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. Margarita loves the Master’s latest work, a historic novel about Pontius Pilate, but Moscow’s literary critics lambast it. Desperate and embittered, he burns the manuscript and checks in at Professor Stravinsky’s psychiatric clinic. There, he meets a fellow patient, the young author 2. D.Savin (Master) and M.Kryuchkov (Ivan Bezdomny), “Master and Margarita” by E.Clug, Bolshoi Ballet 2026 © Bolshoi Theatre/D.YusupovIvan Bezdomny, who seems over the edge after falling victim to Woland. Over time, the Master tells him his life story. Meanwhile, Margarita deals with the devil to be reunited with the Master. She turns into a witch, avenges the damning review, attends Blockula Night, and then transforms into the queen of Woland’s annual spring ball. Her ordeal frees the Master, but his melancholy doesn’t fade. To grant the lovers peace, Woland orders them killed. Before both settle in the calm limbo realm between heaven and hell, the Master finishes his novel by redeeming Pontius Pilate.

Clug drops the biblical part except for the figure of Pontius Pilate. A marble figure chiseled by the Master, he represents both his painstaking effort to write literature and the latter’s historic content. Having come to life, Pontius Pilate has a brief gig at Likhodeyev’s variety theater and returns to the Master after the critics reject his manuscript and drag him 3. A.Turazashvili (Hella), G.Yanin (George Bengalsky), V.Lopatin (Behemoth), and ensemble, “Master and Margarita” by E.Clug, Bolshoi Ballet 2026 © Bolshoi Theatre/E.Fetisova onto their critics’ bench (which serves as the bier of Berlioz’s funeral in the previous scene). Lying on the upended bench, his arms hanging sideways, the Master resembled a crucified man. Pontius Pilate found him collapsed on the ground and surrounded by his scattered manuscript. With hammer and chisel in hand, Pilate put some final touches to the writing. Then his hammer seemed to drive the nails of the Master’s cross home, but it achieved the opposite and freed him. In Pilate’s hands, the manuscript (which by then had been arduously collected by Margarita and safeguarded by Woland’s sidekicks) became history when Pontius Pilate disappeared in a tombstone slab (which until then had represented the mattress of the Master’s and Margarita’s dwelling).

4. M.Kryuchkov (Ivan Bezdomny) and ensemble, “Master and Margarita” by E.Clug, Bolshoi Ballet 2026 © Bolshoi Theatre/D.YusupovMargarita’s transformation was similarly fascinating. Azazello’s magic cream metamorphosed her in seconds into a golden blonde femme fatale, who joined numerous lookalikes in their flight across the Blockula (in fact, only the rose chiffon strap dresses, attached to hangers on thin ropes, flew up and down). Hell’s bathtub worked its alchemy, transforming Margarita into Satan’s queen. Steam clouds accompanied her as she reemerged from its depth, her voluptuous curls flowing onto a red, velvet coat dress, out of which she quickly slipped (costume design by Leo Kulaš).

Clug added more to the countless absurdities caused by Bulgakov’s Woland, most prominently a dry swimming pool spanned by a vaulted ceiling (set design by Marco Japelj) that harbored all action. A bench turned it into Patriarch’s Pond (where Woland sneaked into Berlioz’s and Bezdomny’s conversation), a hospital cod into Professor Stravinsky’s psychiatric clinic, and a mattress into the variety theater’s director Likhodeyev’s apartment, where he slept off his hangover. The presence of Woland completely derailed Likhodeyev and ensured Woland’s subsequent black magic show at said variety. In the meantime, Likodeyev was miraculously transported to far-away Yalta, where he sat on the beach (i.e., on a brown blanket) with a sand shovel and bucket. Behemoth, the black cat of Woland’s crew, left its mark in the cat litter he poured between Likodeyev’s legs.

