Lasting Icons

“Two Annas”
MuzArts
Tovstonogov Bolshoi Drama Theatre
St. Petersburg, Russia
December 2025 (video)

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2025 by Ilona Landgraf

 1. P.Malikova (Anna Akhmatova), E.Sevenard (Anna Akhmatova), and D.Potaptsev (Nikolai Gumilev), “Akhmatova” by Y.Possokhov, MuzArts 2025 © Diaghilev P.S. Festival/M.Vilchuk The production company MuzArts, founded in 2014 to showcase the Bolshoi Ballet’s prima ballerina, Svetlana Zakharova, has grown into a vital force of Russia’s ballet scene. Their recent production, Two Annas, is a joint project with the Diaghilev P.S. International Festival of Arts, a prominent, intercultural, cross-genre event that has been held in St. Petersburg since 2009. Two Annas premiered at St. Petersburg’s Tovstonogov Bolshoi Drama Theatre this February and received its Moscow premiere at the Maly Theatre. Thanks to the Diaghilev P.S. Festival’s executive director, Natalia Tsvetkova, I was able to watch a video of the production.

 3. D.Potaptsev (Nikolai Gumilev) and ensemble, “Akhmatova” by Y.Possokhov, MuzArts 2025 © Diaghilev P.S. Festival/M.Vilchuk 2. P.Malikova (Anna Akhmatova) and E.Sevenard (Anna Akhmatova), “Akhmatova” by Y.Possokhov, MuzArts 2025 © Diaghilev P.S. Festival/M.Vilchuk The title’s Annas are the Russian and Soviet poetess, Anna Akhmatova (1889-1966), and Anna Pavlova (1881-1931), both symbols of the Silver Age. I can’t say for certain, but presumably they never met in person, as Two Annas is a double bill of two separate ballets: Akhmatova by Yuri Possokhov and Pavlova by Pavel Glukhov. The artistic team included set designer Maria Tregubova, costume designer Svetlana Tegin, and lighting expert Ivan Vinogradov.
4. E.Sevenard (Anna Akhmatova), “Akhmatova” by Y.Possokhov, MuzArts 2025 © Diaghilev P.S. Festival/M.Vilchuk 5. E.Sevenard (Anna Akhmatova), A.Putintsev (Amedeo Modigliani), P.Malikova (Anna Akhmatova), and ensemble; “Akhmatova” by Y.Possokhov, MuzArts 2025 © Diaghilev P.S. Festival/M.Vilchuk Felix Mikhailov wrote the libretto and acted as the production’s director. Music by César Franck accompanied Akhmatova; Ilya Demutsky composed the score for Pavlova. Both were played by the Opensound Orchestra at whose piano sat Andrei Korobeinikov. Except for Ildar Gainutdinov, who performed with Pavlova, all dancers are on the Bolshoi Ballet’s roster.

6. E.Sevenard (Anna Akhmatova), “Akhmatova” by Y.Possokhov, MuzArts 2025 © Diaghilev P.S. Festival/M.Vilchuk Akhmatova features the love triangle between Akhmatova, her husband, Nikolai Gumilev, and the Italian painter and sculptor, Amedeo Modigliani, whom she met in 1910 on her honeymoon in Paris. Memories and many of Akhmatova’s poems (spoken by Polina Malikova, a drama actress of the Tovstonogov Drama Theatre who portrayed Akhmatova) added context to happenings on stage.

Malikova’s Akhmatova stood in the doorway of a high double door accompanied by a metronome, the quick tick-tock of which sounded like time flying by. The rectangle of light that shone through the door onto the gloomily gray stage resembled a catwalk. It led Akhmatova, who was reciting “There are three epochs to reminiscences…” back in time and down her memory lane.

