Lucky audience to see this stellar pair of dance-actors attempting with all their matchless skills to infuse blood into the pallid veins of what’s largely a delineation of Pushkin's plot, rather than ...
A rarely-performed gem — a Boston Ballet production at the Opera House through March 6 — “Onegin” is a glorious, but little known masterpiece. “Onegin” is not a prominent name in the ballet world, and ...
“I recollect the ocean rumbling: / O how I envied then the waves— / Those rushing tides in tumult tumbling / To fall about her feet like slaves!” So begins one of the most memorable cantos of ...
It's tempting to see the force and beauty of John Cranko's adaptation of Eugene Onegin, which the National Ballet is presenting until Nov. 27, as the confluence of three troubled creative minds. First ...
American Ballet Theatre announced casting changes for ONEGIN after Principal Dancer Cory Stearns was sidelined by a meniscal ...
John Cranko's 1965 ballet Onegin, based on Alexander Pushkin's narrative poem, is a compelling but dramatically flawed work. The story tells of mousy Tatiana, who falls in love with Onegin, a wealthy ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Reece Clarke as Onegin and Marianela Nuñez as Tatiana - Alastair Muir A packed and unusually buzzing house on Wednesday evening ...
This article was originally on a blog post platform and may be missing photos, graphics or links. See About archive blog posts. During his new ballet spectacle, based on Alexander Pushkin’s revered ...
LONDON — In the summer of 1975, WWD reported that Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis made a rare appearance at the Metropolitan Opera House after the death of her shipping tycoon husband, Aristotle Onassis.
This winter, the Boston Ballet will perform a long awaited ballet- "Onegin". Alexander Pushkin's poignant 19th-century verse-novel "Eugene Onegin" is the doomed-love story of a naive young landowner's ...
Performances in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by Dance Review By Gia Kourlas There are no happy endings in “Onegin,” John Cranko’s three-act ballet inspired by Alexander Pushkin’s narrative poem.
Performances in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by Dance Review By Alastair Macaulay If you are a balletomane, caring more about dancers than choreography, then the casting of John Cranko’s three-act ...