50 years since Nureyev defected and Kirov Ballet debuted in London

Mariinsky aims to seize back the honours from the Bolshoi

share this article

It's 50 years since the mighty Kirov Ballet made their debut London tour - reeling from Nureyev's defection days before at the Paris airport. The tour was promoted by the unique impresarios of Soviet culture, Victor and Lilian Hochhauser. Half a century on, the pair are still indefatigably promoting the company, now named Mariinsky Ballet, whose season at Covent Garden opens on Monday, 25 July and runs to Saturday, 13 August.

The St Petersburg company has been lying low while their Moscow rivals, the Bolshoi, made the Royal Opera House their summer home for the past few years - but it was only a decade ago that the public vote in London was the other way, backing the Mariinsky against a Bolshoi that at the time appeared to be in artistic tatters. Both companies have changed leadership since then, and the Mariinsky aims to seize back classical honours with its aristocratic productions of Swan Lake and La bayadère, while showing its conquest of American Neo-Classicism in a Balanchine/Jerome Robbins programme.

The biggest gamble appears to be a new ballet on Tolstoy's Anna Karenina, created by London's favourite Russian choreographer, Alexei Ratmansky, formerly the Bolshoi's director and now resident in New York. This ballet about an unhappy wife's tragic affair has just been shown to New York for the first time, with the company's two leading stars, Diana Vishneva and Uliana Lopatkina, to unusually mixed reviews. The music is by Rodion Shchedrin, the modern Russian composer currently being specially championed by Valery Gergiev, the Mariinsky’s director, conductor and mastermind.

The programmes are (casting is subject to sudden changes):

  • 25-28 July, 6 & 8 Aug: Swan Lake, opening with Lopatkina, and offering Victoria Tereshkina, Alina Somova, Diana Vishneva, Anastasia Matvienko and Ekaterina Kondaurova as the Swan Queen
  • 29, 30 July, 1 Aug: Fokine's Chopiniana/ The Firebird/ Sheherazade, the Mariinsky Theatre Orchestra deployed in two major scores by Stravinsky and Rimsky-Korsakova, with Kondaurova and Anastasia Petushkova as the Firebird, and Kondaurova, Lopatkina, Tereshkina or Vishneva as the perilously amorous Zobeide and Vladimir Shklyarov, Igor Kolb, Daniil Korzuntsev or Igor Zelensky as the Golden Slave
  • 2 & 3 Aug, Don Quixote with the Matvienkos or Evgenia Obraztsova and Alexei Timofeyev
  • 4 & 5 Aug, Balanchine/Robbins programme of Balanchine’s Scotch Symphony and Ballet Imperial, Jerome Robbins’s In the Night, with music by Mendelssohn, Chopin and Tchaikovsky. Dancers include Lopatkina, Obraztsova, Kondaurova, Somova, Tereshkina, Shklyarov, Kolb, Korsuntsev and New York’s David Hallberg
  • 9 & 10 Aug, Anna Karenina, British premiere of Alexei Ratmansky's ballet to Rodion Shchedrin's music, with Diana Vishneva or Uliana Lopatkina as Anna
  • 11-13 Aug, La bayadère, the second-greatest "white" ballet of the 19th-century glory period of Russian Classicism, with Tereshkina/Shklyarov, Vishneva/Zelensky, Somova/Matvienko and Lopatkina/Korsuntsev the scheduled casts as the doomed Nikiya and Solor

Several favourites of previous Mariinsky visits appear: the sublime Uliana Lopatkina heading the ballerinas, with Diana Vishneva and Igor Zelensky also mature avatars of Mariinsky refinement. Newer faces are the fêted Alina Somova (a Marmite dancer who divides opinion on her idiosyncratically flexible dancing) and Vladimir Shklyarov, while Victoria Tereshkina, Evgenia Obraztsova and the tall redhead Ekaterina Kondaurova have also won followings around the world. The appearance of David Hallberg from American Ballet Theatre in Balanchine's Scotch Symphony and two Swan Lakes with Tereshkina and Kondaurova shows London the man whom New York is currently talking about.

Comments

Permalink
The Lavrovsky "R & J" doesn't fare too well against MacMillan's version. Re Somova, I beg to differ. I wasn't a happy bunny. I attended the 2009 opening night and Shklyarov was the star of the evening. Somova's opening night and debut in the role of Juliet was a disaster, and her closing Aurora was dismal - certainly not what one expects from the Mariinsky Ballet. I'm extremely happy that this time she isn't the "bookends" of the engagement.

Add comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.

Plain text

  • No HTML tags allowed.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Web page addresses and email addresses turn into links automatically.

rating

0

explore topics

share this article

the future of arts journalism

You can stop theartsdesk.com closing!

We urgently need financing to survive. Our fundraising drive has thus far raised £33,000 but we need to reach £100,000 or we will be forced to close. Please contribute here: https://gofund.me/c3f6033d

And if you can forward this information to anyone who might assist, we’d be grateful.

Subscribe to theartsdesk.com

Thank you for continuing to read our work on theartsdesk.com. For unlimited access to every article in its entirety, including our archive of more than 15,000 pieces, we're asking for £5 per month or £40 per year. We feel it's a very good deal, and hope you do too.

To take a subscription now simply click here.

And if you're looking for that extra gift for a friend or family member, why not treat them to a theartsdesk.com gift subscription?

more dance

Support our GoFundMe appeal
The title says it: as dancemaker, as creative magnet, the man clearly works his socks off
Once again the veteran choreographer and maverick William Forsythe raises ENB's game
A book about navigating grief feeds into unusual and compelling dance theatre
Kenneth MacMillan's first and best-loved masterpiece turns 60
Total music theatre takes us from the hell of exile to separation at heaven’s gates
Opera and dance companies share a theme in this terse but affecting double bill
John Cranko was the greatest choreographer British ballet never had. His masterpiece is now 60 years old
It was a year for visiting past glories, but not for new ones