(center, left) as the Tsar Maiden with dancers costumed for
Alexander Gorsky's revival of
The Little Humpbacked Horse for the
Bolshoi Theatre. Moscow, 1901. • Re-staging by Arthur Saint-Léon for the
Ballet of the Moscow Imperial Bolshoi Theatre, with Cesare Pugni revising his original score. First presented on November 26, 1866, at the
Moscow Imperial Bolshoi Theatre in
Moscow, Russia.
Principal Dancers -
Marfa Muravieva (as the Tsar Maiden) and Timofei Stukolkin (as Ivanushka). • Revival by
José Mendez for the Ballet of the Moscow Imperial Bolshoi Theatre. First presented at the Moscow Imperial Bolshoi Theatre on December 26, 1893, in Moscow, Russia. • Revival under the title
The Tsar Maiden by
Marius Petipa for the Imperial Ballet, with musical additions and revisions to Pugni's score by
Riccardo Drigo. First presented on December 6–18, 1895 at the
Imperial Mariinsky Theatre in St. Petersburg, Russia.
Principal Dancers -
Pierina Legnani (as the Tsar Maiden),
Alexander Shirayev (as Ivanushka) and
Felix Kschessinsky (as the Khan). • Revival by
Alexander Gorsky for the Ballet of the Moscow Imperial Bolshoi Theatre, with additional music by Anton Simon,
Boris Asafiev,
Pyotr Tchaikovsy,
Antonín Dvořák,
Alexander Glazunov,
Brahms and
Franz Liszt. First presented at the Moscow Imperial Bolshoi Theatre on November 25, 1901, in
Moscow, Russia.
Principal Dancers -
Lyubov Roslavleva (as the Tsar Maiden) and Alexander Gorsky (as Ivanushka). • Re-staging by Alexander Gorsky of his 1901 revival for the Imperial Ballet, with musical additions and revisions to Pugni's score by Riccardo Drigo. First presented at the Imperial Mariinsky Theatre on December 16, 1912.
Principal Dancers -
Tamara Karsavina (as the Tsar Maiden) and
Nikolai Legat (as Ivanushka). • Revival of Gorsky's 1912 production by
Feodor Lopukhov for the
Kirov Ballet. First presented at the
Kirov State Academic Theatre of Opera and Ballet in 1945. •
Alexander Radunsky choreographed his own version to an entirely new score by
Rodion Shchedrin for the Bolshoi Ballet, Moscow, in 1960. The choreographer,
Igor Belsky utilized Schedrin's score in his staging for the
Maly Theatre in Leningrad in 1963. The Radunsky—Shchedrin version was filmed in 1961 with
Maya Plisetskaya as the Tsar Maiden and
Vladimir Vasiliev as Ivanushka. ==Notes==