A Swansong and a Phoenix’s Rise from the Ashes

“Curtain Call”
Leonid Yacobson Ballet

Alexandrinsky Theatre
St. Petersburg, Russia
June 01, 2026 (video)

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2026 by Ilona Landgraf

1. V.Surkov and ensemble, “Curtain Call” by V.Samodurov, Leonid Yacobson Ballet 2026 © Leonid Yacobson Ballet/S.TyaginFew ballets have been so ingenious and gripping that I stopped taking notes so as not to miss a single moment. Vyacheslav Samodurov’s new choreography, Curtain Call, for the Leonid Yacobson Ballet, St. Petersburg, was one of them. Luckily, I received a video that I could replay.
The one-act piece premiered in early June as part of a triple bill alongside a new creation by Igor Bulytsyn’s (Bruch. Suite) and Samodurov’s 2024 award-winning 598 Beats. In mid-July, the company assembled all three pieces Samodurov has created for them so far (including the 2022 Cheeky Chastushki) in a new triple bill.

 

3. V.Spilchevsky, “Curtain Call” by V.Samodurov, Leonid Yacobson Ballet 2026 © Leonid Yacobson Ballet/S.Tyagin 2. G.Mikhireva and V.Spilchevsky, “Curtain Call” by V.Samodurov, Leonid Yacobson Ballet 2026 © Leonid Yacobson Ballet/S.TyaginAt times, the red curtain of Curtain Call was closed and neatly pleated; at others, it rose, or a small gap permitted voyeuristic peeps. Regardless of the perspective, the episodes thrilled the eye. Samodurov’s ability to transform wit, irony, and mockery into choreography and the tailor-made score (based on the French composer Darius Milhaud’s Provençal Suite) yielded great entertainment.

4. G.Mikhireva and ensemble, “Curtain Call” by V.Samodurov, Leonid Yacobson Ballet 2026 © Leonid Yacobson Ballet/S.Tyagin5. Ensemble, “Curtain Call” by V.Samodurov, Leonid Yacobson Ballet 2026 © Leonid Yacobson Ballet/S.TyaginThe sexy boaster (Victor Surkov) waiting for the spotlight at the front stage resembled an Italian macho blinded by his own greatness (that’s presumably why he wore black sunglasses). A skintight, black, and single-strapped leotard showed off his bronzed pecs. Noise interference almost spoiled his claim to ovations, but then the sound system obeyed, churning out heroic tunes to accompany his trampolinist-like bounces in between which his outstretched arms encouraged applause.
7. V.Surkov, “Curtain Call” by V.Samodurov, Leonid Yacobson Ballet 2026 © Leonid Yacobson Ballet/S.Tyagin6. V.Surkov, “Curtain Call” by V.Samodurov, Leonid Yacobson Ballet 2026 © Leonid Yacobson Ballet/S.TyaginAs the curtain rose, four men of the same caliber joined him. Ostentatiously provocative, they stomped forward, each step a testimony to their manliness and punch. Their arms swiveled as if to make a big deal of…nothing(?), but they also flapped limply, in contrast to their peacock-esque chests.

Two zealous stagehands bringing out the red carpet for a ballerina in a white tutu (Galina Mikhireva) and her noble companion (Vyacheslav Spilchevsky) terminated the men’s self-promotion. Strutting like a stork, Mikhireva had almost reached the opposite wing when the curtain rose, revealing an on-stage audience whose pearl-gray evening gowns looked especially chic against the mauve fur backdrop (set design by Maria Tregubova).
8. V.Surkov and ensemble, “Curtain Call” by V.Samodurov, Leonid Yacobson Ballet 2026 © Leonid Yacobson Ballet/S.Tyagin She bouréed, claimed her space with a series of pirouettes, ignored condescending and approving glances alike, and swept her arms resolutely sideways as if to cut short any comment. Drum rolls reminiscent of a rattling motor added importance to her fellow ballerinas, who sashayed on the red carpet to pose for a snapshot like Instagrammers. But when she appeared on the rear stage, Mikhireva redirected the attention to herself. After miming the grand heroine in a solo, she then led all the ladies like ducklings to the front stage for a final lineup.

