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Xiaoyi

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Posts posted by Xiaoyi

  1. I have one orchestra ticket for Apr. 12 performance of Mariinsky Ballet's DC tour - Le Corsaire. It was bought on the first day of general public sale. 

    I ask $100 for this. We can transfer through ebay. It is electronic ticket. So I can send you immediately. PM me if you are interested.

    Mariinsky Ballet

    Opera House

    Fri, Apr 12, 2019, 7:30 PM

    Medora: Maria Khoreva (replaces Viktoria Tereshkina)
    Conrad: Konsantin Zverev
    Gulnara: Renata Shakirova
    Ali: Kimin Kim
    Lankedem: Alexei Timofeyev

    Seats Qty. Price Total
    Orchestra Price Zone B: T-124 1 $129.00 $129.00

     

    Order Total $129.00
    Ticket Service Charge $18.06
    Grand Total $147.06
    Amount Charged To Credit Card $147.06

     

    6258a159ly1g0lsufdcnrj20ku0yjq7e.jpg

  2. 18 hours ago, ksk04 said:

    Soares danced with Cuthbertson as Mary Vetsera during the fall, so I would imagine that pairing stays barring injuries. I do hope there are three casts, as I have tickets to the Friday and Sunday shows and those would be the most likely to be repeated.

    Mayerling is too challenging for the male dancer’s stamina. So there will definitely be three casts.

  3. 11 hours ago, Drew said:

    We don't seem to have a thread on this year's Mariinsky Festival yet, so I'm just going to put this announcement here. Pretty much anywhere I put it will be a little incongruous.

    Page Six is reporting that a Mick Jagger "curated" work choreographed by Melanie Hamrick to music of the Rolling Stones will have its premier "in March at the Mariinsky Theatre’s ballet festival in St. Petersburg, Russia." Not clear that it will be danced by Mariinsky Dancers. Hamrick is taking a leave from ABT to make this happen and after premiering in Petersburg (assuming that actually happens) the ballet will be danced at the Youth America Grand Prix Gala in New York:

    https://pagesix.com/2018/12/26/mick-jagger-curating-ballet-set-to-rolling-stones-music/

    Thank you for the information.

    I guess the festival will be March 21-31. The only ballet performance in this week is Jewels which is marked “No Tickets” now.

    Looking forward to what Mariinsky will present in this festival and who the guests will be.

  4. 2018.12.13  Swan Lake - Kondaurova/Askerov/Belyakov/Khoreva/Guseinova/Beishenaliev

    Kondaurova and Askerov starred in Mariinsky’s Swan Lake recording in 2013 which I guess everyone in this forum has watched. I went through the recording again before the performance so as to detect the possible difference in acting. But I didn’t notice much, except the reduced difficulty in Odile’s variation and foette.

    Compared to Osmolkina’s version under the veil of depression or a blue-green vintage filter, Kondaurova’s Odette was more human and lively. A very different interpretation, but it still made sense with Kondaurova’s personal quality.

    Kondaurova had perfect muscular arms like wings of a swan, and this gave her a strong stage presence. Her acting was mostly delicate and designed in detail. She looked at the water mirror and shook her head as if a girl was appreciating and decorating herself during Odette’s entrance. Her arms brushed with the Prince’s arms before lying on the ground at the beginning of white adagio, showing affection and linking the dance together.

    The white adagio itself did not impress me so much. (Maybe because the recording took the feeling of freshness away.) It looked like the prince was chasing a shy maiden hidden away from people, instead of fighting the destiny with her. Kondaurova’s back flexibility is not so good as Osmolkina. So her attitude and lying back pose in the Prince’s arm were not so soft.

    Odette’s variation was great with meaning in every string of dance steps. The first half told her sad story, and the second half showed her love for the prince and doubt about the future. Her speed of moving and turning responded perfectly to the music.

