Mariinsky (Kirov) Ballet (Ballet company)
Mariinsky (Kirov) Ballet
The Mariinsky Ballet Company is closely linked with
the entire history of the development of Russian choreographic art which has
begun some 250 years ago. Since 1783 the company performed at the stage of the
St Petersburg Bolshoy (Stone) Theatre and from 1885 onwards the ballet
productions have been staged at the Mariinsky Theatre.
The leading role in the establishment and evolution of
the Russian ballet belonged to foreign masters. At the end of the
18th century active in st Petersburg were Franz Gilferding, Gasparo
Angiolini, Giuseppe Canziani and Charles le Picqu. But already in the 1790s the
first Russian ballet teacher, Ivan Valberkh, became prominent. The main sphere
of his activities was a small mime ballet company. He sought to make his
productions rich in subject matter and to create recognizable lifelike images. A
special place in his work was occupied by ballet divertissements which reflected
his responses to the events of the War against Napoleon. The history of the St
Petersburg ballet in the 19th century was associated with the
activities of Charles Didelot, Jules Perrot, and Arthur Saint-Lion. In 1869 the
position of the principal ballet master was entrusted to Marius Petipa who markedly raised
the professional standards of the company. The peak accomplishment of this
famous master became ballets staged in the period of his collaboration with the
composers Pyotr Tchaikovsky and Alexander Glazunov – The Sleeping Beauty, Swan Lake and Raymonda. The talents of many
generations of ballerinas have been revealed in them – from Yekaterina Vyazem,
Marina Semenova and Galina Ulanova to younger dancers who are just fledging on
the Mariinsky stage.
At the turn of the 19th and 20th century
the Mariinsky Ballet Company yielded to the world of ballet such great dancers
as Anna Pavlova, Mathilde Kschessinska, Tamara Karsavina, Olga Preobrazhenskaya,
Olga Spesivtseva, Vaslav Nijinsky, Nikolai and Sergei
Legat. Many of them glorified the Russian ballet during the legendary Saisons
Russes in Paris which familiarized Europe with pioneering works by Michele Fokine. The years after the
revolution were a difficult period for the Mariinsky Theatre. Almost all its
leading artists abandoned the company. Nevertheless during these years the
classical repertory was retained. And in 1922 when at the head of the company
was put Fyodor Lopukhov, a daring innovator and a brilliant connoisseur of the
past, its repertory was enriched with new productions, in particular ballets
dealing with contemporary life. It was during those years that Galina Ulanova,
Alexei Yermolayev, Marina Semenova, Vakhtang Chibukiani, Alla Shelest and many
other future celebrities of the St Petersburg ballet came to the company
The 1960s saw the staging of Spartacus and Choreographic
Miniatures by Leonid Lavrovsky, the productions
of The Stone Flower and The Legend of Love by Yury Grigorovich as well as The
Coast of Hope and The Leningrad Symphony by Igor
Belsky – the ballets which revived the traditions of symphonic dances. The
success of these productions would obviously be impossible without superb
performers. During the period of the 1950s – 1970s among the dancers of the
company were Irina Kolpakova, Natalia Makarova, Alla Osipenko, Irina Gensler,
Alla Sizova, Rydolph Nureyev, Mikhail Baryshnikov, Valery Panov, Yury Solovyev
and Anatoly Sapogov.
Towards the end of the 1970s in the repertory of the
company appeared Le Sylfide and Naples by Auguste Bournonville,
fragments of ancient choreography by Perrot, Saint-Lion and Coralli. Roland Petit and Maurice Bjart came
to work for some time with the company. The Tudor Foundation gave rights for the
ballets Lilac Garden and Leaves Are Fading. Jerome Robbins staged
in the Mariinsky the ballet In the Night.
It was in 1989 that the Mariinsky Theatre first staged
ballets by outstanding choreographer George Balanchine, who began his
career in Petersburg. The next decade saw the theatre’s repertoire enriched with
productions of the leading choreographers of the mid 20th century to
the early 21st century: Kenneth MacMillan’s Manon and John Neumeier’s
Now and Then and Spring and Fall. Specially for the Mariinsky Theatre Neumeier staged
Sounds of Empty Pages to music by Alfred Schnittke.
These years also saw intense work to restore Marius Petipa’s The Sleeping Beauty and La Bayad`re, both highly
acclaimed in the international press.
Petersburg premieres also include Etudes (choreography by
Harald Lander), two ballets by Stravinsky – Bronislava Nijinska’s
Les Noces and Vaslav Nijinsky’s Le Sacre du printemps – and
ballets by William Forsythe.
The number of world premieres has grown too, with Alexei Ratmansky’s staging of Cinderella and The Nutcracker and The Magic Nut (music by Sergei Slonimsky, libretto, sets,
costumes and production design by Mihail Chemiakin and choreography
by Donvena Pandoursky), the latter two
together comprising "Chemiakin’s Hoffman".

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