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Wednesday, November 1, 2023

World Ballet 🩰 Day

World Ballet Day
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Every year major ballet companies from around the globe celebrate World Ballet Day. The day also offers professional ballerinas an opportunity to showcase their talents and teach others about this artistic dance form.
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World Ballet Day is a floating holiday and its date is set by several ballet companies annually.
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World Ballet Day Dates
Year     Date                   Day
2023     November 1        Wednesday
2024     November 2       Saturday
2025     November          Sunday
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Ballet, which can be traced back to the 15th century, is an intricate and artistic dance form that involves precise, light, and graceful movements and gestures, performed to music. World Ballet Day is a special occasion for people around to celebrate this well-loved art.
Ballet is a graceful type of dance performed to music. This dance form uses precise movements and highly formalized steps and gestures. Ballet is also described as an art form created by the movement of the human body. Dancers usually perform onstage to tell a story or express thoughts and emotions.
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Ballet originated in Italy around 1500. 
When ballet was first performed, dancers wore masks, pantaloons, and large headdresses. These types of costumes made it difficult to dance. 
Eventually, ballet made its way to France
It was often performed in the courts of Kings and Queens. Even Louis XIV performed ballet moves that were popular at the time.
By 1850, ballet was becoming quite popular in Russia
During the early 20th century, the famous theater producer Serge Diaghilev formed the Ballet Russes. This ballet group performed throughout Europe and America. Around the 1930s, several of Diaghilev’s performers developed their own company in the United States. The company helped increase the popularity of ballet in this country.
Since its beginnings, several ballets have become favorites throughout the world. Some of the most famous ballet performances include Swan Lake, The Nutcracker, Giselle, Romeo and Juliet, Cinderella, and The Sleeping Beauty.
HOW TO OBSERVE #WorldBalletDay
Several ballet companies from around the world participate in this day. These companies include The Australia Ballet, The Royal Ballet, The National Ballet of Canada, and the San Francisco Ballet. Each ballet company streams live video of behind the scenes preparations in their respective time zones. In previous years, this event reached over 315 million social media users across the globe. Dance schools and other ballet companies hold special events in their communities.

To participate:
  1. Learn the definitions of ballet lingo, such as arabesque, attitude, barre, failli, pirouette, and sissonne.
  2. Research the most famous Ballet Dancers globally:  
    Anna Pavlova 1881–1931
    Margot Fonteyn  1919–1991
    Mikhail Baryshnikov
    Sylvie Guillem
    Marianela Núñez
    Rudolf Nureyev 1938–1993
    Natalia Osipova  
    Diana Vishneva 
    Natalia Makarova - Natalia Romanovna Makarova (Russian: Ната́лия Рома́новна Мака́рова, born 21 November 1940) is a Russian prima ballerina and choreographer. The History of Dance, published in 1981, notes that "her performances set standards of artistry and aristocracy of dance which mark her as the finest ballerina of her generation in the West."  Wikipedia
  3. Commit to going to a ballet performance in your community.
  4. Sign your children up for ballet lessons.
No matter how you celebrate this day, be sure to share it on social media with #WorldBalletDay. 
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WORLD BALLET DAY HISTORY
Several dance companies joined together in 2014 to create World Ballet Day. It was originally held at the beginning of October. During the last couple of years, it has been held at the end of October. The date varies each year.

https://nationaldaycalendar.com/world-ballet-day-changes-annually
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The 10 Greatest Ballet Dancers
Of the 20th century
19 October 2021

Are these the greatest ballet dancers of the last 100 years?
World-famous ballerina Deborah Bull thinks so. She explains her choices below.
English dancer, former creative director of the Royal Opera House and current director of cultural partnerships at King’s College London, Deborah Bull is one of the country’s leading voices in the arts and ballet.
Watch these amazing videos of the 20th-century icons of
ballet, and see if you agree with Bull on her top 10 choices.
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1. Vaslav Nijinsky (1889-1950)
Nijinsky was a Russian dancer and choreographer of Polish descent, celebrated for his virtuosity and for the depth and intensity of his characterizations.
Deborah Bull says: “Through the Ballets Russes’ tours abroad between 1909 and 1929, Western audiences had their first-ever taste of Russian ballet. In no one was the brilliance of the dancers’ technique and artistry more extraordinary than Nijinsky.”  Unfortunately, no video is available of Nijinsky in action.