7. A.Putintsev (Amedeo Modigliani), E.Sevenard (Anna Akhmatova), D.Potaptsev (Nikolai Gumilev), and ensemble; “Akhmatova” by Y.Possokhov, MuzArts 2025 © Diaghilev P.S. Festival/M.Vilchuk 8. A.Putintsev (Amedeo Modigliani), “Akhmatova” by Y.Possokhov, MuzArts 2025 © Diaghilev P.S. Festival/M.Vilchuk Gradually, light fell on a plain table and a bench, upon which her younger self (danced by Eleonora Sevenard) rested. Sevenard’s light blue dress and Malikova’s floor-length, ink-blue, white collared dress were the only splashes of vibrant color on an otherwise gray stage. The man sitting motionless next to Akhmatova was Gumilev (Daniil Potaptsev). Slowly coming to life, Akhmatova sat up like a diva. Her languid elegance looked pretentious. She took some probing steps, then twirled toward the darkness, curious to explore its depth. Strength and sensuality combined in her.
9. E.Sevenard (Anna Akhmatova), “Akhmatova” by Y.Possokhov, MuzArts 2025 © Diaghilev P.S. Festival/M.Vilchuk A gently singing violin, soft piano music, and the voice of Malikova accompanied Akhmatova’s blossoming romance with Gumilev. They had just met when a second double door opened and a group of artists, among them Modigliani (Alexei Putintsev), entered. Laid back and bohemian, he instantly attracted Akhmatova and vice versa. The reserved Gumilev did not impress him in the least and was sidelined. Emotional turmoil ensued. Every glance from Modigliani burnt Akhmatova like a flame. Obedience fought the wish to break free. Then Gumilev left through one of the doors. The small strip of light that shone through the door signaled that he hadn’t parted forever.
Modigliani fueled Akhmatova’s femininity, but her nature was erratic. “Off you went as if you had not heard, And the soul got empty and clear again,” recited Malikova as the lovers separated. Soon, they were magnetically drawn back to one another. Gumilev returned furious, desperate, and helpless. For the time being, he kept his composure, but it crumbled as his wife abandoned and then returned to him. “Nothing chains a heart to heart,” seemed to be her motto.
10. P.Malikova (Anna Akhmatova), “Akhmatova” by Y.Possokhov, MuzArts 2025 © Diaghilev P.S. Festival/M.Vilchuk 11. A.Putintsev (Amedeo Modigliani) and E.Sevenard (Anna Akhmatova), “Akhmatova” by Y.Possokhov, MuzArts 2025 © Diaghilev P.S. Festival/M.VilchukOn one occasion, after Akhmatova had left Modigliani for Gumilev, Modigliani rolled across the floor like a nerve-racked, anguished bundle. In her memories, Akhmatova wrote that “Obviously [Modigliani] began drinking at a later stage, but hashish had already made its appearance in the stories he told.” A “certain madame” (Yaroslavna Kuprina) appeared in his life and exerted a great influence on him. Because of her, Akhmatova lamented that “No letter came for me today.”
12. Ensemble, “Akhmatova” by Y.Possokhov, MuzArts 2025 © Diaghilev P.S. Festival/M.Vilchuk Contrary to her earlier lines (i.e. “The two of us won’t share a glass together”), she did reunite with Modigliani, who seemed eternally grateful but suddenly looked vulnerable. Gumilev must have learned about his wife’s latest departure from the letter he crumpled up. He then lay flat as a pancake on the table and curled up like a lost child.
As Akhmatova continued to feel torn between two men, Gumilev’s contempt grew. He dumped his wife into Modigliani’s arms, his limbs thrashing in the air. It wasn’t clear whether he was angry about Akhmatova or about having cleared things up. From that moment, the color of Sevenard’s dress was muted.

13. Y.Kuprina (Jeanne) and E.Sevenard (Anna Akhmatova), “Akhmatova” by Y.Possokhov, MuzArts 2025 © Diaghilev P.S. Festival/M.Vilchuk 14. E.Sevenard (Anna Akhmatova), “Akhmatova” by Y.Possokhov, MuzArts 2025 © Diaghilev P.S. Festival/M.Vilchuk Akhmatova later lost sight of Modigliani. No one knew him, Malikova said, and “Someone described him as a ‘drunken monster’ or something of the sort.” Perhaps the many pages that flew onto the stage from the left wing like fallen leaves in autumn symbolized the end of their romance. Perhaps they testified to Akhmatova’s success as an author.
The three nameless couples that intermingled with the main protagonists several times knelt in line with them in a final arm 15. P.Malikova (Anna Akhmatova) and E.Sevenard (Anna Akhmatova), “Akhmatova” by Y.Possokhov, MuzArts 2025 © Diaghilev P.S. Festival/M.Vilchuk movement routine, the intention of which I failed to grasp. As Malikova and Sevenard each walked toward opposite doors, Modigliani’s 1911 drawing of Akhmatova hung above their heads. The last poem Malikova recited was “Twenty-First. Night. Monday.” It mentioned a secret that reveals itself to some, “And on them silence settles down.” Together with Malikova, this secret vanished behind the slowly closing door.

Unlike in The Seagull or The Queen of Spades, for example, Possokhov’s choreography lacked intensity and clarity, but was similar to memories gilded by time. The many poems provided a strong framework, especially since Malikova was almost constantly on stage. César Franck’s Piano Quintet in F minor added acoustic depth.

16. Scene from “Pavlova” by P.Glukhov, MuzArts 2025 © Diaghilev P.S. Festival/M.Vilchuk Pavlova opened with a sound by Ignat Krasikov’s clarinet that must have tapped an old underground pipeline. Once surfaced, it developed into a melody that fizzed and warbled like a cheeky bird. Tongue-in-cheek humor immediately filled the air. Lush red drapery and a semicircular spotlight turned the stage into an intimate cabaret. Apparently, one ballerina wasn’t enough to portray an artist as scintillating as Pavlova, so Glukhov employed six. Three of them (Anastasia Stashkevich, Yaroslavna Kuprina, and Elizaveta Kokoreva) performed solos and pas de deux, and the other three joined them in the final scene. Kokoreva in particular danced a great deal (and superbly conveyed Pavlova’s charm and esprit).