    The goodbye kiss with the Prince connecting a speedy turn was very touching. However, after the Prince made the vow, Kondaurova didn’t show surprise and took it for granted, which made me felt weird.

    Kondaurova’s Odile was more charming than evil, like a playful courtesan. She also teased the audience when she was trying to attract the Prince. As a tall ballerina, she performed the technique very well and stably. I liked her single foettes as her double turns looked too slow and forced in the recording.

    Odette was sad at the beginning of Act IV, as if her feet were trembling with the music. But she was a bit blank in the duet, with little anger or blame to the Prince. However, I forgot the doubt of her acting when I saw a gorgeous queen up in the air. She looked so strong and divine that the triumph over Rothbart made sense.

     

    I’m not a fan of Askerov, but I have to admit was dependable as a partner and impressive in Prince’s variation in Act III (one of the variations he prepared for Moscow Ballet Competition). He acted according to the Mariinsky’s tradition, and gave enough response to Kondaurova’s acting. I cannot ask for more.

    Zverev had a back problem and flew back to Russia after Japan tour. So Belyakov danced Rothbart in all 3 performances in Tianjin. He was quite weak in technique, and wasn’t giving 100% maybe due to the tiredness. The jumps had no height or aggressive power. And the struggle before death in Act IV looked so fake.

    Shumakov’s Joker was brilliant, full of energy and wit. For the first time, I noticed so many acting details of Joker, with the tutor at the queen’s arrival in Act I and behind the bride candidates in Act III. Then I found that these details are set and Beishenaliev from the other performance did that too. However, Shumakov made them look spontaneous and authentic.

    I liked Guseinova in pas de trois. She presented a graceful young lady with good musicality. Khoreva was beautiful and great in technique, but she was too eager to show off and please the audience with a fake smile. She performed as if she was in a competition. Beishenaliev was tense too, but it was understandable considering that this is his first few shows as the friend of prince, replacing injured Zaleyev.

    6258a159gy1fy7k91eecxj21900u07wh.jpg

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  5. 2018.12.14  Swan Lake - Osmolkina/Parish/Belyakov/Selina/Nagahisa/Stepin

    How lucky and privileged I was to watch Ekaterina Osmolkina’s Swan Lake twice in a month. A rare pleasure, even for the audience in St. Petersburg.

    Affecting Odette and enchanting Odile. Act II was better than the performance in Nanjing. The entrance of Odette took my breath away with fluid arms, great back flexibility and musicality. The white adagio moved me to tears, as her arms were conveying sadness and love with the violin. (A friend told me she was also crying in the other corner of the theater.) I wanted time to stop when I was watching this part. There was a little bit of stumbling at the end of the Odette’s variation, but it didn’t hurt the performance.

    Osmolkina presented a strong fear of destiny and broken heart after betrayal in the duet in Act IV. I also love the part when Odette was fighting Rothbart with the Prince. Although she looked so fragile as a fallen leaf swirling in the wind, she held herself together until the last minute with facial expression showing the inner force of Odette.

    Her Odile was also great. I won’t go into details since it was written last time.

    Parish’s partnering was OK, but not so good as Askerov. It was obvious in the lifts in white adagio.

     

    For pas de trois, Stepin was in better shape than Nanjing with regal presence and stable technique. I hope that I can watch him as the Prince some day.

    I had some doubt about May Nagahisa's proportion and arms when watching the videos before. But I became a little fan of her after this performance. Her pointe technique was stunning, best of the new generation. Her stage presence was fresh with good musicality and light arms. Selina looked average compared to Nagahisa.

     

    The character dances were amazing too. I love Hungarian Dance the most. Yernikeyev showed a strong and dramatic stage presence in it.

    Nedviga is always a delightful character dancer. He danced the Neapolitan part as in 2013 recording.

    Gavriel Heine conducted better than Repnikov with more attention to the dancers. The atmosphere of character dances was more fervent under his baton.

