Well on the Way

“Matinee Ballet Academy”
Ballet Academy of the Vienna State Opera
Vienna State Opera
Vienna, Austria
May 31, 2026

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2026 by Ilona Landgraf

1. Students of the Ballet Academy, “Presentation” by P.Armand et al., Ballet Academy of the Vienna State Opera 2026 © Vienna State Opera/A.Taylor Excitement permeated the Vienna State Opera as its auditorium filled for the Ballet Academy’s end-of-the-year performance last Sunday. One could feel the jitters of both the young artists and their families and friends who flocked to the performance. Their worries were unfounded; everything went as smoothly as could be wished.

Music by the Strauss family accompanied the opening Presentation, which assembled students of the 1.- 8. class. Its compilation of polkas, marches, gallops, and ball dances choreographed by the Academy’s director, Patrick Armand, and some ballet teachers showed 2. Students of the Ballet Academy, “Presentation” by P.Armand et al., Ballet Academy of the Vienna State Opera 2026 © Vienna State Opera/A.Tayloroff the progress made with each year of training. The older the students, the more experienced and self-assured they were on stage. They were confident in solos but also worked as a unit in group scenes. I admired the students’ musicality, the calm and ease of their pas de deux, and the brio of the older ones. The jumps and turns of some spunky boys thrilled the audience. Watching the youngest take their place in the crowded stage’s front row was particularly heartwarming.


3. S.Schippani and A.Potskhishvili, “Double Evil” by J.Elo, Ballet Academy of the Vienna State Opera 2026 © Vienna State Opera/A.Taylor4. O.Milton and C.Keffert, “Double Evil” by J.Elo, Ballet Academy of the Vienna State Opera 2026 © Vienna State Opera/A.TaylorPresentation
was substantial, but, to my surprise, Jorma Elo’s Double Evil, a piece created for the San Francisco Ballet, set an even higher standard. It employed eight of the twelve dancers from the Vienna State Ballet’s Jugendkompanie, for whom Elo revised his original choreography. I found nothing devilish in it but intriguing contrasts. Sharp, pacy scenes (accompanied by Philip Glass’s frenetic, percussion-heavy Concerto Fantasy for Two Timpanists and Orchestra) alternated with lyrical adagios (set to Vladimir Martinov’s slow, romantic Come In!). The seamless shifts of the tempo and Elo’s shrewd injection of modern movements into the classical vocabulary are tricky. Moreover, the choreography is complex but must look fluid and dynamic. It only works with the right timing.

6. Students of the Ballet Academy, “Coppélia” by M.Gielgud, P.Armand et al. after A.Saint-Léon, Ballet Academy of the Vienna State Opera 2026 © Vienna State Opera/A.Taylor 5. Students of the Ballet Academy, “Coppélia” by M.Gielgud, P.Armand et al. after A.Saint-Léon, Ballet Academy of the Vienna State Opera 2026 © Vienna State Opera/A.TaylorI know from a conversation with the school management that the matinee was long and meticulously prepared. All young dancers worked hard. Still, the result that the Jugendkompanie achieved in Double Evil by far surpassed everything I’d expect from young dancers. They were completely unbothered by technical demands and visibly relished the dance. Watching them at the curtain call, I saw eight sympathetic, open faces. Each of these young talents will be an asset to a company.

7. Students of the Ballet Academy, “Coppélia” by M.Gielgud, P.Armand et al. after A.Saint-Léon, Ballet Academy of the Vienna State Opera 2026 © Vienna State Opera/A.Taylor8. U.Yamazaki (La Prière), “Coppélia” by M.Gielgud, P.Armand et al. after A.Saint-Léon, Ballet Academy of the Vienna State Opera 2026 © Vienna State Opera/A.TaylorThe divertissements of the third act of Arthur Saint-Léon’s Coppélia (which Maina Gielgud and the team of the Academy adjusted to the abilities of the dancers) included students and members of the Jugendkompanie alike. The former contributed various corps dances, the latter performed solo parts.

9. C.Keffert (Franz) and E.A.Murg (Swanilda), “Coppélia” by M.Gielgud, P.Armand et al. after ASaint-Léon, Ballet Academy of the Vienna State Opera 2026 © Vienna State Opera/A.Taylor The students’ czardas was neat in both the solemn and spirited parts, their tableaux in the waltz pleased the eyes, and they gracefully moved through the patterns of the Le Travail variation. Ailey Osaki, rising from their midst, was a graceful L’Aurore whose elegant arms stuck in my mind. The tender lightness of Uta Yamazaki’s La Prière reminded me of Giselle in Act II. (Yamazaki was the only student soloist; she attended the graduation class.) Charlie Keffert and Elisa Anna Murg portrayed the leading couple. Keffert’s Franz was a composed and reliable partner to Murg, for whom the role of Swanilda seemed tailor-made. She was fresh, smart, and simply brilliant.