18. V.Lopatin (Enrico Cecchetti) and A.Stashkevich (Anna Pavlova), “Pavlova” by P.Glukhov, MuzArts 2025 © Diaghilev P.S. Festival/M.Vilchuk 17. V.Lopatin (Enrico Cecchetti) and A.Stashkevich (Anna Pavlova), “Pavlova” by P.Glukhov, MuzArts 2025 © Diaghilev P.S. Festival/M.Vilchuk Walking across the stage as if lost, Stashkevich, Kuprina, and Kokoreva curtseyed (either modestly, coquettishly, or with the grandeur of a seasoned artist) and disappeared behind the curtain. Only a plush swan peeped out from behind, but it quickly ducked its head backstage. Cecchetti (Vyacheslav Lopatin), who strode on stage as if he were a caricature of the Legat brothers, lured the swan back, resolutely clutched its neck, and pulled it on stage.
19. V.Lopatin (Enrico Cecchetti) and A.Stashkevich (Anna Pavlova), “Pavlova” by P.Glukhov, MuzArts 2025 © Diaghilev P.S. Festival/M.Vilchuk 20. A.Gainutdinov (Vaslav Nijinsky), E.Kokoreva (Anna Pavlova), and A.Gainutdinov (Igor Stravinsky); “Pavlova” by P.Glukhov, MuzArts 2025 © Diaghilev P.S. Festival/M.Vilchuk 21. E.Kokoreva (Anna Pavlova), “Pavlova” by P.Glukhov, MuzArts 2025 © Diaghilev P.S. Festival/M.Vilchuk The puppeteer attached to the swan’s neck was Pavlova. Cecchetti’s cane worked like a magic wand on her. Its slap urged her to the barre, where it honed her line. It manipulated Pavlova like a puppet rod, supported and flirted with her, and, once in her hands, turned against its owner.

23. E.Kokoreva (Anna Pavlova) and I.Gainutdinov (Mikhail Mordkin), “Pavlova” by P.Glukhov, MuzArts 2025 © Diaghilev P.S. Festival/M.Vilchuk 22. E.Kokoreva (Anna Pavlova), “Pavlova” by P.Glukhov, MuzArts 2025 © Diaghilev P.S. Festival/M.Vilchuk The white swan feather that floored Michel Fokine (Makar Mikhalkin, who wore striped pants, suspenders, and a white bow tie) inspired him to perform a lightweight, acrobatic solo from which the idea for The Swan emerged. An innovative choreographer, Fokine brimmed over with novelties. How Pavlova absorbed the swan nature was unclear, but her arms undulated perfectly at the end of their rehearsal. She didn’t dance the swan with Mikhail Mordkin (Ildar Gainutdinov), though. He was a straddle-legged muscleman with a pirate-like headscarf who grimaced like a surprised comic figure, and he propelled her around, lifted her like barbells, and twisted and 24. M.Orlov (Victor Dandré) and Y.Kuprina (Anna Pavlova), “Pavlova” by P.Glukhov, MuzArts 2025 © Diaghilev P.S. Festival/M.Vilchuk folded her in every direction imaginable. It’s said that Mordkin’s sheer physicality brought out the vamp in Pavlova. Obviously, this was the only way to handle him.

The top-hatted Diaghilev (Mark Orlov), whose overlong arms and hunched posture emulated a gorilla, was busy pacifying the constantly quarreling Nijinsky (Alexei Gainutdinov, who wore a white version of Nijinsky’s Le Spectre de la rose costume) and Stravinsky (Anton Gainutdinov). They chased one another in a boxing fight. In a quiet moment, the first tunes of The Rite of Spring came into Stravinsky’s mind, and once written down, he handed them to Korobeinikov in the orchestra pit. Tied up in knots and terribly punctilious, Stravinsky turned ecstatic while listening to Korobeinikov hammering the staccato rhythm.

27. A.Putintsev (Charlie Chaplin) and E.Kokoreva (Anna Pavlova), “Pavlova” by P.Glukhov, MuzArts 2025 © Diaghilev P.S. Festival/M.Vilchuk 26. E.Kokoreva (Anna Pavlova) and A.Putintsev (Charlie Chaplin), “Pavlova” by P.Glukhov, MuzArts 2025 © Diaghilev P.S. Festival/M.Vilchuk 25. Marc Orlov (Victor Dandré) and Yaroslavna Kuprina (Anna Pavlova), “Pavlova” by Pavel Glukhov, MuzArts 2025 © Diaghilev P.S. Festival/M.Vilchuk Of all the men, Victor Dandré (Mark Orlov), Pavlova’s husband, was the least eccentric, and their wedding pas de deux was calm and poetic. Irresistible sweet, by comparison, was the sight of Kokoreva’s Pavlova next to Alexei Putintsev’s Charlie Chaplin. In real life, Pavlova and Chaplin met at his Hollywood Studio in Los Angeles. A photograph shows them sitting hand in hand on a bench. On stage, Pavlova and Chaplin sat on red chairs playing a “going-to-Jerusalem”-esque game, although there was no shortage of chairs. Spellbound by a film we couldn’t see, they constantly pushed, nudged, climbed across, and accidentally groped one another. A black-and-white clip of Chaplin’s waddling gait, followed by a steam engine that sped toward Pavlova, added a grave overtone.

