Australian Ballet
Arriving at the Oscar première on 13 September felt like attending an Oscars ceremony. The foyers of Melbourne’s historic Regent Theatre were filled with artists, journalists, photographers, politicians, dauntingly tall drag queens, and streams of gay couples who may have been first-timers at the ballet. ... (read more)
The opening night of The Australian Ballet’s 2023 season, commencing with Rudolf Nureyev’s unforgettable Don Quixote, was like a joyous homecoming to all sectors of the audience, from rusted-on subscribers to some of Australia’s most gifted ballerinas, and a host of people who quickly absorbed the vitality of Marius Petipa’s 1872 ballet, which Nureyev loved. ... (read more)
Beyond 40 by Jeff Busby (photographer) & A Collector's Book of Australian Dance by Michelle Potter
by Robin Grove •
Lee Christofis reviews 'The Sleeping Beauty' (Australian Ballet)
by Lee Christofis •
18 September 2015
When Sergei Diaghilev staged The Sleeping Princess at the Alhambra Theatre, London, in 1921, he hoped to prove that classical ballet could be as popular as the outrageously glamorous West End hit, Chu Chin Chow, which ran for five years. Diaghilev invited the brilliant colourist Leon Bakst to design sets and costumes equal to those of the orig ...
Luminous: Celebrating 50 Years of the Australian Ballet edited by Kate Scott and Lorelei Vashti
by Jordan Beth Vincent •
Robert Helpmann: A Servant of Art by Anna Bemrose
by Ian Britain •