you listen.
VELVET: Ballet entered your life very early.
Prince Theodore:
I was nine when I started, at Windenburg Preparatory School. It felt instinctive almost immediately. From there I went on to Foxbridge, and then, between eleven and thirteen, everything narrowed — practice, discipline, focus. Auditioning for the Astrarian Royal Ballet School changed my life entirely. It was where the work became real.
VELVET: It was also where you met your wife.
Prince Theodore:
Yes — I met Clara, Duchess of Windslar there. We were very young, very serious, and completely immersed. Ballet gave us a shared language before we ever had a shared life. That matters more than people realise.
VELVET: Ballet remains a family language.
Prince Theodore:
Very much so. Our youngest, Princess Catherine of Windslar, dances professionally now — she’s a junior soloist. Watching her is a joy, not because she dances, but because she loves it. That’s all you ever want for someone you care about.
VELVET: Do you think ballet ever truly leaves a dancer?
Prince Theodore:
No. It stays in how you stand, how you listen, how you move through the world. I won’t perform again, but ballet will always be part of my life. You don’t give that much of yourself to something and simply walk away.
VELVET: Your body has carried a great deal.
Prince Theodore:
(Laughs quietly.) It has. Two knee replacements, both ankles, a hip — and I need another one done. At some point, you stop negotiating with pain and accept that it’s time. This felt like the right moment. Not regretful. Complete.