Links: Website of the Vienna State Opera’s Ballet Academy
Website of the Vienna State Opera’s Jugendkompanie
Photos: 1. Students of the Ballet Academy, “Presentation” by Patrick Armand et al., Ballet Academy of the Vienna State Opera 2026
2. Students of the Ballet Academy, “Presentation” by Patrick Armand et al., Ballet Academy of the Vienna State Opera 2026
3. Sophie Schippani and Andria Potskhishvili, “Double Evil” by Jorma Elo, Ballet Academy of the Vienna State Opera 2026
4. Oriel Milton and Charlie Keffert, “Double Evil” by Jorma Elo, Ballet Academy of the Vienna State Opera 2026
5. Students of the Ballet Academy, “Coppélia” by Maina Gielgud, Patrick Armand et al. after Arthur Saint-Léon, Ballet Academy of the Vienna State Opera 2026
6. Students of the Ballet Academy, “Coppélia” by Maina Gielgud, Patrick Armand et al. after Arthur Saint-Léon, Ballet Academy of the Vienna State Opera 2026
7. Students of the Ballet Academy, “Coppélia” by Maina Gielgud, Patrick Armand et al. after Arthur Saint-Léon, Ballet Academy of the Vienna State Opera 2026
8. Uta Yamazaki (La Prière), Coppélia” by Maina Gielgud, Patrick Armand et al. after Arthur Saint-Léon, Ballet Academy of the Vienna State Opera 2026
9. Charlie Keffert (Franz) and Elisa Anna Murg (Swanilda), Coppélia” by Maina Gielgud, Patrick Armand et al. after Arthur Saint-Léon, Ballet Academy of the Vienna State Opera 2026
all photos © Vienna State Opera/Ashley Taylor
Editing: Kayla Kauffman

 

Enlightening

“American Signatures”
Vienna State Ballet & Volksoper Wien
Volksoper Wien
Vienna, Austria
May 30, 2026

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2026 by Ilona Landgraf

1. K.Mitsumori, “Interplay” by J.Robbins, Vienna State Ballet 2026 © Vienna State Ballet/A.Taylor2. G.Aime and G.Fredianelli, “Interplay” by J.Robbins, Vienna State Ballet 2026 © Vienna State Ballet/A.Taylor Of the four American choreographers included in the Vienna State Ballet’s mixed bill, American Signatures, only Jerome Robbins is well known in mainland Europe. Works by Pam Tanowitz, Lar Lubovitch, and Jessica Lang are rarely staged. Hence, I was glad to see this season’s last performance.

Robbin’s Interplay premiered in autumn 1945, shortly after World War II, as the second choreography in his oeuvre. Absolutely nothing in the piece hints at war. Instead, its eight dancers (four women and four men) portray unburdened, fun-loving youth with contagious optimism and self-assurance. A backdrop as gloriously blue as a summer sky intensifies the bright colors of the men’s shirts (with which they wear black, skintight pants and white socks) and the girls’ short dresses. Of course, they wear ponytails. The American way of living that they represent reminds me of Continue reading “Enlightening”

Cosmic Plans

“Cinderella”
Tartar State Academic Ballet
Jalil Opera and Ballet Tartar State Academic Theatre
Kazan, Russia
May 11, 2026 (video)

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2026 by Ilona Landgraf

1. A.Musakhanov (Cinderella’s father), K.Zakharova (Cinderella), A.Belov (Stepmother), and F.Valiakhmetov (Ballet Teacher); “Cinderella” by N.Kalinina, Tartar State Academic Ballet 2026 © Tartar State Academic BalletRomeo and Juliet is inextricably linked to Sergei Prokofiev’s (1891-1953) music, but it’s less well known that he also composed the score for Cinderella. The ballet was the Bolshoi Theatre’s first post-war world premiere in 1945. One year later, a lighter, more fairy tale-like version premiered at the Kirov Theatre (now Mariinsky Theatre) in Leningrad (now St. Petersburg). This year, Prokofiev would have celebrated his 135th birthday, and two new Cinderellas seem like respectable gifts. In mid-May, Nadezhda Kalinina’s version opened the 39th Rudolf Nureyev International Classical Ballet Festival in Kazan. Vyacheslav Lopatin’s debut choreography for his home company, the Bolshoi Ballet, followed closely on May 28th. I had the opportunity to watch a recording of Kazan’s Cinderella. Continue reading “Cosmic Plans”

