Tag Archive: Georgy Gusev

An Opening Salute

“The Sleeping Beauty”
Bolshoi Ballet
Bolshoi Theatre
Moscow, Russia
September 07, 2024 (live stream)

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2024 by Ilona Landgraf

 1. Y.Ostrovsky (Catalabutte) and ensemble, “The Sleeping Beauty” by Y.Grigorovich after M.Petipa, Bolshoi Ballet 2024 © Bolshoi Theatre/P.Rychkov The Bolshoi Ballet opened its 249th season with a revival of Yuri Grigorovich’s The Sleeping Beauty, which has been absent from the stage for four years. Because of the thorough change of décor, the production was announced as a premiere. It swapped the opulent (and often criticized) sets and costumes that Ezio Frigerio and Franca Squarciapino designed for the 2011 revival (celebrating the reopening of the theater’s Historic Stage after six years of refurbishment) for the restrained décor that Simon Virsaladze (1909–1989) created for Grigorovich’s second version of the ballet in 1973. The subdued hues and aquarelle-ish style of its courtly surroundings direct the gaze toward the colorful costumes (recalling French court fashion from King Louis XIII’s to the Sun King, Louis XIV’s, reign), beautiful flower garlands and bouquets at Aurora’s birthday party, and, most importantly, the dancers and their performances. Raising the curtain didn’t elicit oohs and aahs from the audience as, for example, Jürgen Rose’s décor for Marcia Haydée’s Sleeping Beauty regularly has done on Western stages.
3. D.Khokhlova (Fairy of Tenderness) and S.Postnova (Fairy of Carelessness/Fleur de Farine), “The Sleeping Beauty” by Y.Grigorovich after M.Petipa, Bolshoi Ballet 2024 © Bolshoi Theatre/P.Rychkov 2. M.Koshkaryova (Fairy of Audacity), A.Kovalyova (Lilac Fairy), D.Khokhlova (Fairy of Tenderness), U.Moksheva (Fairy of Tenderness), and ensemble, “The Sleeping Beauty” by Y.Grigorovich after M.Petipa, Bolshoi Ballet 2024 © Bolshoi Theatre/P.Rychkov But in stern times like these, focusing on the substance—inner values and beauty—rather than on pompous veneer seems the right choice. The substance lies in Petipa’s choreography upon which Grigorovich built his interpretation. An epitome of the classics, The Sleeping Beauty has always been a pillar of the Bolshoi Ballet’s repertory since Alexander Gorsky brought Petipa’s production from St.Petersburg’s imperial stage to Moscow in 1899.

