The Bolshoi Ballet has
been dancing at the Covent Garden for three weeks to finish
with a revived "The Pharaoh's Daughter".
Britain's sophisticated ballet-goers
saw time-tested masterpieces-Ludwig Minkus' "Don Quixote",
an Alexei Fadeichev production, and Yuri Grigorovich's endeavours:
Tchaikovsky's "The Swan Lake" and Aram Khachaturyan's
"Spartacus". There was also Sergei Prokofiev's "Romeo
and Juliet", a trailblazing joint effort of British stage
director Declan Donnelan and Moldovan choreographer Radu Poclitaru.
The performances involved more than 220
Bolshoi dancers and orchestra musicians.
Daring in its minimalism, "Romeo and Juliet" made
reviewers break lances. Thus, The Independent and The Financial
Times offered it a very sceptical coverage.
"The opinions of conservative reviewers
and the public of avant-garde tastes were clashing over that
particular production. Ballet-goers liked it more than all
the other ballets we were offering. We owed all grudges against
us to totally unconventional dancing, which broke the Bolshoi's
classical traditions. We did it on purpose-to show the company
in its progress," Anatoli Iksanov, Bolshoi Director General,
said to Novosti.
He sees another reason to the dislike-a
modernist treatment of Shakespeare's renowned tragedy. "We
Russians don't conceal jealousy, either, when foreign directors
or ballet-masters are taking liberties with Chekhov, Gogol,
Ostrovsky or any other Russian classic," remarked Mr.
Iksanov.
Victor Hochhauser Co., which arranged
the summer performances, was the first to offer Londoners
a Bolshoi ballet forty years ago. It also organised the latest
previous big presence of Moscow dancing stars in London, 1999.
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