Tokyo Ballet
Tokyo Ballet | |
---|---|
General information | |
Name | Tokyo Ballet |
Year founded | 1964 |
Principal venue | Tokyo Bunka Kaikan Theatre |
Website | Official Website |
Senior staff | |
Director | Tadatsugu Sasaki |
Artistic staff | |
Artistic Director | Munetaka Iida |
Deputy Director | Naoki Takagishi |
Ballet Mistress | Hiroko Tomoda |
Other | |
Formation | Principals Soloists Artists (Corps de Ballet) |
Tokyo Ballet is dance company based in Tokyo, Japan, and founded in 1964. Tokyo Ballet performs works of Eastern and Western dance, including classical ballet and neoclassical ballet works. It is one of the leading performing arts companies in Japan; as of 2010, it has given over 680 performances internationally, on 23 tours.[1]
Contents
History
European classical ballet, heavily influenced by Russian methods, was introduced to Japan following the end of World War II. By 1959, there were at least 18 classical ballet schools found in Tokyo run by ballet companies, with perhaps 100 throughout Japan.[2]
Tokyo Ballet was founded in 1964. It began as a performance company for graduates of one of Tokyo's first classical ballet schools, Tokyo Ballet Gakko. It was soon directed by Tadatsuko Sasaki. Sasaki envisioned a large company with well-trained ensemble dancers, and developed ties to the international ballet community. By 1966, the company embarked on its first foreign tour, to Russia, where it was well received.[3]
The company's first European tour took place in 1970. International ballet companies were soon brought to perform in Tokyo, and Tokyo Ballet expanded its international touring. The cultural exchange included work with international choreographer. Tokyo Ballet currently has 15 works by Maurice Béjart in its repertory;[4] Béjart bequeathed much of the performing rights to his works to Tokyo Ballet.
Repertoire
Tokyo Ballet's repertory of classics includes The Nutcracker, Giselle, La Fille du Danube, Don Quixote, The Sleeping Beauty, Paquita, Swan Lake, La Sylphide, La Bayadere, and Les Sylphides. The company has also performed modern choreographed works, including Le Palais de Cristal, Theme and Variation, and Ballet Imperial by George Balanchine. Le Spectre de la Rose and Petuchka choreographed by Mikhail Fokine, and Afternoon of a Faun (Nijinsky) were performed in 2006.
Tokyo Ballet has had the rare opportunity of having a number of original works created for it by prominent choreographers: Maurice Béjart's The Kabuki (1986), M (1993), Bugaku(1989); John Neumeier's Seven Haiku of the Moon (1989), Seasons: The Colors of Time (2000) and Jirí Kylián's Perfect Conception (1994).[5]
In 2010 the company premiered John Cranko’s Onegin and Sir Frederick Ashton’s Sylvia.[6]
Dancers
In addition to a regular corps of dancers, Tokyo Ballet has seven Principals and eight Solo Artists (as of 2014).
See also
References
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