4. D.Savin (Carabosse), A.Loparevich (King Florestan), A.Meskova (Queen), and ensemble; “The Sleeping Beauty” by Y.Grigorovich after M.Petipa, Bolshoi Ballet 2024 © Bolshoi Theatre/P.Rychkov 5. A.Kovalyova (Lilac Fairy), S.Postnova (Fairy of Carelessness/Fleur de Farine), U.Moksheva (Fairy of Generosity), M.Koshkaryova (Fairy of Audacity), D.Khokhlova (Fairy of Tenderness), and E.Klyavlina (Fairy of Playfulness); “The Sleeping Beauty” by Y.Grigorovich after M.Petipa, Bolshoi Ballet 2024 © Bolshoi Theatre/P.Rychkov Makhar Vaziev, the Bolshoi Ballet’s artistic director, is notorious for his top-notch standards, and his confidence in the dancers was such that the premiere was streamed live. There were no warm-up performances, but it began at full-throttle as if the paragon of Russian culture opened the new season with a nationwide salute. That this culture is treasured in Russia was not least underscored by the Minister of Culture, Olga Lyubimova, who delivered words of welcome to the online audience during the break. Other audience interviewees included Sergei Novikov, Chief of the Presidential Directorate for Social Projects, and Kirill Kleimyonov, member of the board of directors of Russia’s Channel One, who accompanied his two little children to the performance.
7. E.Kokoreva (Princess Aurora), M.Orlov (Prince Charmant), A.Vodopetov (Prince Cheri), and ensemble; “The Sleeping Beauty” by Y.Grigorovich after M.Petipa, Bolshoi Ballet 2024 © Bolshoi Theatre/P.Rychkov 6. Ensemble, “The Sleeping Beauty” by Y.Grigorovich after M.Petipa, Bolshoi Ballet 2024 © Bolshoi Theatre/P.Rychkov From behind the curtain, Katerina Novikova, head of the press office, contributed further interviews with Vaziev and several dancers. Valery Gergiev, general director of the Bolshoi, also welcomed the online audience and conducted Tchaikovsky’s score himself. The camera caught him during the prologue, every nuance of which seemed to emanate from the maestro’s gaze and fingers before being realized perfectly by the orchestra.
8. E.Kokoreva (Princess Aurora) and ensemble, “The Sleeping Beauty” by Y.Grigorovich after M.Petipa, Bolshoi Ballet 2024 © Bolshoi Theatre/P.Rychkov9. E.Kokoreva (Princess Aurora), E.Khromushin (Prince Fleur de Pois), M.Chino (Prince Fortune), and ensemble; “The Sleeping Beauty” by Y.Grigorovich after M.Petipa, Bolshoi Ballet 2024 © Bolshoi Theatre/P.Rychkov Several dancers made their debut during the first run of The Sleeping Beauty. At the premiere, Elizaveta Kokoreva stepped on stage as Princess Aurora for the first time. As she descended the stairs to join her birthday party, she resembled the sunrise incarnate, her charm and kindness warming everyone’s heart. Though slightly tense at times, Kokoreva’s Aurora confirmed that she must have been born for dance. The beauty that lies within her is so perfect that it feels precious.
As Prince Désiré, Artem Ovcharenko dashed out of the autumnal forest like a winged arrow. His ease and prowess were mind-boggling, and he clearly enjoyed being back on stage.
11. E.Kokoreva (Princess Aurora) and ensemble, “The Sleeping Beauty” by Y.Grigorovich after M.Petipa, Bolshoi Ballet 2024 © Bolshoi Theatre/P.Rychkov 10. E.Kokoreva (Princess Aurora), M.Orlov (Prince Charmant), and ensemble; “The Sleeping Beauty” by Y.Grigorovich after M.Petipa, Bolshoi Ballet 2024 © Bolshoi Theatre/P.Rychkov An epitome of the eternal good, Alyona Kovalyova’s Lilac Fairy was unfazed by any worldly hardship. Her spacious, unpretentious movements and calm smile left no doubt of her generosity. Her counterpart Carabosse, fabulously danced by Denis Savin, swaggered across the stage, hunchbacked but agile. The moment Carabosse, full of scorn and spite, left behind Aurora’s baby cradle, it was apparent that she would not make out well at the end of this fairy tale. However, the good outweighed the evil from the start, as the Lilac Fairy was supported by an entourage of five. The wide port de bras of the Fairy of Tenderness (Daria Khokhlova) bestowed kind warmth on the newborn. Fleur de Farine (Stanislava Postnova), boisterous and cheeky, seemed to tell her “Life is joy—go for it!” while the Fairy of Generosity (Uliyana Moksheva) suggested taking life easily because it has much in store.
12. A.Ovcharenko (Prince Désiré) and ensemble, “The Sleeping Beauty” by Y.Grigorovich after M.Petipa, Bolshoi Ballet 2024 © Bolshoi Theatre/P.Rychkov 13. D.Savin (Carabosse) and ensemble, “The Sleeping Beauty” by Y.Grigorovich after M.Petipa, Bolshoi Ballet 2024 © Bolshoi Theatre/P.Rychkov The sheer joy of Ekaterina Klyavlina’s Fairy of Playfulness was infectious even on screen. She was the giddiest canary I’ve ever seen. The precision with which Maria Koshkaryova’s Fairy of Audacity gazed along her sharply pointed fingers confirmed what had been obvious throughout: this Sleeping Beauty had been prepared with painstaking attention to detail.

