Mariinsky Ballet
The Mariinsky Ballet is the resident classical ballet company of the Mariinsky Theatre in Saint Petersburg, Russia. Founded in the 18th century and originally known as the Imperial Russian Ballet, the Mariinsky Ballet is one of the world's leading ballet companies. Internationally, the Mariinsky Ballet continues to be known by its former Soviet name the Kirov Ballet. The Mariinsky Ballet is the parent company of the Vaganova Ballet Academy, a leading international ballet school.
History
The Mariinsky Ballet was founded in the 1740s, following the formation of the first Russian dance school in 1738.The Imperial Theatre School as it was originally known, was established on 4 May 1738, at the Winter Palace in Saint Petersburg. It would become the predecessor of today's Vaganova Ballet Academy. The school's founder director was the French ballet master and teacher Jean-Baptiste Landé and the purpose of creating the school was to train young dancers to form the first Russian ballet company. The first group of students included twelve boys and twelve girls, who later went on to form what would become the predecessor of today's Mariinsky Ballet.
Very little information exists from the formative years of the ballet company, however it is known that both the school and the ballet company were linked by name, becoming the Imperial Ballet School and Imperial Russian Ballet, names that continued to be used until the abolition of Imperial rule. In the late 18th and early 19th centuries, the Imperial Russian Ballet soon rose to prominence and would employ some of the most influential and famous names in ballet history including Charles Didelot, Marie Taglioni, Christian Johansson, Enrico Cecchetti, Jules Perrot, Fanny Cerrito and Carlotta Grisi.
As the Imperial Russian Ballet, the company is most famous for premiering numerous ballets by the renowned choreographer Marius Petipa. He created many of his most famous works during his time as a ballet master and director of the company in the mid to late 1800s. A number of his ballets now form the basis of the traditional classical ballet repertoire, performed by ballet companies around the world, and often retaining much of Petipa's choreography. These ballets include the original productions of The Nutcracker, The Sleeping Beauty, Don Quixote, La Bayadère and Raymonda; and popular revivals of older ballets, including Coppelia, Giselle and Le Corsaire. Petipa's revival of the ballet Swan Lake, is perhaps his most famous work for the company. Originally choreographed by Julius Reisinger for the Bolshoi Theatre in 1877, Swan Lake was initially a critical and commercial failure. Petipa sought to revive the ballet with the blessing of Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky, but the composer died before the new ballet was created. Petipa consequently worked with his brother Modest Tchaikovsky, who significantly revised the story and rewrote the libretto to the version now commonly performed. The production was choreographed by Petipa and his collaborator Lev Ivanov. Premiering at the Mariinsky Theatre in 1895, the Petipa/Ivanov/Tchaikovsky production of Swan Lake was a major success and is now considered the most famous ballet of all time. Nearly all subsequent productions of Swan Lake, are based on this 1895 production.
Following the Russian Revolution, the Soviet government decided that the ballet school and company were unwanted symbols of the tsarist regime and went on to close them both. The ballet company was the first to be re-established, becoming known as the Soviet Ballet, with the school re-opening later as the Leningrad State Choreographic School, both remaining in their previous locations.
Following the assassination of the Bolshevik revolutionary Sergey Kirov in 1934, the then Soviet Ballet was renamed the Kirov Ballet, a name which is still sometimes incorrectly used. After the end of communist rule, both the ballet company and opera company at the Mariinsky Theatre were linked to the theatre by name, becoming the Mariinsky Ballet and Mariinsky Opera and both companies are run by the theatre itself.
Despite later name changes and pressures of the Russian revolution, the present day Mariinsky Ballet is still linked to the school, which is now known as the Vaganova Ballet Academy.
Today
The Mariinsky Ballet is today recognised as one of the world's greatest ballet companies, employing over 200 dancers, including a reserve troupe and character artists. The Director of the Mariinsky Ballet is Yuri Fateyev.Being modelled on other leading opera/ballet theatres such as the Royal Opera House, London and La Scala, Milan, the Mariinsky Ballet and Mariinsky Opera both come under the management of the Mariinsky Theatre, with Valery Gergiev as Artistic Director. Gergiev also serves as Director of the opera company. The two companies operate as separate units.
