International Marinsky Ballet Festival Is Approaching

International Marinsky Ballet Festival Is Approaching

International Marinsky Ballet Festival Is Approaching

In a week from now, on March 22nd, the stage of the Mariinsky Theatre will see the start of the 12th International Marinsky Ballet Festival, which is a noticeable annual spring event in the world of ballet. The Festival will run for eleven days, till April 1st. The Festival opens on March 22nd with a premiere — the revival of Roland Petit’s ballet Le Jeune Homme et La Mort, an early masterpiece from 1946, which established his name as a choreographer. Many cult names in ballet are connected with this work, among them Jean Cocteau who inspired the choreographer, Sergei Diaghilev, who gave Cocteau the story, and performers of the role of the Young Man over the years including Rudolf Nureyev and Mikhail Baryshnikov... At the Mariinsky Theatre, the ballet was first staged for Farukh Ruzimatov and Ulyana Lopatkina in the late 1990s. The same evening will see a performance of George Balanchine’s ballet Prodigal Son to music by Sergei Prokofiev, created for Diaghilev’s Ballets Russes in 1929, featuring Teresa Reichlen and Daniel Ulbricht, soloists with the New York City Ballet, the guardian and protector of the great choreographer’s style and technique. In line with tradition, the great classical ballets from the Mariinsky Theatre’s repertoire will be performed by international guest soloists. In Swan Lake, Alina Somova will be partnered by the soloist of the Het Nationale Ballet Matthew Golding (March 23rd). Representing the Bolshoi Theatre, Svetlana Zakharova and Alexander Volchkov together with Anastasia Matvienko will form the love triangle in La Bayadère (March 24th), the performance marking sixty-five years of the stage career of Olga Nikolaevna Moiseyeva, an outstanding ballerina and coach. Old friends of the Mariinsky Theatre, regular participants at the Festival and darlings of St Petersburg audiences — London’s Royal Ballet soloists Alina Cojocaru and Johan Kobborg will perform the lead roles in the ballet La Sylphide (March 25th). The culmination of the Festival will come with touring performances by the company of legendary 20th century choreographer Maurice Béjart. Four years after the choreographer’s death, the Béjart Ballet Lausanne, now directed by Gil Roman, will be bringing four of the ballet-master’s works to St Petersburg — Boléro, Ce que l’amour me dit, Cantate 51 and the pas de deux Hélène et Euphorion (from the ballet Notre Faust) as well as Roman’s ballet Là où sont les oiseaux (March 27th & 28th). The visit by the Béjart Ballet Lausanne will be accompanied by an exhibition of unique photographs by Valentin Baranovsky featuring Maurice Béjart, dancer Jorge Donn and artists of the Kirov Ballet Company when the choreographer first visited Leningrad in the late 1980s. Fans of the Mariinsky Ballet Company will see performances by their favourite stars in premieres from recent seasons, among them Viktoria Tereshkina and Alexander Sergeyev in Angelin Preljocaj’s ballet Le Parc (March 26th), Diana Vishneva in the ballet evening Errand into the Maze by Martha Graham, Subject to Change by Paul Lightfoot and Sol León, Pierrot Lunaire by Alexei Ratmansky (March 30th), and Ulyana Lopatkina and Andrei Yermakov in Alexei Ratmansky’s ballet Anna Karenina (March 31st). The Festival closes on April 1st with a grand Gala Concert starring all of the Festival’s guests. In line with Festival tradition, there will also be master-classes by teachers from various schools. This year’s Festival will be attended by Michaël Denard, formerly an étoile and current coach with the Ballet de l’Opéra de Paris. During his visit the great dancer will give a master-class for students at the Vaganova Academy of Russian Ballet and grant-recipients of the Mariinsky Theatre. Source: www.mariinsky.ru

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