15. S.Postnova (White Pussy Cat) and G.Gusev (Puss in Boots), “The Sleeping Beauty” by Y.Grigorovich after M.Petipa, Bolshoi Ballet 2024 © Bolshoi Theatre/P.Rychkov 14. D.Khokhlova (Cinderella) and I.Gorelkin (Prince),“The Sleeping Beauty” by Y.Grigorovich after M.Petipa, Bolshoi Ballet 2024 © Bolshoi Theatre/P.Rychkov Perhaps that was the reason Margarita Shrayner’s Fairy of Diamonds seemed busy performing exact steps at the wedding ceremony rather than molding her solo into a graceful whole. The other jewels—Ekaterina Varlamova (Sapphire), Kristina Petrova (Gold), and Uliyana Mokhseva (Silver) formed a fleet-footed unity. Klim Efimov drew on all his resources to present a flawless Bluebird alongside Anastasia Stashkevich’s capricious Princess Florine. Igor Gorelkin portrayed the lucky prince who found the shoe that freed Cinderella (Daria Khokhlova). The unsuspecting Little Red Riding Hood of Maria Mishina inevitably ended in the clutches of Nikita Kapustin’s Gray Wolf, but White Pussy Cat (Stanislava Postnova), sometimes prickly, sometimes cuddly, ditched the hapless Puss in Boots (Georgy Gusev).
16. A.Stashkevich (Princess Florine) and K.Efimov (Bluebird), “The Sleeping Beauty” by Y.Grigorovich after M.Petipa, Bolshoi Ballet 2024 © Bolshoi Theatre/P.Rychkov 17. A.Ovcharenko (Prince Désiré) and E.Kokoreva (Princess Aurora), “The Sleeping Beauty” by Y.Grigorovich after M.Petipa, Bolshoi Ballet 2024 © Bolshoi Theatre/P.Rychkov Alexei Loparevich and Anastasia Meskova played King Florestan and his Queen. Their master of ceremonies, Catalabutte, whose forgetfulness determined Aurora’s fate, was danced by Yuri Ostrovsky. The four princes (Alexander Vodopetov, Mark Orlov, Mark Chino, and Egor Khromushin) who vied for Aurora’s hand couldn’t be distinguished by their robes, but all seemed reputable. The corps was in fine, but not yet splendid, shape.
18. E.Kokoreva (Princess Aurora), A.Ovcharenko (Prince Désiré), A.Kovalyova (Lilac Fairy), and ensemble; “The Sleeping Beauty” by Y.Grigorovich after M.Petipa, Bolshoi Ballet 2024 © Bolshoi Theatre/P.Rychkov