28.A.Stashkevich (Anna Pavlova) and V.Lopatin (Alexander Vertinsky), “Pavlova” by P.Glukhov, MuzArts 2025 © Diaghilev P.S. Festival/M.Vilchuk 29. A.Stashkevich (Anna Pavlova) and V.Lopatin (Alexander Vertinsky), “Pavlova” by P.Glukhov, MuzArts 2025 © Diaghilev P.S. Festival/M.Vilchuk Warmth, trust, and playfulness characterized Pavlova’s friendship with Alexander Vertinsky (Vyacheslav Lopatin). Sitting together, they reminded me of an ageing couple recalling the good old days. Vertinsky stayed back while Pavlova traveled the world (a huge elephant represented her trip to India). As he sat in the semi-darkness wearing a white ruff and a narrow, black cap, he looked like the melancholic Pierrot of his own stage career.

31. Ensemble, “Pavlova” by P.Glukhov, MuzArts 2025 © Diaghilev P.S. Festival/M.Vilchuk 30. Ensemble, “Pavlova” by P.Glukhov, MuzArts 2025 © Diaghilev P.S. Festival/M.Vilchuk Countless numbers of pointe shoes were scattered on stage when all six Pavlovas joined for their final swan dance. Dissonant piano chords accompanied them as they bouréed in line toward a spotlight. Against the blazing light, their undulating arms seemed to belong to a single body. For a moment, they looked like Shiva surrounded by a bright aura. A spotlight that searched the stage afterward lit nothing but used pointe shoes.

Link: Diaghilev P.S. International Festival of Arts
Photos: 1. Polina Malikova (Anna Akhmatova), Eleonora Sevenard (Anna Akhmatova), and Daniil Potaptsev (Nikolai Gumilev), “Akhmatova” by Yuri Possokhov, MuzArts 2025
2. Polina Malikova (Anna Akhmatova) and Eleonora Sevenard (Anna Akhmatova), “Akhmatova” by Yuri Possokhov, MuzArts 2025
3. Daniil Potaptsev (Nikolai Gumilev) and ensemble, “Akhmatova” by Yuri Possokhov, MuzArts 2025
4. Eleonora Sevenard (Anna Akhmatova), “Akhmatova” by Yuri Possokhov, MuzArts 2025
5. Eleonora Sevenard (Anna Akhmatova), Alexei Putintsev (Amedeo Modigliani), Polina Malikova (Anna Akhmatova), and ensemble; “Akhmatova” by Yuri Possokhov, MuzArts 2025
6. Eleonora Sevenard (Anna Akhmatova), “Akhmatova” by Yuri Possokhov, MuzArts 2025
7. Alexei Putintsev (Amedeo Modigliani), Eleonora Sevenard (Anna Akhmatova), Daniil Potaptsev (Nikolai Gumilev), and ensemble; “Akhmatova” by Yuri Possokhov, MuzArts 2025
8. Alexei Putintsev (Amedeo Modigliani), “Akhmatova” by Yuri Possokhov, MuzArts 2025
9. Eleonora Sevenard (Anna Akhmatova), “Akhmatova” by Yuri Possokhov, MuzArts 2025
10. Polina Malikova (Anna Akhmatova), “Akhmatova” by Yuri Possokhov, MuzArts 2025
11. Alexei Putintsev (Amedeo Modigliani) and Eleonora Sevenard (Anna Akhmatova), “Akhmatova” by Yuri Possokhov, MuzArts 2025
12. Ensemble, “Akhmatova” by Yuri Possokhov, MuzArts 2025
13. Yaroslavna Kuprina (Jeanne) and Eleonora Sevenard (Anna Akhmatova), “Akhmatova” by Yuri Possokhov, MuzArts 2025
14. Eleonora Sevenard (Anna Akhmatova), “Akhmatova” by Yuri Possokhov, MuzArts 2025
15. Polina Malikova (Anna Akhmatova) and Eleonora Sevenard (Anna Akhmatova), “Akhmatova” by Yuri Possokhov, MuzArts 2025
16. Scene from “Pavlova” by Pavel Glukhov, MuzArts 2025
17. Vyacheslav Lopatin (Cecchetti) and Anastasia Stashkevich (Anna Pavlova), “Pavlova” by Pavel Glukhov, MuzArts 2025
18. Vyacheslav Lopatin (Cecchetti) and Anastasia Stashkevich (Anna Pavlova), “Pavlova” by Pavel Glukhov, MuzArts 2025
19. Vyacheslav Lopatin (Enrico Cecchetti) and Anastasia Stashkevich (Anna Pavlova), “Pavlova” by Pavel Glukhov, MuzArts 2025
20. Alexei Gainutdinov (Vaslav Nijinsky), Elizaveta Kokoreva (Anna Pavlova), and Anton Gainutdinov (Igor Stravinsky); “Pavlova” by Pavel Glukhov, MuzArts 2025
21. Elizaveta Kokoreva (Anna Pavlova), “Pavlova” by Pavel Glukhov, MuzArts 2025
22. Elizaveta Kokoreva (Anna Pavlova), “Pavlova” by Pavel Glukhov, MuzArts 2025
23. Elizaveta Kokoreva (Anna Pavlova) and Ildar Gainutdinov (Mikhail Mordkin), “Pavlova” by Pavel Glukhov, MuzArts 2025
24. Marc Orlov (Victor Dandré) and Yaroslavna Kuprina (Anna Pavlova), “Pavlova” by Pavel Glukhov, MuzArts 2025
25. Marc Orlov (Victor Dandré) and Yaroslavna Kuprina (Anna Pavlova), “Pavlova” by Pavel Glukhov, MuzArts 2025
26. Elizaveta Kokoreva (Anna Pavlova) and Alexei Putintsev (Charlie Chaplin), “Pavlova” by Pavel Glukhov, MuzArts 2025
27. Alexei Putintsev (Charlie Chaplin) and Elizaveta Kokoreva (Anna Pavlova), “Pavlova” by Pavel Glukhov, MuzArts 2025
28. Anastasia Stashkevich (Anna Pavlova) and Vyacheslav Lopatin (Alexander Vertinsky), “Pavlova” by Pavel Glukhov, MuzArts 2025
29. Anastasia Stashkevich (Anna Pavlova) and Vyacheslav Lopatin (Alexander Vertinsky), “Pavlova” by Pavel Glukhov, MuzArts 2025
30. Ensemble, “Pavlova” by Pavel Glukhov, MuzArts 2025
31. Ensemble, “Pavlova” by Pavel Glukhov, MuzArts 2025
all photos © Diaghilev P.S. Festival/Mikhail Vilchuk
Editing: Kayla Kauffman