5. D.Savin (Master) and ensemble, “Master and Margarita” by E.Clug, Bolshoi Ballet 2026 © Bolshoi Theatre/E.FetisovaThe swimming pool marked the route of the tram that ran over and beheaded Berlioz and turned into the Moskva River (through which Bezdomny swam when chasing Behemoth), the literary elite’s headquarters at Groboyedev House (where Bezdomny was derided for his report about having met the devil), and the late Berlioz’s flat, which by then Woland and consorts occupied. When opened, the pool’s many doors revealed side plots (a screaming woman who was startled about being exposed while taking a shower, the corrupt Bosoy—Berlioz’s house manager— triumphantly waving bundles of dollar bills while sitting on the toilet, and Poplavsky calling from a telephone booth to claim the inheritance of his uncle Berlioz’s flat) or served as storage rooms for props and clothes. The doors represented the entrances of the variety theater and the gates of hell through which the corpses visiting Woland’s ball wriggled, their arms smeared with blood. At times, closed doors imprisoned the protagonists.
6. D.Savin (Master) and M.Lobukhin (Pontius Pilate), “Master and Margarita” by E.Clug, Bolshoi Ballet 2026 © Bolshoi Theatre/E.FetisovaIn preparation for the ball, the backdrop opened to reveal a diving tower with a platform from which Woland oversaw the goings-on like a mastermind.

The score, which combines music by Alfred Schnittke and Milko Lazar and is played by the Bolshoi orchestra under the batons of Ayrat Kashaev and Anton Gishanin, evoked Pilate’s time with sacral-like singing of male bass voices and accompanied Woland’s activities with Schnittke’s Concerto for Piano and Strings, among others. Its grotesque cacophony interspersed with moments of clarity, somnambulistic passages followed by violent outbursts, and feverishly high-pitched violins created an eerie suspense. At times, the sound was reminiscent of shattering glass.

7. E.Krysanova (Margarita) and V.Lantratov (Woland), “Master and Margarita” by E.Clug, Bolshoi Ballet 2026 © Bolshoi Theatre/E.Fetisova8. M.Vinogradova (Margarita) and S.Chudin (Woland), “Master and Margarita” by E.Clug, Bolshoi Ballet 2026 © Bolshoi Theatre/D.YusupovIgor Tsvirko and Denis Savin portrayed the Master as a melancholic artist with a sensitive soul. The broad-shouldered Savin’s Master was especially commiserable when he stood stooped and enfeebled, his eyes fixed to his manuscript. Both Margaritas (Kristina Kretova and Maria Vinogradova) indulged in it as well as in their femininity with Satan. The most striking aspect of Vladislav Lantratov’s Woland was his sleekness. When standing motionless, his black, slim figure blended so perfectly with the environment that one forgot about his presence. Semyon Chudin’s Woland’s chilling, needle-sharp precision of his interventions was prominent.

