by Emilia & Linda on September 8, 2011
In her newest book, RENÉ BLUM AND THE BALLETS RUSSES: In Search of a Lost Life, dance historian Judith Chazin-Bennahum looks at the tragic story of the theatre producer who was responsible for resurrecting the Ballets Russes de Monte Carlo after his friend Sergei Diaghilev’s death, but who was arrested in 1941 during a roundup [...]
Tagged as:
Alexandra Danilova,
Balanchine,
Ballet Books,
Ballet History,
Ballets Russes,
Colonel W. de Basil,
Cyril Beaumont,
Dance History,
Diaghilev,
Fokine,
George Balanchine,
Igor Youskevitch,
Judith Chazin-Bennahum,
L’Épreuve d’Amour,
Les Ballets de Monte Carlo,
Mikhail Fokine,
Nijinska,
René Blum,
Vera Nemtchinova
by Emilia & Linda on August 26, 2011
Celebrating the 50th anniversary of their first visit to London, the Mariinsky Ballet left a trail of brilliancy following its three-week residency at Covent Garden. The company brought a selection of works that played to its strengths: from big classical works like Swan Lake and La Bayadère (which showed off a flawless corps de ballet) [...]
Tagged as:
Alexander Parish,
Alexander Sergeyev,
Alexei Ratmansky,
Alina Somova,
Anna Karenina,
Balanchine,
Ballet Imperial,
Chopiniana,
Danila Korsuntsev,
David Hallberg,
Denis Matvienko,
Diana Vishneva,
Ekaterina Kondaurova,
Evgenia Obraztsova,
Evgeny Ivanchenko,
Filipp Stepin,
Fokine,
Igor Zelensky,
In the Night,
Jerome Robbins,
La Bayadère,
Maria Shirinkina,
Mariinsky,
Mariinsky Tour 2011,
Rodion Shchedrin,
Scheherezade,
Scotch Symphony,
Swan Lake,
The Firebird,
Ulyana Lopatkina,
Viktoria Tereshkina,
Vladimir Shklyarov,
Xander Parish,
Yana Selina,
Yuri Smekalov
by Emilia & Linda on September 24, 2010
Earlier this week we attended a preview of Diaghilev and the Golden Age of the Ballets Russes, 1909 – 1929, a must see exhibition that opens tomorrow at the Victoria & Albert Museum. The exhibition captures the glamour and excitement of a revolutionary age in ballet, showing Sergei Diaghilev’s genius; his ambition and determination to [...]
Tagged as:
Andre Derain,
Balanchine,
Ballets Russes,
Begoña Cao,
Chanel,
Chout,
Diaghilev,
ENB,
Fedorowsky,
Fokine,
Georges Braque,
Georges Rouault,
Henri Matisse,
Jean Cocteau,
Léon Bakst,
Léonide Massine,
Le Bal,
Le Spectre de la Rose,
Le Train Bleu,
Les Papillons,
Lydia Lopokova,
Marie Rambert,
Massine,
Natalia Goncharova,
Nijinska,
Nijinsksy,
Picasso,
Prokofiev,
Salome,
Serge Sudeikin,
Stravinsky,
Tamara Karsavina,
The Rite of Spring,
V&A,
Yves Saint Laurent
by Linda on March 5, 2010
Tradition and heritage are strong words but they fit The Royal Danish Ballet like a glove. They are one of the oldest classical dance troupes in Europe and direct descendants of the Bournonville lineage. With a repertoire that also includes the most prominent choreographers of the 20th century, the Danes have much to be proud [...]