 

Adventurous

“Peter Pan”
Vienna State Ballet & Volksoper Wien
Volksoper Wien
Vienna, Austria
November 22, 2025

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2025 by Ilona Landgraf

1. Ensemble, “Peter Pan” by V.Orlić, Vienna State Ballet/Volksoper Wien 2025 © A.Taylor Vienna’s Volksoper buzzed with excitement shortly before the performance of Vesna Orlić’s dance adaptation of Peter Pan. The great many children in the auditorium fell into eager silence when a rousing fanfare opened the ballet.

Orlić, leading ballet master of the Volksoper ensemble, began choreographing in 2006. For her 2019 Peter Pan, she was justifiably awarded Austria’s music theater prize. The production, which is based on James Matthew Barrie’s 1911 novel Peter and Wendy (known as Peter Pan), is witty, gripping, and great entertainment for the young and the old. I don’t know why the company’s former artistic director, Martin Schläpfer, shelved it. His successor, Alessandra Ferri, instantly decided on a revival. Continue reading “Adventurous”

Mockery

“Die Fledermaus” (“The Bat”)
Vienna State Ballet
Vienna State Opera
Vienna, Austria
November 21, 2025

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2025 by Ilona Landgraf

1. T.Afshar (Johann) and O.Esina (Bella), “Die Fledermaus” by R.Petit, Vienna State Ballet 2025 © Vienna State Ballet/A.Taylor2. T.Afshar (Johann) and O.Esina (Bella), “Die Fledermaus” by R.Petit, Vienna State Ballet 2025 © Vienna State Ballet/A.Taylor For Johann Strauss II’s bicentennial, the Vienna State Ballet revived Roland Petit’s 1979 ballet adaptation of Strauss’s famous operetta, Die Fledermaus (The Bat). It’s accompanied by a “best of” selection of compositions by Johann Strauss II, his father, Johann Strauss I, and his brother, Josef. The score’s oomph and gaiety are infectious. Strauss’ music, particularly the Viennese waltzes (of which Die Fledermaus has plenty), is part of the DNA of the Vienna State Opera’s orchestra, and under Luciano Di Martino’s baton, it fizzed like champagne. Melodies rose boisterously to a tipping point, balanced provocatively on the edge, and rippled down with relish as if on a rollercoaster ride. Continue reading “Mockery”

Applied Faith

“Romeo and Juliet”
Hungarian National Ballet
Hungarian State Opera
Budapest, Hungary
November 8-9, 2025 (evening performance and matinee)

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2025 by Ilona Landgraf

 1. M.Yakovleva (Juliet), L.Scrivener (Romeo), and ensemble; “Romeo and Juliet” by L.Seregi, Hungarian National Ballet 2025 © A.Nagy/Hungarian State OperaMost ballet companies have a version of Romeo and Juliet. The Hungarian National Ballet’s version, by László Seregi (1929-2012), has been on the program regularly since its premiere in 1985. A crowd puller, the opera house was sold out at both performances I watched.