Link: Website of the Bolshoi Theatre
Photos: 1. Yuri Ostrovsky (Catalabutte) and ensemble, “The Sleeping Beauty” by Yuri Grigorovich after Marius Petipa, Bolshoi Ballet 2024
2. Maria Koshkaryova (Fairy of Audacity), Alyona Kovalyova (Lilac Fairy), Daria Khokhlova (Fairy of Tenderness), Uliyana Moksheva (Fairy of Tenderness), and ensemble, “The Sleeping Beauty” by Yuri Grigorovich after Marius Petipa, Bolshoi Ballet 2024
3. Daria Khokhlova (Fairy of Tenderness) and Stanislava Postnova (Fairy of Carelessness/Fleur de Farine), “The Sleeping Beauty” by Yuri Grigorovich after Marius Petipa, Bolshoi Ballet 2024
4. Denis Savin (Carabosse), Alexei Loparevich (King Florestan), Anastasia Meskova (Queen), and ensemble; “The Sleeping Beauty” by Yuri Grigorovich after Marius Petipa, Bolshoi Ballet 2024
5. Alyona Kovalyova (Lilac Fairy), Stanislava Postnova (Fairy of Carelessness/Fleur de Farine), Uliyana Moksheva (Fairy of Generosity), Maria Koshkaryova (Fairy of Audacity), Daria Khokhlova (Fairy of Tenderness), and Ekaterina Klyavlina (Fairy of Playfulness); “The Sleeping Beauty” by Yuri Grigorovich after Marius Petipa, Bolshoi Ballet 2024
6. Ensemble, “The Sleeping Beauty” by Yuri Grigorovich after Marius Petipa, Bolshoi Ballet 2024
7. Elizaveta Kokoreva (Princess Aurora), Mark Orlov (Prince Charmant), Alexander Vodopetov (Prince Cheri), and ensemble; “The Sleeping Beauty” by Yuri Grigorovich after Marius Petipa, Bolshoi Ballet 2024
8. Elizaveta Kokoreva (Princess Aurora) and ensemble, “The Sleeping Beauty” by Yuri Grigorovich after Marius Petipa, Bolshoi Ballet 2024
9. Elizaveta Kokoreva (Princess Aurora), Egor Khromushin (Prince Fleur de Pois), Mark Chino (Prince Fortune), and ensemble; “The Sleeping Beauty” by Yuri Grigorovich after Marius Petipa, Bolshoi Ballet 2024
10. Elizaveta Kokoreva (Princess Aurora), Mark Orlov (Prince Charmant), and ensemble; “The Sleeping Beauty” by Yuri Grigorovich after Marius Petipa, Bolshoi Ballet 2024
11. Elizaveta Kokoreva (Princess Aurora) and ensemble, “The Sleeping Beauty” by Yuri Grigorovich after Marius Petipa, Bolshoi Ballet 2024
12. Artem Ovcharenko (Prince Désiré) and ensemble, “The Sleeping Beauty” by Yuri Grigorovich after Marius Petipa, Bolshoi Ballet 2024
13. Denis Savin (Carabosse) and ensemble, “The Sleeping Beauty” by Yuri Grigorovich after Marius Petipa, Bolshoi Ballet 2024
14. Daria Khokhlova (Cinderella) and Igor Gorelkin (Prince),“The Sleeping Beauty” by Yuri Grigorovich after Marius Petipa, Bolshoi Ballet 2024
15. Stanislava Postnova (White Pussy Cat) and Georgy Gusev (Puss in Boots), “The Sleeping Beauty” by Yuri Grigorovich after Marius Petipa, Bolshoi Ballet 2024
16. Anastasia Stashkevich (Princess Florine) and Klim Efimov (Bluebird), “The Sleeping Beauty” by Yuri Grigorovich after Marius Petipa, Bolshoi Ballet 2024
17. Artem Ovcharenko (Prince Désiré) and Elizaveta Kokoreva (Princess Aurora), “The Sleeping Beauty” by Yuri Grigorovich after Marius Petipa, Bolshoi Ballet 2024
18. Elizaveta Kokoreva (Princess Aurora), Artem Ovcharenko (Prince Désiré), Alyona Kovalyova (Lilac Fairy), and ensemble; “The Sleeping Beauty” by Yuri Grigorovich after Marius Petipa, Bolshoi Ballet 2024
all photos © Bolshoi Theatre/Pavel Rychkov
Editing: Kayla Kauffman

 

Intense

“Romeo and Juliet”
Bolshoi Ballet
Bolshoi Theatre (Historic Stage)
Moscow, Russia
April 04, 2024 (video)