    6258a159gy1fy7mr5puvnj20u0190e72.jpg

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  6. On 11/21/2018 at 6:34 AM, Dreamer said:

    For those of us who cannot make it to London in the middle of summer lets hope to see the Bolshoi during the 2019-2020 season at the Kennedy Center. I wonder what would they bring after Mariinsky's Raymonda, La Bayadere and Le Corsaire. A mixed bill? The Pharaoh's Daughter? Coppelia? Hopefully, no Anna Karenina and no Lady of the Camellias. The Winter's Tale would be a back draw for me.

    Dreamer, can I ask about the source of Bolshoi tour at Kennedy Center?

    I'm just too excited about this and want to make sure that this is really going to happen. (I've searched the internet but no news about this.)

  7. 1 hour ago, Birdsall said:

    If the turns that slow down instead of speeding up that you mention were assisted turns (with Parish assisting with finger turns or paddle turns) then the fault is probably Parish. He is notorious for slowing down ballerinas during turns. He's gotten better, but it used to be the second he put his hands on the ballerina she would almost come to a complete stop and occasionally looked like he knocked her off balance. I have seen him doing better recently, but he's still not great at helping the ballerina. 

    The slow down that I mentioned was the end of Odette's variation when she makes turns in diagonal direction swapping her wings. From 1'50'' in this Zakharova's video:

    https://youtu.be/cpsk0GPEI1U

    So it had nothing to do with Parish. Parish's assisting turns got better and tolerable now. It didn't look easy and fluid, but at least he didn't slow down the ballerina or knock her off balance this time. 

  8. 2018.11.24(eve)  Swan Lake - Osmolkina/Parish/Zverev/Khoreva/Nikitina/Stepin

    I went to Nanjing simply for Osmolkina, after her 11 years’ absence from Chinese stages. (So the change from Kim to Parish didn't hurt me so much.) I had watched her videos of Black Swan pdd and White Adagio from Youtube. She exceeded my expectation in this performance. Her Odette was melancholic and sentimental, a beautiful swan queen under the veil of depression. Her fragility and innocence was obvious when she bowed to Rothbart. And she told her story to the Prince with sad eye contact and leaned on his arms with attachment. Her famous musicality and upper body were there as always. And I could see that her arms as Odette got better with more performances and retouch in the past two seasons. (Two minor complaints about the technique, Pas de bourrée not delicate enough during the entrance and the turns getting more slowly instead of speeding up during the variation.)

    IMHO, her Odile was more impressive and stunning than Odette (You can watch the video from russianballetvideos2). Her entrance and the perfect attitude pose caught my breath immediately. During the pdd, She had got an evil grin facing the audience. And when she turned to the Prince and other characters on stage, she was aggressive and flamboyant, attracting everyone's attention like a super gorgeous princess from a neighbor country. Some of her facial expressions reminded me of Anna Tikhomirova, but in a more elegant way. Some friends complained that Osmolkina's interpretation was too gentle, but I thought this was reasonable. Why would the Prince propose to an obvious devil?

    Her foettes were well done, although all in singles. The shaft was stable with the leg up high and she matched beats beautifully. (You cannot demand Osmolkina to perform foettes like Tereshkina anyway.) Chinese audience loved the foettes. So Osmolkina sent us a charming air kiss during the bow in applause.

    In Act 4, Odette refused to make eye contact with the Prince in the adagio out of disappointment, Her solo moving backwards on one leg was so light and ethereal, as if the swan is trying to fly away. When Odette was put on the floor before the final fight, her arm slid gently in front of the Prince's arm, reminding me of the farewell photos in World War II. (The performance will be better with a tragic ending.)