As the quicksilver Behemoth, Georgy Gusev and Vyacheslav Lopatin caused mischief whenever possible. Egor Gerashchenko and Dmitry Dorokhov, unmistakable in their black-and-white checkered suits, portrayed Behemoth’s buddy Fagot. Woland’s hatchet man, the top-headed Azazello, was danced by Alexander Smoliyaninov and Igor Pugachyov. Angelina Vlashinets and Antonina Chapkina wriggled their curves as hell’s red-haired Hella. The man from the past, Pontius Pilate, was portrayed by Alexander Vodopetov and Mikhail Lobukhin. Klim Efimov and Mikhail Kryuchkov played the maddened poet Bezdomny. The oil that made poor Berlioz (Evgeny Triposkiadis and Alexei Matrakhov) slip under the tram was spilled by Ksenia Averina’s and Vlada Zakharova’s Annushkas.
Links: Website of the Bolshoi Theatre
Ticket to the Bolshoi Master and Margarita
Photos: (Some photos show a different cast.)
1. Igor Tsvirko (Master) and Maria Vinogradova (Margarita), “Master and Margarita” by Edward Clug, Bolshoi Ballet 2026 © Bolshoi Theatre/Damir Yusupov
2. Denis Savin (Master) and Mikhail Kryuchkov (Ivan Bezdomny), “Master and Margarita” by Edward Clug, Bolshoi Ballet 2026 © Bolshoi Theatre/Damir Yusupov
3. Ana Turazashvili (Hella), Gennady Yanin (George Bengalsky), Vyacheslav Lopatin (Behemoth), and ensemble, “Master and Margarita” by Edward Clug, Bolshoi Ballet 2026 © Bolshoi Theatre/Elena Fetisova
4. Mikhail Kryuchkov (Ivan Bezdomny) and ensemble, “Master and Margarita” by Edward Clug, Bolshoi Ballet 2026 © Bolshoi Theatre/Damir Yusupov
5. Denis Savin (Master) and ensemble, “Master and Margarita” by Edward Clug, Bolshoi Ballet 2026 © Bolshoi Theatre/Elena Fetisova
6. Denis Savin (Master) and Mikhail Lobukhin (Pontius Pilate), “Master and Margarita” by Edward Clug, Bolshoi Ballet 2026 © Bolshoi Theatre/Elena Fetisova
7. Ekaterina Krysanova (Margarita) and Vladislav Lantratov (Woland), “Master and Margarita” by Edward Clug, Bolshoi Ballet 2026 © Bolshoi Theatre/Elena Fetisova
8. Maria Vinogradova (Margarita) and Semyon Chudin (Woland), “Master and Margarita” by Edward Clug, Bolshoi Ballet 2026 © Bolshoi Theatre/Damir Yusupov
Editing: Kayla Kauffman

 

Lasting Icons

“Two Annas”
MuzArts
Tovstonogov Bolshoi Drama Theatre
St. Petersburg, Russia
December 2025 (video)

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2025 by Ilona Landgraf

 1. P.Malikova (Anna Akhmatova), E.Sevenard (Anna Akhmatova), and D.Potaptsev (Nikolai Gumilev), “Akhmatova” by Y.Possokhov, MuzArts 2025 © Diaghilev P.S. Festival/M.Vilchuk The production company MuzArts, founded in 2014 to showcase the Bolshoi Ballet’s prima ballerina, Svetlana Zakharova, has grown into a vital force of Russia’s ballet scene. Their recent production, Two Annas, was supported by the Diaghilev P.S. International Festival of Arts, a prominent, intercultural, cross-genre event that has been held in St. Petersburg since 2009. Two Annas premiered at St. Petersburg’s Tovstonogov Bolshoi Drama Theatre this February and received its Moscow premiere at the Maly Theatre. Thanks to the MuzArts’s director, Yuri Baranov, I was able to watch a video of the production. Continue reading “Lasting Icons”

“We Need Him”

“Diaghilev”
Dancers of the Bolshoi Ballet
Bolshoi Theatre (New Stage)
Moscow, Russia
June 24, 2025 (video)

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2025 by Ilona Landgraf

1. A.Meskova (Gypsy Woman) and D.Rodkin (Sergei Diaghilev), “Diaghilev” by A.Kaggedzhi, Dancers of the Bolshoi Ballet 2025 © G.Galantnyi  2. D.Rodkin (Sergei Diaghilev), “Diaghilev” by A.Kaggedzhi, Dancers of the Bolshoi Ballet 2025 © G.Galantnyi  The man in need whom Sergei Lifar wrote about in 1939 was Sergei Diaghilev (1872-1929), impresario of the Ballets Russes and a revolutionist of ballet. Diaghilev’s burning passion to discover and promote creative beauty is unequaled. He shaped the perception of Russian culture in the West and, like a virus, changed the DNA of twentieth-century art. Without him, Vaslav Nijinsky, Tamara Karsavina, Ida Rubinstein, Feodor Chaliapin, and Igor Stravinsky wouldn’t have become known to the world, and the careers of choreographers, such as Michel Fokine, Bronislava Nijinska, Léonide Massine, and George Balanchine, might have taken another path. Ten years after Diaghilev’s death, no one had filled the void he had left behind.