Tagged as:
A Folk Tale,
Aage Thordal-Christensen,
Abdallah,
Adeline Genée,
Amy Watson,
Anna Karenina,
Apollon Musagete,
Études,
Balanchine,
Birgit Cullberg,
Bournonville,
Bournonville Festival,
Brandstrup,
Cecilie Lassen,
Cranko,
Danish Ballet Week,
Danseurs,
Dawid Kupinski,
Erik Bruhn,
Femke Slot,
Fernando Mora,
Flemming Flindt,
Flower Festival of Genzano,
Fokine,
Frank Andersen,
Gamle Scene,
Gitte Lindstrøm,
Gudrun Bojesen,
Hans Beck,
Henning Kronstam,
Henrik Steenberg,
Ib Andersen,
Jens Vilhelm Dahlerup,
Johan Kobborg,
Johnny Eliasen,
Kenneth Greve,
Kermesse in Bruges,
Kristoffer Sakurai,
La Sylphide,
Lis Jeppesen,
Lloyd Riggins,
Lucile Grahn,
Ludvig Holberg,
Mads Blangstrup,
Maina Gielgud,
Marie-Pierre Greve,
Martin Mydtskov Rønne,
Miss Julie,
Mogens Boesen,
Napoli,
Neumeier,
Nicolai Hansen,
Niels Bjørn Larsen,
Nikolaj Hubbe,
Onegin,
Peter Martins,
Peter Schaufuss,
Ratmansky,
RDB,
Romeo and Juliet,
Royal Danish Ballet,
Royal Danish Ballet School,
Rushton,
Silja Schandorff,
Sorella Englund,
Susanne Grinder,
The Kermesse in Bruges,
The Lesson,
The Little Mermaid,
The Triumph of Death,
The Whims of Cupid and the Ballet Master,
Thomas Lund,
Vera Volkova,
Vincenzo Galeotti,
Yao Wei
by Emilia on September 21, 2009
This week we have double reason to party. While at Covent Garden the Royal Ballet returns home for the 2009/2010 season, over here at the Ballet Bag we celebrate 6 months of online balletomania. To mark the occasion we have prepared a – non exhaustive – balletic timeline of sorts, to highlight some of our [...]
Tagged as:
ABT,
Anna Pavlova,
Auguste Vestris,
Balanchine,
Ballet Newbie,
Ballets Russes,
Bournonville,
Cecchetti,
Diaghilev,
Fokine,
Frederick Ashton,
Jewels,
Kenneth MacMillan,
Kim Brandstrup,
Les Sylphides,
Mariinsky,
Mayerling,
Ninette de Valois,
NYCB,
Ondine,
Royal Ballet,
Steven McRae,
Tamara Karsavina,
The Firebird,
The Sleeping Beauty,
Vaslav Nijinsky,
Veronika Part
by Emilia on August 17, 2009
If you follow us on Twitter or Facebook or if you have been reading our posts here you will know that, ballet-wise, the past two weeks have been “all about the Mariinsky in London”, their stylish dancing and the impressive array of performers they have fielded to wow us in the classics Swan Lake, The [...]
Tagged as:
Albrecht,
Alexander Kolidenko,
Alina Somova,
Ana Laguna,
Balanchine,
Ballet Bag,
Chopiniana,
Christian Spuck,
Christopher Wheeldon,
Daria Pavlenko,
Debra Craine,
Diana Vishneva,
Fokine,
Gennadi Selyutski,
Giselle,
Igor Kolb,
Igor Kolb & Friends,
Ilya Kuznetsov,
Irina Golub,
Jeffery Taylor,
Judith Mackrell,
La Bayadère,
Lavrovsky,
Le Grand Pas de Deux,
Le Spectre de la Rose,
Les Intermittences du Coeur,
Les Sylphides,
Linbury Studio,
London Tour,
Marc Haegeman,
Mariinsky,
Mats Ek,
Mikhail Baryshnikov,
Nadine Meisner,
NYCB,
Paquita Grand Pas,
Petipa,
Proust,
Radu Poklitaru,
Roland Petit,
Romeo and Juliet,
Royal Ballet,
Scotch Symphony,
Siegfried,
St. Petersburg,
Svetlana Zakharova,
Swan Lake,
Tamara Rojo,
The Sleeping Beauty,
Tobi Tobias,
Two on a Swing,
Ulyana Lopatkina,
Vaganova Prix,
Vera Shveisova,
Vikharev,
Yevgenia Obraztsova,
Yulia Makhalina,
Yuri Fateyev,
Zhanna Ayupova