     

    I have to praise Parish a bit, although I dislike him overall. His technique and acting improved considerably from Stepanova's debut. The variation of the black swan pdd was light and well-stretched with elegant pose. His partnering was tolerable and even good in Act 4. He was quite devoted to his acting, maybe a bit over acting. The eagerness to find Odette from the swans, the longing for his beloved when dancing with the bride candidates, the doubt of Odile and the regret after being cheated were quite believable. I will not ask too much of him about the neat footwork and musicality. (The little solo by Parish in Act 1 was miserable with no connection to the music.) Anyway, he's done his best. And I've got to tolerate him considering he is the partner for a few great ballerinas.

     

    Zverev's Rothbart was almost invisible in my eyes, fading into the dark background. He was light, but not strong and sharp enough. His stage presence was weak IMHO. (He shares some secondary male roles with Smekalov, but with totally different acting quality.)

     

    Pas de trois by Khoreva/Nikitina/Stepin was average, not the best they can do. Khoreva has great clean footwork and Nikitina has great upper body. (Nikitina was also the Big Swan in Act 4. She was very beautiful. I can almost imagine her as Odette.) Stepin looked a bit tired and was heavy in his jumping. (He performed 4 out of 5 Swan Lakes in Nanjing, due to Zaleyev's injury.)

     

    The Hungarian Dance was especially good with Alina Kraskovskaya and Maxim Zenin, with a sense of nobility.

    (Written in Chinese and translated into English. Please forgive my mistakes in wording.)

     

    Some photos from curtain call:

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  9. 21 minutes ago, volcanohunter said:

    On the other hand, neither Bayadère nor Shrew sold out in Milan in September, Shrew selling especially poorly, so the Hochhausers are probably wary.

    Maybe La Scala didn't do a proper marketing? I could not beblieve that La Bayadere with great cast was not sold out when La Scala's Manon was sold out early. 

    And The Taming of the Shrew is the best new choreography in Bolshoi in the past few years imho. It deserves to go back to London in three years.

  10. Specific dates for each repertoire are released: https://www.bolshoi.ru/en/performances/10007/

    Ballet Company and Orchestra Tour, London

    Royal Opera House Covent Garden 

    29 July - 1 August 
    Aram Khachaturyan 
    Spartacus 
    Ballet in three acts 

    2 – 6 August 
    Pyotr Tchaikovsky 
    Swan Lake 
    Ballet in two acts 

    7 & 8 August 
    Dmitry Shostakovich 
    The Bright Stream 
    Ballet in two acts 

    9 & 10 August 
    Aram Khachaturyan 
    Spartacus 
    Ballet in three acts 

    12 – 14 August 
    Pyotr Tchaikovsky 
    Swan Lake 
    Ballet in two acts 

    15 – 17 August 
    Ludwig Minkus 
    Don Quixote 
    Ballet in three acts 

     

    It's a pity that The Taming of the Shrew and La Bayadere are gone : (

  11. Casting for The Nutcracker released:

    https://national.ballet.ca/Productions/2018-19-Season/The-Nutcracker

    The Sugar Plum Fairy
    Heather Ogden (December 8 at 2:00 pm/December 19, 28 at 7:00 pm/December 23 at 5:00 pm/ December 30 at 1:00 pm)
    Jillian Vanstone (December 8, 22 at 7:00 pm/December 15, 29 at 2:00 pm/ December 30 at 5:30 pm)
    Greta Hodgkinson (December 9 at 1:00 pm/December 18, 21 at 7:00 pm)
    Sonia Rodriguez (December 9, 16 at 5:30 pm/December 13 at 7:00 pm)
    Jurgita Dronina (December 12, 14, 15 at 7:00 pm)
    Calley Skalnik (December 16, 27 at 1:00 pm/December 20 at 7:00 pm)
    Elena Lobsanova (December 22 at 2:00 pm/December 23 at 1:00 pm/December 27 at 5:30 pm/ December 29 at 7:00 pm)