When the men, headed by Surkov’s macho, replaced them in the next scene, the backdrop turned dark red as if to herald Béjart’s Boléro. Instead, the lowering curtain suddenly separated Surkov from his entourage, and his put-on smile incurred confusion.
10. Ensemble, “Curtain Call” by V.Samodurov, Leonid Yacobson Ballet 2026 © Leonid Yacobson Ballet/S.Tyagin9. Ensemble, “Curtain Call” by V.Samodurov, Leonid Yacobson Ballet 2026 © Leonid Yacobson Ballet/S.TyaginGlossing over his shivering knees, he flirted with the audience, did some push-ups, and pumped and kissed his biceps until he stumbled backward over the red carpet, which the stagehands diligently rolled up.

Boléro was off the table, and La Bayadère was the next to toss barbs at. Four fluorescent blue fans rotating on a pitch-black stage heralded the Indian love drama, of which the next scene showed an alternate version of the Scarf Pas de Deux. Rather than a tender bond, the scarf was a pull rope for Mikhireva’s Nikiya and Spilchevsky’s Espada-like Solor.
11. G.Mikhireva, V.Spilchevsky, and ensemble; “Curtain Call” by V.Samodurov, Leonid Yacobson Ballet 2026 © Leonid Yacobson Ballet/S.Tyagin12. Ensemble, “Curtain Call” by V.Samodurov, Leonid Yacobson Ballet 2026 © Leonid Yacobson Ballet/S.TyaginNikiya had barely run off before she was paraded back in a solemn procession with her hands tied with the very same scarf. Surkov, lounging on a palanquin like a tourist, followed her, taking photos. In Nureyev’s era, Solor at least rode an elephant in the procession—what a decline! Alas, times have changed, and cheap, short-term effects matter. That’s why the stagehands rolled up the procession’s red carpet on the heels of the last plume fan carrier.
13. V.Spilchevsky and ensemble, “Curtain Call” by V.Samodurov, Leonid Yacobson Ballet 2026 © Leonid Yacobson Ballet/S.TyaginSpilchevsky, meanwhile, seemed to parody a Russian aristocrat of Onegin’s time. Puffing up his chest, he burst into a snappy solo with swooshing arms and resolute turns, but his showmanship suffered from reluctant, stuttering between steps. He was soon to bid a painful goodbye to Mikhireva, whom the on-stage audience carried away. (Whether she still portrayed Nikiya at that point or was a nondescript ballerina was unclear.) Beforehand, a couple from a vintage gangster comedy got lost on stage and, hotheadedly, engaged in a shooting duel. As the blonde beauty sank into her companion’s arms in Hollywood style, I expected a final kiss. But no, she died from the shot in her back. In the end, her killer supplicated heaven before dragging her behind the curtain.

14. V.Surkov and ensemble, “Curtain Call” by V.Samodurov, Leonid Yacobson Ballet 2026 © Leonid Yacobson Ballet/S.Tyagin 15. V.Surkov and ensemble, “Curtain Call” by V.Samodurov, Leonid Yacobson Ballet 2026 © Leonid Yacobson Ballet/S.TyaginA pas de huit to courtly Renaissance music was the last good-natured jab at ballet history. Fingers wiggled as if to add flourish to the arms or flicked in tune with the music, hips kinked sideways, and relentless jumps soared like on a trampoline again. The dancers’ pluck must have encouraged the onstage audience to line up at the front stage, where they grimaced, stuck out their tongues, and made fools of themselves in any way possible. Luckily, the curtain closed on them.

17. G.Mikhireva and V.Spilchevsky, “Curtain Call” by V.Samodurov, Leonid Yacobson Ballet 2026 © Leonid Yacobson Ballet/S.Tyagin16. Ensemble, “Curtain Call” by V.Samodurov, Leonid Yacobson Ballet 2026 © Leonid Yacobson Ballet/S.Tyagin Furthermore, the sound system had reached rock bottom, spluttering shreds of music and humming noise. It was time for a fresh start, which came in the person of Surkov, this time wearing his sunglasses with a firebird-red leotard. He ripped down the curtain and exposed the dark, naked stage, his outstretched arms and fluttering fingers shivering as if to sense its vibes. His fleet foot measured the terrain with the softness of a panther; at certain points, tours en l’airs soared as if to mark a new construction.
18. G.Mikhireva and V.Spilchevsky, “Curtain Call” by V.Samodurov, Leonid Yacobson Ballet 2026 © Leonid Yacobson Ballet/S.Tyagin19. Ensemble, “Curtain Call” by V.Samodurov, Leonid Yacobson Ballet 2026 © Leonid Yacobson Ballet/S.Tyagin 20. Ensemble, “Curtain Call” by V.Samodurov, Leonid Yacobson Ballet 2026 © Leonid Yacobson Ballet/S.Tyagin By then, the sound system had resorted to looping a catchy tune, to which one couldn’t help but dance. And what a firework it elicited! Each dancer swirled, ran, or hopped right in the center of the single, foggy spotlight and let it rip. As the music’s pace turned frantic, the solos became shorter and more frenetic. Sirens and the horn of Russian police indicated an emergency, their blue light tinging the fiery red of the dancers’ modern style outfits. But no one wanted to quit. Like freaks, they jumped about and hopped into the spotlight, mimicking a rabbit too bold to flee. Only when the lighting went dark and the music fell silent did they stop. Although I like to believe that they secretly continued.