Congratulations

“Giselle”
Vienna State Ballet
Vienna State Opera
Vienna, Austria
April 26, 2026 (live stream)

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2026 by Ilona Landgraf

1. L.Fernandez Gromova (Giselle) and A.Casalinho (Count Albrecht), “Giselle” by E.Tchernichova, Vienna State Ballet 2026 © Vienna State Ballet/A.Taylor2. L.Fernandez Gromova (Giselle) and A.Casalinho (Count Albrecht), “Giselle” by E.Tchernichova, Vienna State Ballet 2026 © Vienna State Ballet/A.Taylor The Vienna State Ballet’s recent live stream of Giselle was one of those precious events where everything is perfect. Choreographed for Vienna in 1993 by Elena Tchernichova, the piece is the company’s “calling card.” Additionally, perhaps due to the new artistic director, Alessandra Ferri, who passed on her experience studying with Tchernichova herself, the dancers performed especially well. “Elena Tchernichova was the person who first taught me the role of Giselle when I was just twenty-one, dancing with American Ballet Theatre alongside Mikhail Baryshnikov,” Ferri revealed. Continue reading “Congratulations”

Retrospection

“Tribute to Tetley”
Stuttgart Ballet
Stuttgart State Opera
Stuttgart, Germany
April 25, 2026

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2026 by Ilona Landgraf

1. Ensemble, “Voluntaries” by G.Tetley © Glen Tetley Legacy, Stuttgart Ballet 2026 © Stuttgart BalletIn 1972, no one foresaw how fateful Glen Tetley’s (1926-2007) invitation to stage his 1965 piece, The Mythical Hunter, for Stuttgart’s junior company would be. He and the artistic director, John Cranko, got along, and Tetley was commissioned to create a new ballet for the main company. It was June 1973, and Voluntaries wasn’t yet finished when news of Cranko’s sudden death on a transatlantic flight reached Stuttgart. At the request of Marcia Haydée and Cranko’s heir, the late Dieter Graefe, Tetley subsequently took over as the company’s artistic director. But administrative work burdened him. After two seasons, he passed the reins to Haydée, relieved to renew his focus on choreography. Yet fate had something else in store. In 1986, just as Tetley agreed to become Erik Bruhn’s artistic associate at the National Ballet of Canada, Bruhn died. Tetley kept his word, took up the post, and stayed for five years. Continue reading “Retrospection”

Growing From Solid Roots

“Miniatures”
Les Ballets de Monte Carlo
Salle Garnier Opéra de Monte-Carlo
Monte-Carlo, Monaco
April 18, 2026

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2026 by Ilona Landgraf

1. Ensemble, “Résonances” by J.-C.Maillot, Les Ballets de Monte-Carlo 2026 © A.BlangeroLes Ballets de Monte-Carlo’s recent premiere, Miniatures, takes up the 2004 project of the same title. Back then, Bruno Mantovani, artistic director of the festival Printemps des Arts de Monte-Carlo and director of the Ensemble Orchestral Contemporain, challenged Le Ballets de Monte-Carlo’s artistic director, Jean-Christophe Maillot, with seven contemporary compositions. Each of them represented another mindscape; none was written for dance, and Maillot was tasked with choreographies. He was successful. Mantovani threw four new compositions commissioned for this year’s festival into the ring (and also played them with the Ensemble Orchestral Contemporain during the run of the program), which former and current dancers of the company put into dance. Two of Maillot’s 2004 works complemented the ninety-minute program. Continue reading “Growing From Solid Roots”

A Man of Mystery

“Pushkin”
Ballet of the Krasnoyarsk State Opera and Ballet Theatre
Hvorostovsky Krasnoyarsk State Opera and Ballet Theatre
Krasnoyarsk, Russia
March 15, 2026 (video)

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2026 by Ilona Landgraf

1. Y.Kudryavtsev (Pushkin) and ensemble, “Pushkin” by N.Dmitrievsky, Krasnoyarsk Ballet 2026 © E.Koryukin Three years after Catharsis Dante, the Moscow-based choreographer Nikita Dmitrievsky created a second piece, Pushkin, for the Krasnoyarsk Ballet. Its two densely pact acts deal with Russia’s literary hero, Alexander Pushkin (1799-1837), and his inner life and spiritual being. Except for the music, which is by Konstantin Borosov (his first ballet composition), Dmitrievsky was in charge of the entire production (i.e., the choreography, libretto, lighting, and set, costume, and video design). I had the opportunity to watch a video of the premiere, which took place on March 15th.