Seregi’s name is well known to Hungarian ballet lovers. Initially trained as a folk dancer, he joined the opera’s corps de ballet when it was short on artists during the 1956 revolution. In 1977, he became the company’s director but, feeling burdened by his duties, suffered from an enduring artistic crisis. Continue reading “Applied Faith”

Reborn

“Callirhoe”
Vienna State Ballet
Vienna State Opera
Vienna, Austria
October 19, 2025 (live stream)

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2025 by Ilona Landgraf

1. M.Young (Callirhoe) and ensemble, “Callirhoe” by A.Ratmansky, Vienna State Ballet 2025 © Vienna State Ballet/A.Taylor 2. V.Caixeta (Chaireas) and ensemble, “Callirhoe” by A.Ratmansky, Vienna State Ballet 2025 © Vienna State Ballet/A.TaylorThe title of Martin Schläpfer’s farewell choreography, Pathétique, summarized the condition of the Vienna State Ballet he left behind after five years as its artistic director. His successor, Alessandra Ferri, restructured the company. Some dancers left, and others joined, some of whom were returnees. Last weekend, she presented the first premiere under her reign, Alexei Ratmansky’s Callirhoe (which he choreographed for ABT in 2020 under the title Of Love and Rage). It felt like the rebirth of the company. I cannot remember when I last saw the Vienna State Ballet perform with such force. Congratulations! Continue reading “Reborn”

Watered Down

“Le Corsaire”
Korean National Ballet
Forum Ludwigsburg
Ludwigsburg, Germany
October 18, 2025

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2025 by Ilona Landgraf

1. Ensemble, “Le Corsaire” by J.Song, Korean National Ballet 2025 © Korean National BalletLast weekend, the Korean National Ballet presented Le Corsaire at the Forum Ludwigsburg. The tour stopped at Suejin Kang’s, the company’s artistic director, former home in the Stuttgart region, where she is a cherished former principal of Stuttgart Ballet. The senior guard of Stuttgart’s ballet circle therefore flocked to the performance as if it were a family gathering.

The Koreans’ Le Corsaire premiered in 2020 and is by Jungbin Song, a soloist of the company who began choreographing in 2016. He kept some of Petipa’s signature choreography (such as the tender pas de deux of Medora and Conrad in Act II; the pas de trois of Medora, Conrad, and Ali; and the Grand Pas de Trois des Odalisques) but rewrote the plot significantly. Continue reading “Watered Down”

The Art of Embarrassing Oneself

“Stravinsky in Paris” (“Farewell in Paris”/“Le Sacre du Printemps”)
State Ballet of the Gärtnerplatztheater, Munich
Forum Ludwigsburg
Ludwigsburg, Germany
July 30, 2025

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2025 by Ilona Landgraf

1. M.J.Perko (Jerry) and ensemble, “Farewell in Paris” by J.Verbruggen, State Ballet of the Gärtnerplatztheater 2025 © M.-L.Briane Since 1932, the city of Ludwigsburg in Baden-Württemberg has hosted an annual summer festival featuring various cultural genres. Many events are held at the Ludwigsburg Palace, a vast complex that served as the Duke of Württemberg’s residence after its completion in 1733. Munich’s State Ballet of the Gärtnerplatztheater, whose Stravinsky in Paris marked the festival’s final dance event, performed at the Ludwigsburg Forum near the palace. Last October, the Gärtnerplatztheater showed Troja (“Troy”) by the Greek-born Andonis Foniadakis on its tour to Ludwigsburg. Its display of sexist abuse was annoying. As the press praised Stravinsky in Paris as a “confetti rocket,” I was curious about its “sophisticated dance and music.”
Stravinsky in Paris, a co-production of the Gärtenerplatztheater and the Ludwigsburg Festival, recently premiered in Munich. The double bill combines Jeroen Verbruggen’s Farewell in Paris and Marco Goecke’s Le Sacre du Printemps.
The nonchalant steps of the straw-hatted men who opened Farewell to Paris seemed inspired by a blend of Broadway style and Parisian savoir vivre. In their pale pink of their blazers and pants, they seemed to belong in a little girl’s dream (costumes by Emmanuel Maria). Continue reading “The Art of Embarrassing Oneself”