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2024 by Ilona Landgraf

1. D.Efremov (Montague's Servant), I.Alexeyev (Benvolio), M.Lobukhin (Tybalt), and ensemble; “Romeo and Juliet” by L.Lavrovsky, Bolshoi Ballet 2024 © Bolshoi Ballet / D.YusupovIn early April, the Bolshoi Ballet revived Leonid Lavrovsky’s Romeo and Juliet, which senior balletomanes may remember from the company’s famous tours of London and the Met in the 1950s and ‘60s. Galina Ulanova, Raisa Strutchkova, Vladimir Vasiliev, Maris Liepa, and many others wrote ballet history dancing the leading roles. I couldn’t attend the premiere in Moscow but was finally able to watch a video of the opening night. It made me wonder why the production had been dropped from the schedule. (more…)

A Grand Spectacle

“La Fille du Pharaon”
Bolshoi Ballet
Bolshoi Theatre
Moscow, Russia
February 16, 2024

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2024 by Ilona Landgraf

1. M.Mishina (Ramze), E.Kokoreva (Aspicia), and ensemble; “La Fille du Pharaon” by P.Lacotte, Bolshoi Ballet 2024 © Bolshoi Ballet / D.Yusupov The Bolshoi Ballet’s La Fille du Pharaon is about an Egyptian pipe dream—and it felt like a dream indeed. I was already impressed in 2019 when I watched it for the first time. Five years later, the cultural landscape has changed so much that its magnificence seems surreal. It highlights the extent to which the paths of Western and Russian cultures have diverged. While European culture finds itself on shaky grounds, the Bolshoi stands firm as a rock. The critics who argue that Pierre Lacotte’s recreation of Marius Petipa’s La Fille du Pharaon (1862) is like unearthing a dusty ballet mummy are wrong. True, the piece’s libretto (which is based on Theophile Gautier’s 1857 Le Roman de la Momie and was edited by Lacotte) is flimsy. Hearty drags on an opium pipe transport a traveling Englishman and his servant to the pyramids during the reign of a mighty pharaoh. This pharaoh has a daughter who instantly falls in love with the Englishman. After some adventurous trouble (including the dispatch of a lion, a last-minute escape, a nearly murderous assault, a suicide attempt, and the hero’s near execution), the lovers are happily united. But – alas! Upon awakening, (more…)

Fiendishly Fine

“Master and Margarita”
Bolshoi Ballet
Bolshoi Theatre (New Stage)
Moscow, Russia
October 29, 2023 (matinee)

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2023 by Ilona Landgraf

1. A.Ovcharenko (Master) and E.Krysanova (Margarita), “Master and Margarita” by E.Clug, Bolshoi Ballet 2023 © Bolshoi Ballet / Batyr Anadurdiev I was skeptical whether Edward Clug was the right choice to tackle Mikhail Bulgakov’s novel “The Master and Margarita”. A Russian choreographer seemed better equipped to adapt this landmark of Soviet literature for the ballet stage than a Romanian-born working in Maribor, Slovenia. Two years after its premiere at the Bolshoi Theatre, I was able to watch Clug’s “Master and Margarita” – and my reservations were proven thoroughly wrong. It’s a fabulous blend of entertainment and food for thought, brimful of metaphors and allusions. Yuri Possokhov, Clug’s Russian colleague, currently preparing a new piece for the Bolshoi, is full of appreciation for “Master and Margarita” as well. I met him at another performance where he told me that Clug understands the Russian soul perfectly well.

Interestingly, Clug, together with Christian Spuck (then artistic director of Zurich Ballet) intended to stage “Master and Margarita” in Zurich in 2015, but their plan was thwarted when the theater’s research revealed that ticket sales would be uncertain because the Zurich audience wasn’t familiar with Bulgakov’s novel. Destiny brought the Bolshoi Ballet’s artistic director Makhar Vaziev to the scene who decided to stage the piece in Moscow.

A lifetime could be spent exploring Bulgakov’s political and social satire and the biblical questions raised by the novel. In short “The Master and Margarita” (published only after Bulgakov’s death in 1940, first in an edited serial form in 1966/67 and uncensored in 1973) intertwines two plots: (1) the mayhem caused by the Satan (alias Professor Woland) and his entourage when visiting Moscow in the 1930s, and (2) the trial of Jesus of Nazareth in Jerusalem during Pontius Pilate’s governance. The connecting link is the Master, a Muscovite author (and Bulgakov’s alter ego) whose latest manuscript tells the Jerusalem plot. Margarita is the woman who loves him and – unlike Moscow’s critics – his work. (more…)

Hot!