As the libretto comprises no fewer than twenty-seven scenes, becoming familiar with the synopsis in advance is highly recommended. Continue reading “A Man of Mystery”

A Conversation With Pavel Glukhov

Moscow, Russia
March 16, 2026 (video conference)

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2026 by Ilona Landgraf

1. Pavel Glukhov © Rust2DIn recent years, Pavel Glukhov has carved out a place for himself at the forefront of contemporary dance in Russia. Two of his latest pieces, Pavlova and Russian Character, were created for MuzArts; The Nutcracker. Not a Fairy Tale premiered with Ballet Moscow. Thanks to MuzArts’s executive producer, Daria Faezova, I was able to talk with him via video conference. Alexei Faezov kindly interpreted from Russian to English and vice versa.

What encouraged you to become a dancer? Were there any role models in your family or other sources of inspiration?
Actually, no one in my family is directly connected to art. I’m the only one. I started dancing around the age of nine. Once, when I was walking with a friend, we entered a culture club, which offered dancing classes, and I stayed there right away. I felt connected to it and liked it very much. Continue reading “A Conversation With Pavel Glukhov”

Unrealistic

“Nureyev”
State Ballet Berlin
Deutsche Oper
Berlin, Germany
March 21, 2026

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2026 by Ilona Landgraf

1. O.L.Biron (Christie’s auctioneer) and ensemble, “Nureyev” by Y.Possokhov and K.Serebrennikov, State Ballet Berlin 2026 © C.Quezada Last weekend, Yuri Possokhov’s and Kirill Serebrennikov’s joint production Nureyev premiered with the State Ballet Berlin. I remember well the piece’s 2017 world premiere at the Bolshoi Theatre and the troubles preceding it. In 2022, Nureyev was removed from the Bolshoi’s repertory following new Russian anti-LGBTQ+ legislation that made it illegal to promote the success and power of queer personalities, per Serebrennikov’s explanation.

Bringing this ballet back to life could have been a tribute to not only Rudolf Nureyev but also Russian ballet as well as a gift to the Bolshoi, which celebrates its 250th anniversary this year. Continue reading “Unrealistic”

The Benchmark

“Coppélia”
Bolshoi Ballet
Bolshoi Theatre (New Stage)
Moscow, Russia
February 21, 2026 (evening performance)

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2026 by Ilona Landgraf

1. E.Kokoreva (Swanilda) and D.Zakharov (Frantz), “Coppélia” by S.Vikharev after M.Petipa and E.Cecchetti, Bolshoi Ballet 2026 © Bolshoi Theatre/P.RychkovMy hopes on a new video release were raised when I noticed the cameraman at the Bolshoi Ballet’s performance of Coppélia, until he explained that the recording was for internal use only. It’ll set the bar high for future generations of dancers.

Sergei Vikharev’s production, which he said is the most complete and exact rendition of what Nicholas Sergeyev noted from his St. Petersburg memories (his manuscripts are stored at Harvard University), has been in the Bolshoi’s repertory since 2009. It preserves all the details that fell victim to artistic, financial, and producing conditions in many Western stagings. Continue reading “The Benchmark”

Restorative

“The Snow Maiden”
Ballet of the Stanislavsky and Nemirovich-Danchenko Moscow Music Theatre
Stanislavsky and Nemirovich-Danchenko Moscow Music Theatre
Moscow, Russia
February 21, 2026 (matinee)

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2026 by Ilona Landgraf

1. K.Ismagilova (Snow Maiden), S.Bukharaev (Father Frost), and ensemble; “The Snow Maiden” by V.Burmeister, Stanislavsky Ballet 2026 © MAMT/K.Zhitkova The legend of a girl made of snow who falls in love with a human but cannot survive the warmth of spring has its roots in Slavic mythology. The fairy tale entered the stage in 1873 when, due to the renovation of Moscow’s Maly Theatre, all three Imperial companies—drama, opera, and ballet—were accommodated by the Bolshoi Theatre. To seize the occasion, the management decided to unite them in a single fairy tale production. The Russian author Alexander Ostrovsky was commissioned for the libretto and Pyotr Tchaikovsky a composition. A few months later, Nikolay Rubinstein conducted the premiere. This marked the stage birth of The Snow Maiden. Nikolay Rimsky-Korsakov’s 1880/81 opera version is also based on Ostrovsky’s libretto. Continue reading “Restorative”

Recovery

“The Nutcracker. Not a Fairy Tale”
Ballet Moscow
Novaya Opera Theatre
Moscow, Russia
February 20, 2026