Ninety-six years later, a new Diaghilev has yet to be found, but—as Russia and the West separated again—the need for a bridge-building spirit and culture that unites people across borders is more pressing than ever. That’s why Russia launched the cultural search festival We Need Diaghilev last year, which features various expositions, lectures, and performances at Russian and foreign venues. Continue reading ““We Need Him””

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. Continue reading “Intense”

In Commemoration of Ekaterina Maximova

“Fragments of One Biography”
Bolshoi Ballet and Guests
Bolshoi Theatre
Moscow, Russia
February 01, 2024 (video)

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2024 by Ilona Landgraf

1. Ensemble, “Fragments of One Biography” staged by V.Vasiliev, Bolshoi Ballet 2024 © Bolshoi Ballet / E.FetisovaOn February 1st, the Bolshoi Ballet’s prima ballerina, Ekaterina Maximova (1939-2009), would have celebrated her 85th birthday. A phenomenally successful (and multi-decorated) artist, Maximova’s fame reached far beyond Russia’s borders. After retiring from the stage of the Bolshoi in 1988, she continued to dance with other Russian and international companies—and sometimes even returned home to the Bolshoi. From 1990 on, Maximova worked as a coach, teacher, and member of several arts councils and committees. Every five years, Maximova’s husband, Vladimir Vasiliev, stages a gala at the Bolshoi in honor of his late wife. I was able to watch this year’s event on video. Continue reading “In Commemoration of Ekaterina Maximova”

Reassuring

“Chopiniana”/“Grand Pas from the Ballet Paquita
Bolshoi Ballet
Bolshoi Theatre (Historic Stage)
Moscow, Russia
February 14, 2024

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2024 by Ilona Landgraf

 1. A.Denisova, “Chopiniana” by M.Fokine, Bolshoi Ballet 2024 © Bolshoi Ballet / D.Yusupov The musicians of the Bolshoi Orchestra are on their toes. After acknowledging the welcoming applause, conductor, Pavel Klinichev, raised his baton in the same instant that he turned around to face them. The vigorous bars that he prompted belonged to a Polonaise by Chopin. It opened Mikhail Fokine’s romantic Chopiniana (1908), which the Bolshoi Ballet revived in November 2022. It’s the first part of a double bill the second piece of which – the Grand Pas from Petipa’s Paquita – has been a landmark of classical dance since its creation in 1881.

There’s no need to discuss how Fokine’s choreography was performed. The Bolshoi is a guarantor of sublime performances. Indeed, the unity of the corps was nothing less than staggering; every step was measured yet effortless like an outpouring of natural decency. Perfect proportions soothed the eye. As the leading sylphs, Anastasia Stashkevich, Elizaveta Kruteleva, and Anastasia Denisova paid great attention to detail, adding the right tinge of buoyancy, melancholy, or playfulness to their solos. Vyacheslav Lopatin’s poet combined sensitivity and decisiveness. His clean and – at times mighty – jumps earned applause. Alyona Pikalova’s set design – an arch of gnarled treetops opening onto a sunny water meadow – invited the mind to dream.
I’ve watched several companies dance Chopiniana, but no performance was as complete as the Bolshoi’s. Perhaps due to experiencing messy times in my home country of Germany (and in the West in general), the refined order and serenity of Chopiniana felt especially comforting. It seemed like the epitome of civilization. Continue reading “Reassuring”

Style Over Substance

Modanse”
Svetlana Zakharova Evening/MuzArts

Bolshoi Theatre (Historic Stage)
Moscow, Russia
October 31, 2023

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2023 by Ilona Landgraf

1. S.Zakharova, “Come un respiro” by M.Bigonzetti; Svetlana Zakharova Evening, MuzArts 2023 © A.Stepanov The title “Modanse” sounds like an à la mode ballet – classy, extravagant, and fashionable. It belongs to a double bill featuring the Bolshoi Ballet’s prima ballerina Svetlana Zakharova. The external production includes dancers of the Bolshoi Ballet’s roster, and since 2019 has guested regularly on the Bolshoi Theatre’s stage and abroad.