“Don Quixote”
Bolshoi Ballet
Bolshoi Theatre
Moscow, Russia
April 5, 2023

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2023 by Ilona Landgraf

1. A.Putintsev (Basilio), E.Kokoreva (Kitri), and ensemble, “Don Quixote” by A.Fadeechev after M.Petipa, Bolshoi Ballet 2023 © Bolshoi Theatre / D.Yusupov “The Bolshoi Ballet” is synonymous with excellence – and if anyone can pull off “Don Quixote”, it’s them. This past Wednesday, though, the company left me flabbergasted. Pavel Klinichev wasted no time at the conductor’s podium, unleashing Ludwig Minkus’s score the instant he turned to face the orchestra. The effervescent pacing of the first few bars made clear that this “Don Quixote” would be a spicy one.
From the first moment that the goateed Don Quixote (Alexey Loparevich) and his loyal, oft-gluttonous squire Sancho Panza (Georgy Gusev) set off on their chivalrous journey, Valeriy Levental’s set transported us to the sizzling cauldron of the jam-packed port of Barcelona. Everything is perfect: the turquoise Mediterranean Sea glints under the bright summer sun; fresh fruit is piled sky-high; and the local youth remain in the merriest of moods. The happiest of all, Kitri (Elizaveta Kokoreva) and Basilio (Alexey Putintsev), quickly bring the scene to a boil. Kokoreva’s Kitri sweeps onstage like a torpedo, her fleet-footed legs and teasing fan leaving a trail of sparks. Klinichev’s brisk conducting seemed to spur rather than challenge her. I especially admired Kokoreva’s rock-solid balances – from which she descended only to hurl herself into a battery of snappy pirouettes. (more…)

Transcendent

“The Nutcracker”
Bolshoi Ballet
Bolshoi Theatre
Moscow, Russia
December 29, 2022 (matinee and evening performance)

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2023 by Ilona Landgraf

1. V.Bessonova (Colombine), “The Nutcracker” by Y.Grigorovich, Bolshoi Ballet 2022 © Bolshoi Ballet / M.LogvinovAfter meeting him at a guest performance with Les Ballets de Monte Carlo six years ago, the Bolshoi’s Semyon Chudin suggested that I see their “Nutcracker” in Moscow. Year after year, one thing or another has prevented me from getting to the Bolshoi at Christmastime. Finally, this year, it happened: on the edge of New Year’s Eve, I watched a matinee and an evening performance.

The Bolshoi’s “Nutcracker” dates back to 1966 – qualifying it neither as trendy nor hip by today’s standards. Perhaps Makhar Vaziev, the company’s artistic director, has kept it in the repertoire for a number of reasons: out of respect for tradition; out of respect for the ballet’s choreographer – Yuri Grigorovich – one of the company’s formative figures; and out of respect for the crowd-pleasing nature of the piece that leads to sold out performances now as ever. (more…)

Pipe Dreams

“La Fille du Pharaon”
Bolshoi Ballet
Bolshoi Theatre
Moscow, Russia
March 08, 2019 (matinee and evening performance)

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2019 by Ilona Landgraf

1. E. Obraztsova, “La Fille du Pharaon” by P. Lacotte, Bolshoi Ballet 2019 © Bolshoi Ballet / D. Yusupov Aspicia, the heroine in Petipa’s “La Fille du Pharaon”, was a highly coveted role among ballerinas. Carolina Rosati, an Italian ballerina whose insistence propelled the ballet to creation, danced Aspicia at the world premiere in St. Petersburg in 1862. Mathilde Kschessinska, the unofficial queen of St. Petersburg’s Imperial Theatres, claimed the role as hers at the 1898 revival – meaning that it was like a revolution when the role was given to Anna Pavlova in 1906. “La Fille du Pharaon” was Petipa’s first significant choreographic success. Pierre Lacotte’s take on the ballet for the Bolshoi Ballet in 2000 was a tribute to Petipa and to the famous ballerinas who had shared their knowledge about Aspicia with Lacotte: Lyubov Egorova, Mathilde Kschessinska, and Olga Spesivtseva.

