Galina Mezentseva

Galina Sergeyevna Mezentseva (Russian: Галина Серге́евна Мéзенцева, born 8 November 1952, Stavropol) is a Russian ballerina, with a career as professional classic dancer from the early 1970s to the late 1990s. She was the first of the crop of tall Kirov ballerinas with long and thin lines, introducing a new aesthetic look to ballet audiences. Mezentseva is recognized as a dramatic performer, and is known for her improvisation.[1][2][3]

Galina Mezentseva
Born
Galina Sergeyevna Mezentseva

(1952-11-08) November 8, 1952
EducationVaganova Academy of Russian Ballet
OccupationBallet dancer
AwardsSelected: Honored Artist of Russia (1978), People's Artist of Russia (1983)

Career

Mezentseva completed her dancing studies in 1970 at the Vaganova Ballet Academy in Saint Petersburg, Russia. After graduation, she got the position of principal dancer at the Kirov/Mariinsky Ballet, keeping it for almost 20 years. In 1990 she left Russia to live in the UK. From 1990 to 1994, Mezentseva worked as a guest dancer at the Scottish Ballet (Glasgow). From 1994 to 2000, she toured the US and other countries as guest star with the Saint-Petesburg State Academic Ballet, directed by Askold Makarov. Since then Mezentseva has worked as a ballet teacher and as an occasional performer.[3][4]

Awards

Galina Mezentseva received many prestigious awards and titles: First Prize Laureate Award of the International Ballet Competition in Moscow (1977), Honored Artist of Russia (1978), National State Prize Winner (1980), Gold Medal at the International Ballet Competition (Japan, 1980) and The People's Artist of Russia (1983).[4][5]

The intensity of Mezentseva's best live performances is believed to not translate well into the (few) available recorded presentations. Most of these recordings were taken after a severe achilles tendon rupture experienced by her in the early 1980s.[6][7]

Ulyana Lopatkina on Mezentseva

Ulyana Lopatkina, the Kirov's principal dancer (2007), compared Galina Ulanova, Ekaterina Maximova and Galina Mezentseva, her favorite ballerinas, in an interview given in 2005:[8]

They all had different personalities. Ulanova was sincere, she astonished ballet-goers with her utter fidelity to human feelings. Maximova had exceptional physique and moved very beautifully. And Mezentseva – oh, she was serene, she was a queen, she had poise, beautiful lines and a profound dramatism. She could cast a spell effortlessly. The strongest impression anyone has made on me was Mezentseva with her Dying Swan.

  • Mezentseva performing Dying Swan Video on YouTube (retrieved January 2, 2008)

Filmography

gollark: This is why it has to run ahead of time, see. Although my code isn't optimal, and also being compiled in debug mode.
gollark: Due to concurrency, this is using all available CPU power.
gollark: Currently, it is able to process a few books per second, by which I mean extract all the text but not parse it.
gollark: It's written in Rust and MODERATELY concurrent.
gollark: Fortunately, EPUB is a structured format, and the library means the amount of XML I touch is reduced.

See also

References

  1. Galina Mezentseva Encyclopedia of Russian Ballet (retrieved December 27, 2007, in Russian)
  2. Ng, Kevin. Interview with Ulyana Lopatkina. Archived 2008-01-11 at the Wayback Machine Ballet Magazine, Oct, 1999 (retrieved December 27, 2007)
  3. Graeme, Chris. The Swan Returns Prospects (St. Petesburg Press Culture and Lifestyle Guide), 116, 1995. (retrieved January 7, 2008)
  4. Galina Mezentseva's biography Archived 2007-08-29 at the Wayback Machine Mezentseva's personal site (retrieved December 27, 2007)
  5. Galina Mezentseva The Oxford Dictionary of Dance - Oxford University Press (retrieved January 7, 2008)
  6. Elena. Remembering Galina Mezentseva Archived 2008-10-11 at the Wayback Machine Ballet Magazine, Jul, 2007 (retrieved December 27, 2007)
  7. Discussion about Galina Mezentseva. Archived 2008-10-12 at the Wayback Machine Ballet Talk Forum 2004-2007 (retrieved January 7, 2008)
  8. Dissanayake, Natasha. Interview with Ulyana Lopatkina. Archived 2007-12-11 at the Wayback Machine Ballet Magazine, Jun/Jul, 2005 (retrieved December 27, 2007)
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.