Natalia Osipova, Sadler's Wells

NATALIA OSIPOVA, SADLER'S WELLS Superstar ballerina and new partner Sergei Polunin lack lustre in self-commissioned contemporary triple

Superstar ballerina and new partner Sergei Polunin lack lustre in self-commissioned contemporary triple

Why does Natalia Osipova, one of the world's best classical, dramatic ballerinas, want to start a sideline in contemporary dance in the middle of her career? Two years ago, when she mounted her first self-commissioned contemporary triple bill with her then newly-ex-fiancée Ivan Vasiliev, I was willing to believe that it was for the love of trying new things, pushing her own boundaries, and taking all aspects of her artform seriously.

Wheeldon Triple Bill, Royal Ballet

WHEELDON TRIPLE BILL, ROYAL BALLET New work about a 19th-century It Girl's dramatic fall sheds a welcome light on John Singer Sargent

New work about a 19th-century It Girl's dramatic fall sheds a welcome light on John Singer Sargent

Christopher Wheeldon's new ballet Strapless scores a first on a number of counts. It’s the first co-production between the Royal Ballet and the Bolshoi (London gets first dibs – Moscow doesn’t get the goods for another 12 months). It forms part of the first ever triple bill the Royal Ballet has devoted to its most famous son. It’s the first ballet music Mark-Anthony Turnage has written to order. And it’s the first ballet on the Covent Garden main stage to feature a passionate gay male kiss.

Woolf Works, Wayne McGregor, Royal Ballet

Leaden score and ponderous choreography do an injustice to Bloomsbury author's name

On my way to the Woolf Works opening last night, I made the mistake of reading The Waves, Virginia Woolf’s most experimental novel. It was a mistake because even the briefest immersion in Woolf’s prose was a thousand times more exhilarating than the 90 minutes of treacly sludge served up by Wayne McGregor and Max Richter in this, the choreographer’s much-hyped first full-length work for the Royal Ballet.

Ex-Bolshoi star Natalia Osipova joins The Royal Ballet

Exclusive: Covent Garden signs Osipova - but not partner Ivan Vasiliev

The Russian superstar ballerina Natalia Osipova is to join the Royal Ballet, the Royal Opera House announced today. The 26-year-old Moscow ballerina, who made her name as a wunderkind in the Bolshoi Ballet until she quit two years ago, signed a contract last month but held back the news until the end of the London tour of her current company, the Mikhailovsky Ballet, reports Russian daily Kommersant.

Don Quixote, Mikhailovsky Ballet, London Coliseum

DON QUIXOTE, MIKHAILOVSKY BALLET, LONDON COLISEUM A perfectly paced production of a demented old warhorse

A perfectly paced production of a demented old warhorse

If you want virtuosity, there’s only one place to be in London right now, and that’s watching the Mikhailovsky’s fine production of that demented old warhorse, Don Quixote, with Natalia Osipova and Ivan Vasiliev in the leads.

Ashton's Romeo and Juliet, London Coliseum

Two stellar artists bring an intimate tragedy out from behind closed doors

Like planets crossing in the skies, light years apart, but by some ocular illusion coinciding, this conjunction of the two most thrilling young Bolshoi stars in the world and Frederick Ashton’s rarely staged Romeo and Juliet really must be seen. Natalia Osipova and Ivan Vasiliev are real-life lovers as well as phenomenal work colleagues and passionate actors. The freshness of youth, the unhindered outpouring of emotion, the finish of their dancing, and their direct stage personalities enrich to bursting a chamber-sized telling of the tragedy that's refreshingly intimate by comparison with the more popular blockbuster versions.

Interview Special: Bolshoi Dancers Natalia Osipova & Ivan Vasiliev

FROM OUR TAD AT 7 ARCHIVE: OSIPOVA & VASILIEV Q&A Lovers onstage and off tell (almost) all

Lovers on stage and off, two young stars bring back English rarity

“What I love about her is her emotion, her true emotion. She’s a ball of energy and emotion all together, quite an amazing thing. From the first time I saw her, I thought I want her to be my girlfriend.” Ivan Vasiliev, the young Bolshoi Ballet superstar, is talking about his girlfriend - though he could also be Romeo talking about Juliet.