The ballet’s rambling narrative is loosely based on Théophile Gautier’s 1857 novel “The Romance of a Mummy”. Fueled by opium, an English explorer imagines a slew of adventures with Aspicia, the daughter of an Egyptian pharaoh. Aspicia, a mummy, resurrected from her sarcophagus, goes hunting and is saved from a lion’s wrath by the heroic Egyptian Taor (the Englishman), with whom she naturally falls in love. The duo, contending with Aspicia’s forced marriage to the King of Nubia, elopes to an idyllic fishing village. There, they are met by further hazards: suicide attempts, a detour to the underwater realm of the God of the river Nile, and more. Finally, Aspicia and Taor are reunited and happily married – until at the height of the rejoicing, the Englishman awakes from his dream. (more…)

Universal Love

“Romeo and Juliet”
Bolshoi Ballet
Bolshoi Theatre
Moscow, Russia
November 25, 2017

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2017 by Ilona Landgraf

1. V.Lopatin and A.Stashkevich, "Romeo and Juliet" by A.Ratmansky, Bolshoi Ballet 2017 © Bolshoi Ballet / E.Fetisova Last week the Bolshoi Ballet added a second version of “Romeo and Juliet” to its repertoire. By Alexei Ratmansky, it premiered at the National Ballet of Canada in 2011 and is being performed on the New Stage of the Bolshoi Theatre. As during recent years, Yuri Grigorovich’s adaption will be shown on the Bolshoi’s Historic Stage.
Ratmansky cast three leading couples: Ekaterina Krysanova & Vladislav Lantratov; Anastasia Stashkevich & Vyacheslav Lopatin; and Evgenia Obraztsova & Artemy Belyakov; however the pairings switched in the course of the first run. I saw the fourth performance after the premiere; Stashkevich was Juliet alongside Lopatin’s Romeo. (more…)

Maillot’s Idea of How to Tame

Taming of the Shrew”
Bolshoi Ballet
Royal Opera House
London, Great Britain
August 03, 2016

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2016 by Ilona Landgraf

1. E.Krysanova and V.Lantratov, “The Taming of the Shrew” by J.-C.Maillot, Bolshoi Ballet © M.Logvinov/Bolshoi TheatreThe Bolshoi Ballet’s three-week tour to London draws crowds of ballet aficionados to the Royal Opera House. Every evening each of the five productions is sold out. Those include the much-loved classics, “Swan Lake”, “Don Quixote” and “Le Corsaire”, as well as “The Flames of Paris” by Alexei Ratmansky and Jean-Christophe Maillot’s “The Taming of the Shrew” which premiered two years ago at the Bolshoi. “Shrew” was scheduled only twice. I saw the first performance.

Similar to Kurt-Heinz Stolze’s Scarlatti-pastiche for John Cranko’s “Shrew”, Maillot also cobbled together the score. He assembled less well known film music and excerpts of symphonies by Dmitri Shostakovich which go along with the events on stage like lubricating oil. Whether swooshing or romantic, the Orchestra of the Bolshoi Theatre under Igor Dronov’s baton played with verve.

The story sets off at the estate of Baptista, a wealthy lord in Padua. But the two broad, curved outdoor stairs arching over the house’s entrance, designed by Ernest Pignon-Ernest, don’t relate to any specific town. Baptista is beset with two daughters, the prickly Katharina and her younger sister, the much-adored Bianca. But the latter will not be allowed to marry until Katharina first wears her wedding ring. (more…)