    Peter/The Nutcracker
    Guillaume Côté (December 8 at 2:00 pm/December 19 at 7:00 pm)
    Skylar Campbell (December 8, 22 at 7:00 pm/December 15, 29 at 2:00 pm/December 30 at 5:30 pm)
    Harrison James (December 9 at 1:00 pm/December 12, 14, 15, 18, 21 at 7:00 pm)
    Piotr Stanczyk (December 9, 16 at 5:30 pm/December 13 at 7:00 pm)
    Jack Bertinshaw* (December 16, 27 at 1:00 pm/December 20 at 7:00 pm)
    Naoya Ebe (December 22 at 2:00 pm/December 23 at 1:00 pm/December 27 at 5:30 pm/December 29 at 7:00 pm)
    Christopher Gerty (December 23 at 5:00 pm/December 28 at 7:00 pm/December 30 at 1:00 pm)

    All casting subject to change.

  12. @pherank and @JosetteThank you very much for sharing the information about the theater. I will try to find some tickets on the Founders Circle if the cast is ideal for me.

    By the advertisement of RB Japan Tour , 2019.06.21-30, which is just one week ahead of LA tour (the picture below). It lists almost all the principal dancers except Kish and Bonelli (who is in some study course until next season). 

    There is high hope that most of them will come to LA after that. So there will be four possible Rudolph (McRae, Soares, Hirano and Ball). I don't think that Watson will try this exhausting repertoire again, although I would do everything to see the performance if he is listed.

    53977527gy1fwu2rxqjp4j22c0340kjl.jpg

     

  13. Cast for The Dream & Being and Nothingness released:

    https://national.ballet.ca/Productions/2018-19-Season/The-Dream

    The Dream

    Titania
    Jillian Vanstone (November 21, 23, 24 at 7:30 pm/November 25 at 2:00 pm)
    Elena Lobsanova (November 22 at 2:00 pm)
    Aya Okumura (November 22 at 7:30 pm)
    Alexandra MacDonald (November 24 at 2:00 pm)

    Oberon
    Harrison James (November 21, 24 at 7:30 pm)
    Evan McKie (November 22 at 2:00 pm)
    Naoya Ebe (November 22 at 7:30 pm)
    Guillaume Côté (November 23 at 7:30 pm/November 25 at 2:00 pm)
    Brendan Saye (November 24 at 2:00 pm)

    Puck
    Skylar Campbell (November 21, 23, 24 at 7:30 pm)
    Donald Thom (November 22 at 2:00 pm)
    Siphesihle November (November 22 at 7:30 pm/November 25 at 2:00 pm)
    Naoya Ebe (November 24 at 2:00 pm)

    Being and Nothingness

    Part 1 – The Light
    Greta Hodgkinson (November 21, 22, 23 at 7:30 pm)
    Tanya Howard (November 22 at 2:00 pm/November 24 at 7:30 pm)
    Jenna Savella (November 24, 25 at 2:00 pm)

    Part 2 – The Bedroom
    Kathryn Hosier and Félix Paquet (November 21, 22, 24 at 7:30 pm/November 24 at 2:00 pm)
    Miyoko Koyasu and Nan Wang (November 22, 25 at 2:00 pm/November 23 at 7:30 pm)

    Part 3 – The Door
    Chelsy Meiss and Jack Bertinshaw (November 21, 23, 24 at 7:30 pm)
    Meghan Pugh and Skylar Campbell (November 22 at 2:00 pm/November 22 at 7:30 pm)
    Aya Okumura and Jack Bertinshaw (November 24, 25 at 2:00 pm)

    Part 4 – The Sink
    Siphesihle November (November 21, 23, 24 at 7:30 pm)
    Kota Sato (November 22 at 2:00 pm/November 22 at 7:30 pm)
    Spencer Hack (November 24, 25 at 2:00 pm)

    Part 5 – The Living Room
    Svetlana Lunkina and Brendan Saye (November 21, 23, 24 at 7:30 pm)
    Hannah Fischer and Christopher Gerty (November 22, 24 at 2:00 pm)
    Heather Ogden and Brendan Saye (November 22 at 7:30 pm/ November 25 at 2:00 pm)

