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While glasnost was a buzzword, no ballerina exemplified it better than
Nina Ananiashvili. When, after a long hiatus, the
Bolshoi began again to tour Britain and America in 1986-7, she was its youngest star, marvelously fresh in the full-length “Raymonda” and “Giselle.” She soon began interleaving her Bolshoi career with engagements in the West. She has danced Balanchine with
New York City Ballet, Ashton and MacMillan with the
Royal Ballet of London, Bournonville with the
Royal Danish Ballet, Petipa with the
Kirov Ballet: That is, she, like no one else, has gone to all the main choreographic centers of ballet classicism to dance their home choreography, and she remains too a principal guest artist with
American Ballet Theater. (She dances “Swan Lake” there on June 28.)
As that “-ashvili” end to her name suggests, this international star comes from Georgia, and her main focus today is as artistic director and prima ballerina of the State Ballet of the Republic of Georgia. That company is now touring America with a range of repertory ancient and modern.
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