Links: Website of the Leonid Yacobson Ballet Theatre
Website of the Alexandrinsky Theatre
Interview with Galina Mikhireva and Vyacheslav Spilchevsky; May 26, 2026 (video)
Photos: 1. Victor Surkov and ensemble, “Curtain Call” by Vyacheslav Samodurov, Leonid Yacobson Ballet 2026
2. Galina Mikhireva and Vyacheslav Spilchevsky, “Curtain Call” by Vyacheslav Samodurov, Leonid Yacobson Ballet 2026
3. Vyacheslav Spilchevsky, “Curtain Call” by Vyacheslav Samodurov, Leonid Yacobson Ballet 2026
4. Galina Mikhireva and ensemble, “Curtain Call” by Vyacheslav Samodurov, Leonid Yacobson Ballet 2026
5. Ensemble, “Curtain Call” by Vyacheslav Samodurov, Leonid Yacobson Ballet 2026
6. Victor Surkov, “Curtain Call” by Vyacheslav Samodurov, Leonid Yacobson Ballet 2026
7. Victor Surkov, “Curtain Call” by Vyacheslav Samodurov, Leonid Yacobson Ballet 2026
8. Victor Surkov and ensemble, “Curtain Call” by Vyacheslav Samodurov, Leonid Yacobson Ballet 2026
9. Ensemble, “Curtain Call” by Vyacheslav Samodurov, Leonid Yacobson Ballet 2026
10. Ensemble, “Curtain Call” by Vyacheslav Samodurov, Leonid Yacobson Ballet 2026
11. Galina Mikhireva, Vyacheslav Spilchevsky, and ensemble; “Curtain Call” by Vyacheslav Samodurov, Leonid Yacobson Ballet 2026
12. Ensemble, “Curtain Call” by Vyacheslav Samodurov, Leonid Yacobson Ballet 2026
13. Vyacheslav Spilchevsky and ensemble, “Curtain Call” by Vyacheslav Samodurov, Leonid Yacobson Ballet 2026
14. Victor Surkov and ensemble, “Curtain Call” by Vyacheslav Samodurov, Leonid Yacobson Ballet 2026
15. Victor Surkov and ensemble, “Curtain Call” by Vyacheslav Samodurov, Leonid Yacobson Ballet 2026
16. Ensemble, “Curtain Call” by Vyacheslav Samodurov, Leonid Yacobson Ballet 2026
17. Galina Mikhireva and Vyacheslav Spilchevsky, “Curtain Call” by Vyacheslav Samodurov, Leonid Yacobson Ballet 2026
18. Galina Mikhireva and Vyacheslav Spilchevsky, “Curtain Call” by Vyacheslav Samodurov, Leonid Yacobson Ballet 2026
19. Ensemble, “Curtain Call” by Vyacheslav Samodurov, Leonid Yacobson Ballet 2026
20. Ensemble, “Curtain Call” by Vyacheslav Samodurov, Leonid Yacobson Ballet 2026
all photos © Leonid Yacobson Ballet/Sergei Tyagin
Editing: Kayla Kauffman

 

Full of Spirits

“The Tempest”
Bolshoi Ballet
Bolshoi Theatre (New Stage)
Moscow, Russia
April 22, 2025

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2025 by Ilona Landgraf

1. D.Savin (Prospero), “The Tempest” by V.Samodurov, Bolshoi Ballet 2025 © Bolshoi Theatre/E.Fetisova For his latest choreography for the Bolshoi Ballet in 2024—The Tempest (after Shakespeare’s play)—Vyacheslav Samodurov again teamed up with composer Yuri Krasavin. Both had already collaborated on the one-act ballet Dancemania in 2022. This time, their cooperation must have been tempestuous. “Vyacheslav Samodurov and I did not get along right away…I still see this play completely different,” Krasavin stated in an interview. While Krasavin believed that he accompanied rather than led the artistic process, for Samodurov, “Music comes always first and the composer is the boss in many ways.” But whoever was the boss, the score (played by the Bolshoi Orchestra under the baton of Pavel Klinichev) was mesmerizing. Continue reading “Full of Spirits”