    Part 6 – The Street
    Joe Chapman, Jimmy Coleman, Trygve Cumpston, Giorgio Galli, Christopher Gertyor Peng-Fei Jiang, Spencer Hack or Alexander Skinner, Teagan Richman-Taylor, Kota Sato or Larkin Miller, Donald Thom, Nan Wang or Nicholas Rose, Ethan Watts

    Part 7 – The Call
    Greta Hodgkinson and Ben Rudisin (November 21, 22, 23 at 7:30 pm)
    Tanya Howard and Guillaume Côté (November 22 at 2:00 pm/November 24 at 7:30 pm)
    Jenna Savella and Piotr Stanczyk (November 24, 25 at 2:00 pm)

    All casting is subject to change.

  14. Can I ask for some suggestions on seating? About feet visibility, sidelines and distance from upstairs

    The ramp in orchestra stalls looks decent from the photos on the official website. But I'm not sure what the space is really like. 

    Are the front rows of loge and balcony too faraway?

    As a short person, I'm  worried about tall men sitting in front of me.

    And I'm kind of worried if I get a good seat after the cast is released (in May, I guess.) 

  15. Swan Lake, Nanjing

    https://mp.weixin.qq.com/s?__biz=MzI3NDY4NTM3Ng==&mid=2247484969&idx=1&sn=9e8e04ff3670d05b934fa127db8ffe05&chksm=eb110a86dc66839047ccdc8b1f611a0d5632de05aab92b37caeb32cf24704db05d72785ff4d7&mpshare=1&scene=1&srcid=1114Nj3i9danYkMXrs3xlyGm&pass_ticket=4XrR3PQN3xiRPAGPTVBWPBbXOuHB2FatOY9tdNd%2FMzhKBq5I5qlA4WbHMaY7xEfu#rd

    2018.11.22[Thu.] 19:30 
    Yekaterina Chebykina, Timur Askerov, Konstantin Zverev (as Rothbart), Nadezhda Gonchar, Elena Yevseyeva, Philipp Stepin (as Prince's friends) (The following cast in the same sequence)

    2018.11.23[Fri.] 19:30
    Anastasia Kolegova, Yevgeny Ivanchenko, Andrei Yermakov, Maria Khoreva, Anastasia Nikitina, David Zaleyev

    2018.11.24[Sat.] 14:30
    Yekaterina Chebykina, Timur Askerov, Ivan Oskorbin, Nadezhda Gonchar, Elena Yevseyeva, Philipp Stepin

    2018.11.24[Sat.] 19:30
    Yekaterina Osmolkina, Kimin Kim, Konstantin Zverev, Maria Khoreva, Anastasia Nikitina, David Zaleyev

    2018.11.25[Sun.] 19:30
    Anastasia Kolegova, Yevgeny Ivanchenko, Ivan Oskorbin, Nadezhda Gonchar, Elena Yevseyeva, David Zaleyev

     

    Swan Lake, Tianjin

    https://mp.weixin.qq.com/s?__biz=MzU1MTQ5Mzk2MA==&mid=2247496542&idx=1&sn=f91fd8668e8e9d95fda42bd8e04bd7c2&chksm=fb923b79cce5b26fd9ddaf1482673300970ce88e601cd2c97f99e59f6b773f16b445e5c14b25&mpshare=1&scene=1&srcid=1114ipmZ4AbNMHopsIDh5JRA&pass_ticket=4XrR3PQN3xiRPAGPTVBWPBbXOuHB2FatOY9tdNd%2FMzhKBq5I5qlA4WbHMaY7xEfu#rd

    2018.12.12[Wed.] 19:00 
    Nadezhda Batoeva, Vladimir Shklyarov, Konstantin Zverev, Renata Sharkirova, May Nagahisa, Philipp Stepin

    2018.12.13[Thu.] 19:00 
    Ekaterina Kondaurova, Timur Askerov, Roman Belyakov, Maria Khoreva, Shamala Guseinova, David Zaleyev