As a seasoned artist, Zakharova must have an instinct about what suits her on stage. Hence I’m flabbergasted that she has kept Mauro Bigonzetti’s “Come un respiro” (“Like a Breath”) in the program. The 2009 creation, of which Zakharova acquired a reworked version, is ill-suited to make her and her co-dancers (among them Anastasia Stashkevich, Ana Turazashvili, Mikhail Lobukhin, Vyacheslav Lopatin, and Denis Savin) look good. Moreover, its succession of bland solos, pas de deux, and group dances fails to excite. Continue reading “Style Over Substance”

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 (Columbine), “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. Continue reading “Transcendent”

Weighty

“The Winter’s Tale”
Bolshoi Ballet
Bolshoi Theatre
Moscow, Russia
April 06, 2019 (matinee and evening performance)

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2019 by Ilona Landgraf

1. E. Svolkin, L. Timoshenko, O. Smirnova, and D. Savin, “The Winter's Tale” by C. Wheeldon, Bolshoi Ballet 2019 © Bolshoi Ballet / D. YusupovThe Bolshoi Ballet recently added Christopher Wheeldon’s “The Winter’s Tale” to their repertoire – and what a fortunate choice that was! It is a co-production of the Royal Ballet and the National Ballet of Canada, and premiered in London in 2014. It’s strange that such a strong piece of work is only now being performed by a third company.

The ballet is based on Shakespeare’s play of the same name – one of his intricately-plotted later works, which is classified as a comedy despite its Continue reading “Weighty”

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. Continue reading “Pipe Dreams”

From “Ballet Falsity” to Long-Runner

“The Bright Stream”
Bolshoi Ballet
Bolshoi Theatre
Moscow, Russia
February 10 and 11, 2018

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2018 by Ilona Landgraf

1. Front Curtain, “The Bright Stream” by A.Ratmansky, Bolshoi Ballet © Bolshoi Theatre / D.Yusupov“The Bright Stream” was Shostakovich’s third score for ballet. After his previous ballets, “The Golden Age” (1930) and “Bolt” (1931), were banned from the stage, Shostakovich attempted to create a new composition that would please everyone. Fyodor Lopukhov (1886 – 1973) was in charge of the choreography, the libretto was by Adrian Pyotrovsky and Lopukhov, and indeed, “The Bright Stream” was enthusiastically received at its premiere in Leningrad – today’s St. Petersburg – in 1935. Continue reading “From “Ballet Falsity” to Long-Runner”

It’s Done

“Nureyev”
Bolshoi Ballet
Bolshoi Theatre
Moscow, Russia
December 09, 2017

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2017 by Ilona Landgraf

1. V.Lantratov, “Nureyev”, chor.: Y.Possokhov, dir.: K.Serebrennikov, Bolshoi Ballet 2017 © Bolshoi Ballet / M.LogvinovAfter the Bolshoi Ballet’s July premiere of “Nureyev” was canceled at the last minute, officials doubled down on security efforts for the rescheduled performance on December 9th. Although guards lined the theater’s entrances and the curtain rose behind schedule, the performance was a smooth ride from start to finish.
And yet only those who attended the dress rehearsal this summer can truly asses whether or not the initial version was tweaked to comply with requests from the authorities. One might have noticed, for instance, that Richard Avedon’s photo of the naked Nureyev was not used as a backdrop, but rather was only projected on a screen for a quick second. But given the fact that the work was finally seen by the public – do these minor changes matter?

Choreographer Yuri Possokhov, stage director and set designer Kirill Serebrennikov, and composer Ilya Demutsky are the artistic core team behind “Nureyev”. Interviews with the trio, who had previously collaborated on the Bolshoi’s ballet “A Hero of Our Time”, were printed in the program booklet, which also contains Serebrennikov’s libretto.

Continue reading “It’s Done”

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. Continue reading “Universal Love”

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. Continue reading “Maillot’s Idea of How to Tame”