Something Is Going On

“Twilight”/“Bronia”
Les Ballets de Monte Carlo
Salle Garnier Opéra de Monte-Carlo
Monte Carlo, Monaco
July 18, 2025

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2025 by Ilona Landgraf

1. Ensemble, “Twilight” by L.Timulak, Les Ballets de Monte-Carlo 2025 © A.BlangeroLes Ballets de Monte-Carlo closed the season with two new creations: Twilight by Lukáš Timulak and Bronia by Mattia Russo and Antonio de Rosa. So far, all productions I’ve seen in Monaco have been performed at the Grimaldi Forum, a modern glass and steel complex whose Salle des Princes lies below sea level. The new double bill was, however, presented at the Salle Garnier at the Opéra de Monte-Carlo, which is next door to the famous casino. A miniature replica of the Paris Opera, the Salle Garnier is a red and gold Italian theater built in the Second Empire style. It was here that Sergei Diaghilev’s Ballets Russes took up residence in 1911. Until the First World War, Diaghilev’s company rehearsed, prepared new productions, and stored sets and props in Monte-Carlo. On April 9, 1911, the Ballets Russes gave its first performance, which featured Scheherazade and Giselle. On April 19th, Nijinsky and Karsavina gave their debut in Fokine’s Le Spectre de la Rose. This history was significant in the context of the recent premiere. Continue reading “Something Is Going On”

“We Need Him”

“Diaghilev”
Dancers of the Bolshoi Ballet
Bolshoi Theatre (New Stage)
Moscow, Russia
June 24, 2025 (video)

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2025 by Ilona Landgraf

1. A.Meskova (Gypsy Woman) and D.Rodkin (Sergei Diaghilev), “Diaghilev” by A.Kaggedzhi, Dancers of the Bolshoi Ballet 2025 © G.Galantnyi  2. D.Rodkin (Sergei Diaghilev), “Diaghilev” by A.Kaggedzhi, Dancers of the Bolshoi Ballet 2025 © G.Galantnyi  The man in need whom Sergei Lifar wrote about in 1939 was Sergei Diaghilev (1872-1929), impresario of the Ballets Russes and a revolutionist of ballet. Diaghilev’s burning passion to discover and promote creative beauty is unequaled. He shaped the perception of Russian culture in the West and, like a virus, changed the DNA of twentieth-century art. Without him, Vaslav Nijinsky, Tamara Karsavina, Ida Rubinstein, Feodor Chaliapin, and Igor Stravinsky wouldn’t have become known to the world, and the careers of choreographers, such as Michel Fokine, Bronislava Nijinska, Léonide Massine, and George Balanchine, might have taken another path. Ten years after Diaghilev’s death, no one had filled the void he had left behind.

Ninety-six years later, a new Diaghilev has yet to be found, but—as Russia and the West separated again—the need for a bridge-building spirit and culture that unites people across borders is more pressing than ever. That’s why Russia launched the cultural search festival We Need Diaghilev last year, which features various expositions, lectures, and performances at Russian and foreign venues. Continue reading ““We Need Him””

A Recap

“Malditos Benditos”
Ballet of the State Theater Nuremberg
State Theater
Nuremberg, Germany
July 10, 2025

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2025 by Ilona Landgraf

1. Ensemble, “Malditos Benditos” by G.Montero, Ballet of the State Theater Nuremberg 2025 © J.VallinasMalditos Benditos (“Damned Blessed Ones”) is Goyo Montero’s farewell piece to Nuremberg. After seventeen years as artistic director of the State Theater’s ballet company, the Spaniard will leave for the State Ballet Hanover this autumn to take up the reins Marco Goecke was forced to give up in 2023. Richard Siegal, director of the Cologne-based Ballet of Difference, will succeed Montero in Nuremberg and bring his dancers along. They will merge with their Nuremberg colleagues into the State Theater Nuremberg Ballet of Difference.
Malditos Benditos is the counterpart to Benditos Malditos, Montero’s first creation in Nuremberg in 2008. Many of the intervening twenty-five productions are reflected in Malditos Benditos. Applause blended into the medley of musical snippets and electronic noise as the black curtain rose. The black-suited dancers (costumes by Goyo Montero and Margaux Manns) bowed to the applause of an imaginary audience at the rear stage, framed by a bright red curtain. Continue reading “A Recap”

Too Bad

“Scheherazade”
Czech National Ballet
National Theatre
Prague, Czech Republic
June 21, 2025 (matinee)