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2026 by Ilona Landgraf

1. D.Komlyakova (Clara), M.Isakov (Nathaniel as an adult), and ensemble, “The Nutcracker. Not a Fairy Tale” by P.Glukhov, Ballet Moscow 2026 © Novaya Opera Theatre/B.Annadurdyev The premiere of a new Nutcracker in late February sounded uncommon to my Western ears until I noticed the still festive decorations of Moscow’s streets and the growing piles of snow lining them. Snow also fell in Pavel Glukhov’s The Nutcracker. Not a Fairy Tale and much more fiercely than outside, as if to herald his version’s chilling content, the First World War. Told with warmth and ending happily, Glukhov’s Nutcracker has characteristics of a fairy tale but is recommended for children aged twelve and older. He choreographed it for Ballet Moscow, the home base of which is the Novaya Opera Theatre in the city center.

The story’s hero is Nathaniel, a figure E.T.A. Hoffmann created not for his The Nutcracker and the Mouse King but for his spooky The Sandman, which later served as the basis for Coppélia. A crossbreed between Coppelius, the Nutcracker, and Drosselmeyer, Glukhov’s Nathaniel is a puppet maker who specializes in wooden nutcrackers in military dress. Continue reading “Recovery”

Someone is in Control

“Master and Margarita”
Bolshoi Ballet
Bolshoi Theatre (New Stage)
Moscow, Russia
February 18/19, 2026

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2026 by Ilona Landgraf

1. I.Tsvirko (Master) and M.Vinogradova (Margarita), “Master and Margarita” by E.Clug, Bolshoi Ballet 2026 © Bolshoi Theatre/D.YusupovAround two years ago, I saw Edward Clug’s ballet adaptation of Mikhail Bulgakov’s novel The Master and Margarita at the Bolshoi Theatre and found it fabulous. Last week’s two performances corroborated my impression. They also reminded me that, however chaotic the world might get, there’s no need to worry; someone is in control. In Clug’s version, it’s the Satan alias Woland and his accomplices. That hell and heaven commonly coordinate their actions went by the board.

Bulgakov intertwined two storylines (one deals with the absurd mayhem caused by Woland and his entourage on a 1930 visit to Moscow, the other is an eyewitness account of the trial of Jesus of Nazareth under Pontius Pilate’s governance), which are connected by the Master (an unrecognized Muskovit author, i.e., Bulgakov’s alter ego) and his muse, Margarita. Continue reading “Someone is in Control”

Heavy

“Planida” (“Russian Character”/“Nerve”/“Francesca da Rimini”)
MuzArts
Maly Theatre
Moscow, Russia
February 16, 2026

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2026 by Ilona Landgraf

1. P.Sorokin (Yegor’s comrade), A.Putintsev (Yegor Dryomov), and G.Gusev (Yegor`s comrade); “Russian Character” by P.Glukhov, MuzArts 2026 © MuzArts/B.Annadurdiev 2. A.Putintsev (Yegor Dryomov), “Russian Character” by P.Glukhov, MuzArts 2026 © MuzArts/B.AnnadurdievDue to popular demand, MuzArts’ triple bill Planida returned to the Maly Theatre this Monday. I was previously familiar only with the video production. Seeing it live opened new perspectives.
The cast of Pavel Glukhov’s Russian Character was the same; Alexei Putintsev portrayed the tanker, Yegor Dryomov; Elizaveta Kokoreva danced his bride, Katya; Ekaterina Krysanova and Mikhail Lobukhin played Yegor’s parents; and Georgy Gusev and Ivan Sorokin performed the roles of Yegor’s comrades. Continue reading “Heavy”

“I’m a supporter of talented people”

“Marco Spada”
Bolshoi Ballet
Bolshoi Theatre (Historic Stage)
Moscow, Russia
February 15, 2026

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2026 by Ilona Landgraf

The Bolshoi Ballet has two choreographies by Pierre Lacotte (1932-2023) in its repertory: his recreation of Petipa’s La Fille du Pharaon (which he entrusted to no other company) and Marco Spada, a 1857 ballet d’action for the Paris Opéra by Joseph Mazilier to music by Daniel Auber, which was lost except for a few sketches and reviews. In 1981, Lacotte choreographed and staged it from scratch for the Teatro Dell’Opera di Roma with Rudolf Nureyev in the title role. Despite being peripatetic, Nureyev was so eager to participate in the production that he signed a contract on the tablecloth during a restaurant outing with Lacotte. “I, Rudolf Nureyev, guarantee that for the duration of a month I will attend daily rehearsals in Rome for the ballet Marco Spada,” he wrote.

Continue reading ““I’m a supporter of talented people””