I bought Ballet in Moscow Today by Helene Bellew at a used bookstore
earlier this year. It was published by the New York Graphic Society, but there
is no information provided on the copyright date. Usually, one may pick up
a clue when the author signs the Preface but not in this instance.
I am curious about the date of publication, because I would like to know more
about the context in which this author is writing. It is probably around the 1960's,
and the Western author seems to write as if she spent a season watching the
Company perform...in the USSR.
Profiles of the prinicipal and character dancers are written about in minute detail.
Ulanova, Lepechinskaya, Plisetskaya, Struchkova, Yermolaev, Preobrazhenski,
Kondratov, Koren, Lapauri, Karelskaya, Chorokova, Cherkassova, Gotlieb, Sekh,
Evdokimov, Andrianov, Zhdanov, Chistova, Bogolubskaya, Banke, Tikhorminova,
Farmanyantz, Kouznetsov, Horlov, Gerber, Homutov, Radunsky, Kashani, Olenina,
Golovkina, Iluchenko, Kapustina, Tuchina, Efremova, Makedonskaya
Many thanks for assistance in the detective work! B)
I am also looking for the title and publisher of another book about the Bolshoi.
Unfortunately, the only clues I can provide here are that it was a coffee table
book (large format) with many, many color photographs of the Bolshoi to match
their repetoire. What fascinated is that through these photos was my first
encounter with "The Fountains of Bakhchisarai", and an overhwelming joy at
viewing photos of "Stone Flower" (more than just 1 and in color). There were
other ballets that I had never seen, and guessed were deemed not popular
enough outside of the former USSR? I am soooooo happy to hear that the
Bolshoi will be bringing these ballets forth. I am not so worried about whether
the story line was strong enough to withstand the test of time, as I am about
viewing these dances to get a sense of what audiences viewed back then.
If you are familiar with such a book, please share the title! I keep kicking
myself for having not sprung for it at the famous Strand Books (eight miles
of used books *gasp*).
~Giselle the Lazer Canary