Tangled

“Tales of Perrault”
Ural Opera Ballet
Ekaterinburg State Academic Opera and Ballet Theatre
Ekaterinburg, Russia
April/September 2024 (video)

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2024 by Ilona Landgraf

1. N.Shamshurina (Mushroom Fairy), “Tales of Perrault” by M.Petrov, K.Khlebnikov, and A.Merkushev; Ural Opera Ballet 2024 © Ural Opera BalletLast week, the Ural Opera Ballet’s joint production, Tales of Perrault, returned to the stage. It combines four fairy tales by Perrault—Puss in Boots, Little Red Riding Hood, Bluebeard, and Little Thumb—that are newly interpreted by three choreographers. Two of them, Konstantin Khlebnikov and Alexandr Merkushev, are junior choreographers from the company’s ranks of dancers; the third, Maksim Petrov, choreographed for the Mariinsky Ballet before succeeding the Ural Opera Ballet’s then-artistic director, Vyacheslav Samodurov, in August 2023.
Perrault’s fairy tales are often dark and scary (which is why Tales of Perrault is reserved for an adult audience and children aged twelve and older) but with a poetic note. From their wide range of meanings, the choreographers distilled a core message that combines all four fairy tales: regardless of one’s physicality, conduct, and wit, everyone deserves love and sympathy. Continue reading “Tangled”

Prix Benois Laureates 2023

Prix Benois de la Danse
Bolshoi Theatre (Historic Stage)
Moscow, Russia
June 21, 2023

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2023 by Ilona Landgraf

Yesterday evening, this year’s laureates of the Prix Benois were announced on the Historic Stage of the Bolshoi Theatre.

1. J.Ryu, C.Kerche, and Q.Yunting, Prix Benois de la Danse, Bolshoi Theatre 2023 © Bolshoi Theatre / B.Annadurdyev2. M.Kang, Prix Benois de la Danse, Bolshoi Theatre 2023 © Bolshoi Theatre / B.AnnadurdyevQiu Yunting (National Ballet of China) and Misun Kang (Universal Ballet, South Korea) share the prize for the best female dancer. Yunting was nominated for her performance of Tatiana in John Cranko’s “Onegin”, Kang for her interpretation of the Widow in Bingxian Liu’s “Mirinaegil”. Hugo Marchand (Paris Opera Ballet) was awarded the prize for the best male dancer. He didn’t attend the ceremony. Vyacheslav Samodurov won the prize for the best choreography for “Dancemania” – a creation for the Bolshoi Ballet.

Mikhail Lavrovsky, People’s Artist of the USSR, was honored with the Lifetime Achievement Award. Continue reading “Prix Benois Laureates 2023”

Choreographer Nominees for the Prix Benois 2023

Prix Benois de la Danse
Li Jun / Maša Kolar / Wayne McGregor / Vyacheslav Samodurov
Bolshoi Theatre
Moscow, Russia
June 15, 2023

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2023 by Ilona Landgraf

On June 20th, the Bolshoi Theatre hosts the annual Prix Benois ceremony, followed by a gala on June 21st. Prizes will be awarded for the best choreographer, and the best female and male dancers. Mikhail Lavrovsky will be honored for his lifetime achievement.

Four choreographers are competing this year:
1. “Where to Pour All My Love?” by L.Jun, National Ballet of China © National Ballet of China 2. “Where to Pour All My Love?” by L.Jun, National Ballet of China © National Ballet of ChinaLi Jun, dancer-choreographer of the National Ballet of China, is nominated for “Where to Pour All My Love?”, a twenty-minute piece set to music by Zhao Jiping. It premiered at the company’s 12th ballet workshop in April 2022. Jun’s source of inspiration was the Chinese multi-episode TV drama “Da Zhai Men” (Grand Mansion Gate) which traces the history of a Beijing-based family from the late Qing Dynasty (1644 – 1911) to World War II. “Where to Pour All My Love?” focuses on Bai Yuting – one member of this family – whose love for Peking Opera gets out of control. Continue reading “Choreographer Nominees for the Prix Benois 2023”