    2018.12.14[Fri.] 19:00
    Ekaterina Osmolkina, Xander Parish, Konstantin Zverev, Yana Selina, May Nagahisa, Philipp Stepin

     

    It was rumor that Balanchine Gala (Prodigal Son. Symphony in C) would also come to China with the sales-promising Swan Lake. But it was declined by the conservative theaters (

  16. Link to ROH official website: https://www.roh.org.uk/seasons/2018-19/spring/events

    What attracts me most is the wonderful R & J casts: Natalia Osipova + David Hallberg, Sarah Lamb + Vadim Muntagirov,  Francesca Hayward + Corrales (saw him on WBF Tokyo, wonderful technique although not very handsome. I hope he will be a better partner than Golding).

    Yasmine Naghdi + Matthew Ball are cast for R & J cinema broadcast on June 11th. There was a lot of acclaim for their debut in 2015. 

    Stix-Brunell, Cuthbertson, Lamb & Muntagirov are cast for Within the Golden Hour / New Sidi Larbi Cherkaoui / Flight Pattern cinema broadcast on May 16th.

  17. Cast for Anna Karenina released:

     https://national.ballet.ca/Productions/2018-19-Season/Anna-Karenina

    Anna Karenina  
    Svetlana Lunkina (November 10, 14, 16 at 7:30 pm/November 18 at 2:00 pm) 
    Heather Ogden (November 11 at 2:00 pm/November 15, 17 at 7:30 pm) 
    Sonia Rodriguez (November 13 at 7:30 pm/November 15, 17 at 2:00 pm) 

    Alexei Vronsky
    Harrison James (November 10, 14, 16 at 7:30 pm/November 18 at 2:00 pm) 
    Guillaume Côté (November 11 at 2:00 pm/November 15, 17 at 7:30 pm) 
    Naoya Ebe (November 13 at 7:30 pm/November 15, 17 at 2:00 pm) 

    Alexei Karenin
    Piotr Stanczyk (November 10, 14, 16 at 7:30 pm/November 18 at 2:00 pm) 
    Evan McKie (November 11 at 2:00 pm/November 15, 17 at 7:30 pm) 
    Brendan Saye (November 13 at 7:30 pm/November 15, 17 at 2:00 pm) 

    Levin
    Skylar Campbell (November 10, 14, 16 at 7:30 pm/November 18 at 2:00 pm) 
    Félix Paquet (November 11 at 2:00 pm/November 15, 17 at 7:30 pm) 
    Kota Sato (November 13 at 7:30 pm/November 15, 17 at 2:00 pm) 

    Kitty
    Meghan Pugh (November 10, 14, 16 at 7:30 pm/November 18 at 2:00 pm) 
    Antonella Martinelli (November 11 at 2:00 pm/November 15, 17 at 7:30 pm) 
    Calley Skalnik (November 13 at 7:30 pm/November 15, 17 at 2:00 pm) 

    Dolly
    Xiao Nan Yu (November 10, 14, 16 at 7:30 pm/November 18 at 2:00 pm) 
    Chelsy Meiss (November 11 at 2:00 pm/November 15, 17 at 7:30 pm) 
    Jenna Savella (November 13 at 7:30 pm/November 15, 17 at 2:00 pm) 

    Stiva
    Naoya Ebe (November 10, 14, 16 at 7:30 pm/November 18 at 2:00 pm) 
    Ethan Watts (November 11 at 2:00 pm/November 15, 17 at 7:30 pm) 
    Christopher Gerty (November 13 at 7:30 pm/November 15, 17 at 2:00 pm) 

  18. Ratmansky's La Bayadere released the cast last weekend. And Godunova will debut Gamzatti on November 10th with Daniil Simkin.

    https://www.staatsballett-berlin.de/en/spielplan/la-bayadere/10-11-2018/720 

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