French ballet star wins plaudits with contemporary stagings in Moscow

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Sun, 09 Jul 2017 - 11:57 GMT

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Sun, 09 Jul 2017 - 11:57 GMT

The first Frenchman to head a Russian troupe for 150 years, Laurent Hilaire is widening the repertoire of the historic Stanislavsky theatre, despite the fact "people had told me the ballet audience in Russia was rather conservative"

The first Frenchman to head a Russian troupe for 150 years, Laurent Hilaire is widening the repertoire of the historic Stanislavsky theatre, despite the fact "people had told me the ballet audience in Russia was rather conservative"

France - 9 July 2017:French dancer star Laurent Hilaire, who this year joined Moscow's renowned Stanislavsky ballet troupe as artistic director, on Saturday wowed audiences with a programme introducing top contemporary choreographers.

Hilaire, a former principal dancer of the Paris Opera Ballet, became artistic director of the Stanislavsky Music Theatre six months ago in a rare choice of a foreigner to head a Russian ballet troupe.

The audience responded with rapturous applause to his first programme that premiered Saturday and saw works by two internationally renowed choreographers performed by the troupe for the first time.

The first Frenchman to head a Russian troupe for 150 years, Hilaire has vowed to "open up" the repertoire of the historic Stanislavsky theatre, which focuses on classics.

On Saturday, Hilaire staged "Suite en Blanc" by the late French choreographer Serge Lifar as well as groundbreaking US choreographer William Forsythe's "The Second Detail" and Czech Jiri Kylian's "Petite mort."

"This is a challenge for the troupe. They had never done Lifar, they had never done Forsythe," Hilaire told AFP, adding that the warm reception came as a pleasant surprise.

"People had told me the ballet audience in Russia was rather conservative." he said.

Hilaire also revealed he plans to stage in the next season "Don Quixote" as it was choreographed by dance legend Rudolf Nureyev, the star who defected to the West from the Soviet Union in 1961 and died from an AIDS-related illness in 1993 aged 54.

"This will be the first time there's been a Rudolf ballet here," he said.

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