Repertoire
- Adagio Hammerklavier
- Anna Karenina-Alexei Ratmansky version
- Apollo
- Ballet Imperial
- Bambi
- La Bayadère
- Bolero Factory
- The Bronze Horseman
- Camera obscura
- Carmen Suite
- Carnaval
- The Cat on the Tree
- Chopiniana
- Choreographic Game 3x3
- Cinderella-Alexei Ratmansky version
- Concerto DSCH
- Le Corsaire
- Le Divertissement du roi
- Don Quixote
- Elegy. Ophelia
- The Firebird
- Fountain of Bakhchisarai
- The Four Seasons
- Giselle
- Infra
- In the Middle, Somewhat Elevated'
- In the Night
- In the Jungle
- Inside the Lines;;
- Jewels
- The Legend of Love-choreography Yury Grigorovich
- Leningrad Symphony
- The Little Humpbacked Horse-Alexei Ratmansky version
- Marguerite and Armand
- A Midsummer Night's Dream
- Les noces
- The Nutcracker-Marius Petipa version
- The Nutcracker-Mihail Chemiakin version
- Paquita-Yuri Smekalov version
- Paquita Grand Pas
- Pavlovsk
- Le Parc
- Petrouchka
- Petrouchka-Vladimir Varnava and Konstantin Fyodorov version
- 'Polovtsian Dances
- The Prodigal Son
- Raymonda
- Le Réveil de Flore
- Romeo and Juliet-Leonid Lavrovsky version
- Russian Overture
- Le Sacre Du Primtemps
- Sacre
- Scheherazade
- Scotch Symphony
- Second I
- Serenade
- Shurale
- Solo
- 'Sleeping Beauty-Konstantin Sergeev version
- Sleeping Beauty-Sergei Vikharev version
- Spartacus-Leonid Yakobson version
- Le Spectre de la rose
- The Stone Flower
- The Swan
- Swan Lake
- La Sylphide
- Sylvia
- Symphony in C
- Symphony in Three Movements
- Tarantella
- Tchaikovsky Pas de deux
- The Vertiginous Thrill of Exactitude
- Variations for two couples
- Violin Concerto No. 2
- Without
- Yaroslavna. The Eclipse
- The Young Lady and the Hooligan
- 5 Tangos''
Dancers
Principals
- Ekaterina Kondaurova
- Oksana Skorik
- Alina Somova
- Viktoria Tereshkina
- Diana Vishneva
- Timur Askerov
- Yevgeny Ivanchenko
- Kimin Kim
- Igor Kolb
- Danila Korsuntsev
- Xander Parish
- Vladimir Shklyarov
- Andrey Ermakov
First Soloists
- Nadezhda Batoeva
- Maria Khoreva
- Anastasia Kolegova
- Anastasia Matvienko
- Olesya Novikova
- Yekaterina Osmolkina
- Renata Shakirova
- Maria Shirinkina
- Elena Evseeva
- Alexander Sergeev
- Philipp Stepin
- Konstantin Zverev
Second Soloists
- Maria Bulanova
- Yekaterina Chebykina
- Nadezhda Gonchar
- Alexandra Iosifidi
- Anastasia Lukina
- Valeria Martynyuk
- May Nagahisa
- Anastasia Nuikina
- Yana Selina
- Tatiana Tkachenko
- Victor Caixeta
- Roman Belyakov
- Evgeni Konovalov
- Ivan Oskorbin
- Yuri Smekalov
- Alexei Timofeyev
- Vasily Tkachenko
- David Zaleyev
- Maxim Zyuzin
Character Soloists
- Elena Bazhenova
- Alina Krasovskaya
- Alisa Rusina
- Islom Baimuradov
- Soslan Kulaev
- Vladimir Ponomarev
- Vasily Shcherbakov
- Andrei Yakovlev
Coryphees
- Viktoria Brilyova
- Yuliana Chereshkevich
- Xenia Dubrovina
- Shamala Guseinova
- Maria Iliushkina
- Svetlana Ivanova
- Viktoria Krasnokutskaya
- Anastasia Nikitina
- Xenia Ostreikovskaya
- Ekaterina Petrova
- Anastasia Petushkova
- Zlata Yalinich
- Fyodor Murashov
- Alexei Nedviga
- Grigory Popov
- Dmitry Pykhachov
- Alexander Romanchikov
- Andrei Solovyov
- Ilya Zhivoi
Notable dancers
- Altynai Asylmuratova
- Mikhail Baryshnikov
- Vakhtang Chabukiani
- Petra Conti
- Natalia Dudinskaya
- Ilya Gaft
- Pavel Gerdt
- Tamara Karsavina
- Irina Kolpakova
- Theodore Kosloff
- Mathilde Kschessinska
- Ninel Kurgapkina
- Pierina Legnani
- Larissa Lezhnina
- Ulyana Lopatkina
- Askold Makarov
- Natalia Makarova
- Varvara P. Mey
- Galina Mezentseva
- Vaslav Nijinsky
- Rudolf Nureyev
- Alla Osipenko
- Anna Pavlova
- Olga Preobrajenska
- Farukh Ruzimatov
- Leonid Sarafanov
- Marina Semyonova
- Konstantin Sergeyev
- Alla Sizova
- Yuri Soloviev
- Olga Spessivtzeva
- Galina Ulanova
- Diana Vishneva
- Svetlana Zakharova
- Igor Zelensky
- Maria Khoreva