Ekaterina Maximova passed away this night
#16
Posted 28 April 2009 - 10:15 AM
I'm sure that Miss Maximova is there too, in that "somewhere", enchanting her peers...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yP5p-hjOsyc&feature=related
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xjR0WjhQ0zM&feature=related
#17
Posted 28 April 2009 - 11:12 AM
Mikhail, on Apr 28 2009, 05:28 AM, said:
The first time I saw Yekaterina offstage she looked like a pretty young girl who should be at school and not a ballet dancer with one of the world’s great ballet companies.
I was fortunate to see her dance many times and I cherish deep memories of her in many roles. For me Yekaterina Maximova became Katerina, became Phrygia, became Masha, became Kitri and achieved extraordinary success in so many other roles. When I first saw Maximova and her husband who were not too different in age to myself, their extraordinary projection of youth resonated deeply with me. In London she was much loved and with her husband, we were privileged to see performances of one of the great partnerships of the 20th century. Arnold Haskell seeing her dance Don Q pas said that Maximova "...had the wittiest feet since Anna Pavlova."
There is a today headline on http://gazeta.ru/cul...a_2980218.shtml which Ilya posted, which reads, “Yekaterina Maximova - The little elf of the Bolshoi?
Which I found an extremely poignant description of this wonderful childlike woman and great artist.
To her husband Vladimir Vasiliev and her mother I send my sincere condolences and the ballet world for me is a a lesser place than it was yesterday.
#18
Posted 28 April 2009 - 11:46 AM
A long romance. A lot to be thankful for.
#19
Posted 28 April 2009 - 01:35 PM
Since then, through video and youtube, I have had some other indirect exposure to her vivid, beautiful dancing and characterizations in more standard repertory--Nutcracker and Don Quixote. I remember stumbling over a black and white Don Quixote pas de deux solo just a year ago or so via youtube and feeling as if I had been given a sudden illumination, a sort of balletomane vision: "Oh! THAT'S how it's supposed to look." In every video I have ever seen of her, she has, too, an extraordinarily engaging personal quality--she inspires love, as she did that one time I saw her on stage.
#20
Posted 28 April 2009 - 04:19 PM
What a noble talent!
leonid, on Apr 28 2009, 12:12 PM, said:
Mikhail, on Apr 28 2009, 05:28 AM, said:
The first time I saw Yekaterina offstage she looked like a pretty young girl who should be at school and not a ballet dancer with one of the world’s great ballet companies.
I was fortunate to see her dance many times and I cherish deep memories of her in many roles. For me Yekaterina Maximova became Katerina, became Phrygia, became Masha, became Kitri and achieved extraordinary success in so many other roles. When I first saw Maximova and her husband who were not too different in age to myself, their extraordinary projection of youth resonated deeply with me. In London she was much loved and with her husband, we were privileged to see performances of one of the great partnerships of the 20th century. Arnold Haskell seeing her dance Don Q pas said that Maximova "...had the wittiest feet since Anna Pavlova."
There is a today headline on http://gazeta.ru/cul...a_2980218.shtml which Ilya posted, which reads, “Yekaterina Maximova - The little elf of the Bolshoi?
Which I found an extremely poignant description of this wonderful childlike woman and great artist.
To her husband Vladimir Vasiliev and her mother I send my sincere condolences and the ballet world for me is a a lesser place than it was yesterday.
#21
Posted 28 April 2009 - 04:36 PM
#22
Posted 28 April 2009 - 04:39 PM
#23
Posted 28 April 2009 - 11:11 PM
The official diagnosis is not published yet. People from the Bolshoi tell that Maximova died in a sleep, probably because of a heart insufficiency. Her mother found her dead in a bed. Thus, Tatiana Gustavovna Shpett-Maximova (now 94) took care of her famous daughter all her life, until the very end. So sad.
We will go to Bolshoi tomorrow morning at 10 am MSK to tell Katya our Last Farewell. She always was in my life from the time I started to watch ballets. Да будет земля ей пухом (can this be translated as "let the ground be light for her as down"?).
#24
Posted 29 April 2009 - 01:10 AM
Quote
That's exactly how I feel too, the brightest of lights in the ballet world has been extinguished.
#25
Posted 29 April 2009 - 08:52 AM
#26
Posted 30 April 2009 - 09:20 AM
I saw her in Bolshoi Theater - in Nutcracker and in Anjuta. It was absolutely magical!
She was truly noble ballerina.
My sincere condolences to her mother and to her husband.
Ekaterina, rest in peace.
#27
Posted 01 May 2009 - 02:58 PM
#28
Posted 02 May 2009 - 12:07 AM
#29
Posted 07 May 2009 - 01:35 PM
Lovely dancer. Rest in peace.
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