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2025 by Ilona Landgraf

1. N.Nakagawa (Scheherazade), “Scheherazade” by M.Bigonzetti, Czech National Ballet 2025 © S.Gherciu To be upfront, Mauro Bigonzetti’s new Scheherazade for the Czech National Ballet is no asset to its repertory. Its choreography is meager and the plot thin; the characters lack depth, and the digital set design is unconvincing.
Bigonzetti takes up the narrative thread where Fokine’s 1910 Scheherazade for Diaghilev’s Ballets Russes ends. Zobeida, the favorite but unfaithful wife of Shahryar, the king of Persia, had died. Enraged about womanhood in general, Shahryar took revenge by killing every woman he slept with the morning after their first night together. Scheherazade, the clever daughter of his vizier, put a stop to the slaughter. The tales she narrated to the king each night (collected in the Middle Eastern folk tale, One Thousand and One Nights) softened him.
Bigonzetti portrayed the women in line for Shahryar, among them Scheherazade (Nana Nakagawa), who was ready to sacrifice herself. Continue reading “Too Bad”

Eerie

“Valerie and Her Week of Wonders”
Laterna magika
The New Stage
Prague, Czech Republic
June 20, 2025

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2025 by Ilona Landgraf

1. Z.Piškula (Orlik) and P.Stach (Richard/Polecat), “Valerie and Her Week of Wonders,” Laterna magika 2025 © V.Brtnický The Czech avant-garde author Vítězlav Nezval’s gothic novel, Valery and Her Week of Wonders, written in 1935 and published in 1945, has experienced a revival at home. It was first adapted for the stage in 1967, and a new production was shown in Prague only forty years later in 2008. In 2023, two Czech companies simultaneously presented stage versions of Valeria and Her Week of Wonders; the West Bohemian Theatre in Cheb (located between Karlovy Vary and the Czech/German border) and Laterna magika in Prague. I saw Laterna magika’s production.

The wonders that Nezval’s teenage heroine, Valerie, experiences during the span of one week are far from wonderful and are rather a sexually laden horror trip that torpedoes her into womanhood. Events unfold with a dream Valerie has on the night of her first menstruation. Only late in the novel does this dream verge into the realm of reality, which it soon forsakes for a Garden of Eden-like happy ending. Continue reading “Eerie”

Prix Benois Laureates 2025

Prix Benois de la Danse
Bolshoi Theatre (Historic Stage)
Moscow, Russia
June 17, 2025

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2025 by Ilona Landgraf

1. Y.Grigorovich, Prix Benois Award Ceremony, Bolshoi Theatre 2025 © B.AnnadurdyevYesterday evening, the Prix Benois laureates were announced on the Bolshoi Theatre’s historic stage for the 33rd time.

Mthuthuzeli November won the prize for best choreography in absentia for Chapter Two, a creation for Cape Ballet Africa in South Africa. The Mariinsky Ballet’s Renata Shakirova won the best female dancer prize for her performance as Swanilda in Alexander Sergeev’s new Coppélia. Like last year, the prize for the best male dancer was awarded twice. Joshua Williams received the Prix Benois for his performance in November’s Chapter Two; Dmitry Smilevsky (Bolshoi Ballet) was awarded for his performances as Mercutio in Leonid Lavrovsky’s version of Romeo and Juliet and Prince Désiré in Yuri Grigorovich’s version of The Sleeping Beauty. Continue reading “Prix Benois Laureates 2025”

Dancer Nominees for the Prix Benois 2025

Prix Benois de la Danse
Bolshoi Theatre (Historic Stage)
Moscow, Russia
June 2025

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2025 by Ilona Landgraf

1. Bolshoi Theatre © Bolshoi Theatre/D.Yusupov2. Statuette of the Prix Benois de la Danse, design by I.Ustinov © Benois Center As in 2024, the Prix Benois jury nominated thirteen dancers from eight companies for this season’s award. Of the six women and seven men, two dance in China, France, and South Africa; one dances in Kazakhstan; and six, Russia. Next Tuesday, the laureates will be announced at an award ceremony at the Bolshoi Theatre, Moscow.

Here’s a short overview of the nominees in alphabetical order by company name: Continue reading “Dancer Nominees for the Prix Benois 2025”

Choreographer Nominees for the Prix Benois 2025

Prix Benois de la Danse
Mukaram Avakhri, Wang Ge, Thomas Lebrun, Andrey Merkuriev, Mthuthuzeli November, Alexander Sergeev
Bolshoi Theatre (Historic Stage)

Moscow, Russia
June 2025

by Ilona Landgraf
Copyright © 2025 by Ilona Landgraf

1. Bolshoi Theatre © Bolshoi Theatre/D.Yusupov2. Statuette of the Prix Benois de la Danse, design by I.Ustinov © Benois Center On June 17th, the Bolshoi Theatre’s Historic Stage will host the annual Prix Benois charity gala and awards ceremony. Traditionally, laureates of previous years have performed in a gala concert on the following evening. Prizes will be awarded for the best choreographer, female dancer, and male dancer. This year’s festival will pay tribute to Yuri Grigorovich, who passed away on May 19th. Grigorovich founded the Prix Benois competition in 1991 and served as chairman of the jury, artistic director, and president.
Below is an overview of the six nominated choreographers. A report of the dancer nominees will follow. Continue reading “Choreographer Nominees for the Prix Benois 2025”