A Farewell and a Fresh Start

“Pavilion of Armids” / “Hungarian Dances” / “Sextus Propertius”
Ural Opera Ballet
Yekaterinburg State Academic Opera and Ballet Theatre
Yekaterinburg, Russia
April 14, 2023 (video)

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2023 by Ilona Landgraf

1. A.Lazarev (Museum attendant), “Pavilion of Armids” by M.Petrov, Ural Opera Ballet 2023 © I.Mohnatkin / Ural Opera BalletPerseverance pays off. A few weeks after the premiere of the Ural Opera Ballet’s new triple bill in mid-April I finally got access to its recording. Three Russian choreographers contributed to the program: the Maryinsky Ballet’s dancer-choreographer Maxim Petrov, the artistic director of the Perm Opera Ballet Anton Pimonov, and the Yekaterinburg company’s own artistic director Vyacheslav Samodurov.

Petrov chose to reinterpret Michel Fokine’s “Le Pavillon d’Armide” – one of the ballets that manifested the Ballet Russes’ legendary tour to Paris in May 1909. Its libretto by Alexandre Benois (which is based on Théophile Gauthier’s novel “Omphale”) tells of the sorceress Armida who descends at night from a magic tapestry in a marquis’s garden pavilion to bewitch an aristocrat. Petrov relocated the action to a modern-day museum and swapped the tapestry for a wall-sized modern field painting, evoking the work of Mark Rothko (set design by Aliona Pikalova). Instead of an aristocrat, Armida (Anna Domke) beguiles (or rather befools) a young, bored museum attendant (Alexandr Merkushev). Petrov didn’t stint on satire when portraying Armida’s maneuvers, reinstating the humor Benois had deleted when adapting Gautier’s “Omphale”. Continue reading “A Farewell and a Fresh Start”

What a Mess

“The Order of the King”
Ural Opera Ballet
Ekaterinburg State Academic Opera and Ballet Theatre
Ekaterinburg, Russia
May 02, 2021 (online)

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2021 by Ilona Landgraf

1. M.Klekovkin (The King) and ensemble, “The Order of the King” by V.Samodurov, Ural Opera Ballet 2021 © O.Kerelyuk / Ural Opera Ballet “The Order of the King” – choreographed in 2018 for the Ural Opera Ballet by its artistic director Vyacheslav Samodurov – won two Golden Mask awards last year. Samodurov was awarded the prize for Best Choreographer and set designer Aleksei Kondratiev the prize for Best Designer in Musical Theatre. The ambitious two-act production marked the bicentennial of Marius Petipa’s birth and was staged according to his templates, augmented by additional historic analysis and scientific research. Continue reading “What a Mess”

Let’s Party!

“Brahms Party”
Ural Opera Ballet
Ekaterinburg State Academic Opera and Ballet Theatre
Ekaterinburg, Russia
April 2021 (video)

 

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2021 by Ilona Landgraf

1. Ensemble, “Brahms Party” by A.Pimonov, Ural Opera Ballet 2021 © O.Kerelyuk / Ural Opera Ballet Last season, two of the Ural Opera Ballet’s programs were nominated for Golden Mask awards in several categories: “Walpurgisnacht” by George Balanchine (which was shown in a double bill with “Brahms Party” by Anton Pimonov) and “The Order of the King”, a full-evening piece by the company’s artistic director Vyacheslav Samodurov. Though the pandemic halted the festival the first time around, the company brought both productions to the Stanislavsky and Nemirovich-Danchenko Moscow Music Theatre as part of this season’s festival in mid-April. Continue reading “Let’s Party!”

Still Elusive: The Eternal Feminine

“Ondine”
Bolshoi Ballet
Bolshoi Theatre
Moscow, Russia
March 04, 2017

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2017 by Ilona Landgraf

1. I.Tsvirko and E.Krysanova, “Ondine” by V.Samodurov, Bolshoi Ballet 2017 © Bolshoi Theatre / D.YusupovIn 1958 Frederick Ashton choreographed the story of “Ondine” for The Royal Ballet in London. This three-act work is about the water nymph Ondine – a role Ashton made specially for Margot Fonteyn – who becomes the object of a worldly prince’s desire. Upon finding the prince unfaithful, Ondine kills him with a kiss. German composer Hans Werner Henze was commissioned with the “Undine” music. Other choreographers subsequently used Henze’s score for their own productions, the most recent dating from the summer of 2016 by Vyacheslav Samodurov for the Bolshoi Ballet. Continue reading “Still Elusive: The Eternal Feminine”