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2. Anna Pavlova (1881-1931)
A Russian prima ballerina, recognized for the creation of the role ‘The Dying Swan’, Pavlova became the first ballerina to tour ballet internationally.
Deborah Bull says: “An iconic ballerina, Pavlova was not only a sublime artist but also a great innovator, making use of the new invention of film and exploiting her fame to take ballet to new audiences. Her tireless tours to what would have been exotic and distant lands – India, east Asia, Australia – seeded classical ballet in countries around the world. It was a performance by Pavlova in Lima, Peru, in 1917 that inspired the great Frederick Ashton to become a dancer.” https://youtu.be/zDETpNnazmM

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3. Galina Ulanova (1910-1998)
Acclaimed Russian dancer Galina Ulanova was transferred by Stalin to the Bolshoi Theatre to be prima ballerina assoluta for 16 years. “Ulanova’s performances with the Bolshoi during its first-ever performances in the West – at the Royal Opera House in 1956 – changed ballet in Britain forever.”

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4. Rudolf Nureyev (1938-1993)
Nureyev, portrayed in 2018 biographical film The White Crow starring Oleg Ivenko and Ralph Fiennes, was a Soviet-born dancer whose expressive skills, provided a new role for the male dancer who previously served primarily as support to the women.  
“Nureyev’s defection to the West in 1961 represented the ‘second coming’ of the Russian dancers and set new standards. With Margot Fonteyn, he is one half of the most famous partnership ballet has ever seen. A household name.” See a video of Nureyev dancing with Fonteyn below.

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5. Margot Fonteyn (1919-1991)
Fonteyn spent her entire career as a dancer with The Royal Ballet, eventually being appointed Prima Ballerina Assoluta by HM The Queen.“She defined the image of the ballerina for most of the 20th century. Fonteyn and Nureyev were ballet’s golden and most glamorous couple.”

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6. Mikhail Baryshnikov (1948-)
After defecting from Russia, Baryshnikov later became artistic director of the American Ballet Theatre. In 1977, he received an Oscar nomination for Best Supporting Actor in The Turning Point.“Famed for his partnership with Natalia Makarova. Through movies such as The Turning Point, Baryshnikov took ballet to a massive audience. He has continued to dance way beyond conventional retirement age, extending his creativity into contemporary works.”

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7. Natalia Makarova (1940-)
Russian ballerina Natalia Makarova performed with the American Ballet Theatre in New York and the Royal Ballet. “Another defector from Soviet Russia,” Bull says. “Post-Makarova, high extensions (getting your leg up as high as possible) became an essential job requirement.”

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8. Anthony Dowell (1943-)
Anthony Dowell is most noted for the role of Oberon in The Dream by Sir Frederick Ashton and for his filmed performance as Siegfried in Swan Lake with Natalia Makarova in 1980.  “Not the first British male dancer, but the first world class male star to be trained and developed through the Royal Ballet School and company established by Dame Ninette de Valois,” Bull says. 
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9. Gelsey Kirkland (1952-)
After joining the New York City Ballet at 15, Kirkland was promoted to soloist in 1969 and principal in 1972. She went on to create leading roles in many of the great 20th-century ballets. “From baby ballerina at New York City Ballet, to the cover of Time magazine, Kirkland had a relatively brief career in the 1970s and 80s but she had a major impact on young dancers like me.”

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10. Sylvie Guillem (1965-)
The top-ranking female dancer with the Paris Opera Ballet from 1984 to 1989, Guillem later became a principal guest artist with the Royal Ballet in London. “Sylvie broke the mould and redefined what a ballerina could be, post-Fonteyn. She excelled in the classical repertoire and then forged new pathways in collaborations with contemporary choreographers. She continues to innovate, even in her late 40s.”
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The date of World Ballet Day since its inception in 2014 has been:
02 November 2022
07  February 2023
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                    https://repeatreplay.com/ballet-music/
 

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