Posted on 12/17/2025 6:11:44 PM PST by CondoleezzaProtege
The Italian Renaissance gave birth to ballet, but Russians dominated the art to such a degree no one questioned their supremacy. The Bolshoi, the world’s reigning company, pirouetted onto U.S. stages in 1959 and 1962. The State Department-sponsored American Ballet Theatre (ABT) went east in 1960 followed two years later by the New York City Ballet (NYCB), led by its Russian émigré choreographer George Balanchine. Adding a thermonuclear layer of stress, the Cuban Missile Crisis ignited in October 1962 when the Bolshoi and the NYCB were in each other’s countries.
Upstart Americans left home unproven underdogs…The New York Times feared a “profound national humiliation” might result if the ABT disappointed the folks back home.
But audiences in both nations went wild. The Bolshoi’s artistic director wrote to his wife that people screamed, cried, and tore up their programs after an audience demanded 17 curtain calls. Scalpers resold tickets for the equivalent of $830 in 2018 dollars.
Cultural misunderstandings hobbled both sides. The Bolshoi flopped with “Spartacus,” a ballet about a Roman slave uprising. A Hollywood epic of the same name had just opened. The Soviets thought their extravaganza would do boffo biz while sneaking its true meaning—a depiction of proletariat revolt…
Just as astronauts and cosmonauts sought to literally fly higher than each other, in ballets like “Spartacus” and the Americans’ “Rodeo” and “Fancy Free,” male dancers did the same. They wielded swords, rode imaginary bucking broncos, and brawled like drunken sailors. Surprisingly, post-war ballet in both countries “glorified the very masculine working-class man” —with works whose “strong dancing showed off big jumps and big spins,” not genteel aristocratic male footwork.
No one out-machoed Balanchine—not Khrushchev, who went stag to a Moscow show, or a dapper President Kennedy in black tie...
(Excerpt) Read more at magazine.washington.edu ...
|
Click here: to donate by Credit Card Or here: to donate by PayPal Or by mail to: Free Republic, LLC - PO Box 9771 - Fresno, CA 93794 Thank you very much and God bless you. |
Upon arriving in Russia, an interviewer said, “Welcome to Moscow, home of classic ballet.” Balanchine shot back, “I beg your pardon. Russia is the home of romantic ballet. The home of classic ballet is now America.” Translation? Your ballets are mud. I own ballet’s future.
As a kid, I went to the USSR as a student ambassador. We saw a Russian ballet in Moscow one night. Can’t say I remember much though.
That is a very cool fact!
Alexander Godunov defected from the Bolshoi Ballet in 1982, and was romantically involved with Jacqueline Bisset. He passed at the age of 45 in 1995.
Alexander Godunov defected...
These were the types of people for whom our asylum laws were written. Not 300 million squatemalans fleeing gang violence.
Kinda a highbrow version of the way gangs would solve their differences with break dancing contests.
I knew a member of the USA Cycling Team that went over to the USSR in the mid-80’s for the Goodwill Games. They got friendly with a member of the housekeeping staff at the hotel. When they left, they gave her several pairs of Levis jeans and a Walkman. They said she cried over their generosity.
Yep...but RAT Administrations have allowed everyone to claim asylum with no proof of them actually being in danger if they stayed in their own country.
Yep.
People talk about "100 million illegals" without realizing that many of these people are here legally, admitted by the Biden Administration under a farcical interpretation of our asylum laws. And this "legal" status allows them to qualify for various forms of taxpayer gibs, documents, and even to register to vote (they're not supposed to vote but they do, and the Democrats don't mind).
Baryshnikov’s Nutcracker was just amazing. Enthralling, though I was just a kid who understood nothing about ballet.
Where is he now? Rehab?
Please ignore the fact that after they dance they are handed around like favors to good party members.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.