and
Pavel Gerdt of the Imperial Ballet as Princess Aurora and Prince Desire in the 1890 premiere of the
Sleeping Beauty. The Mariinsky Ballet was founded in the 1740s, following the formation of the first Russian dance school in 1738. The Imperial Theatre School, as it was originally known, was established on 4 May 1738, at the
Winter Palace in
Saint Petersburg. It would become the predecessor of today's
Vaganova Academy of Russian Ballet. The school's founder director was the French
ballet master and teacher
Jean-Baptiste Landé and the purpose of creating the school was to train young dancers to form the first Russian ballet company. As the Imperial Russian Ballet, the company premiered numerous ballets by choreographer
Marius Petipa. A number of his ballets now form the basis of the traditional classical ballet repertoire, performed by ballet companies around the world, and often retaining much of Petipa's choreography. These ballets include the original productions of
The Nutcracker,
The Sleeping Beauty,
Don Quixote,
La Bayadère, and
Raymonda; and popular revivals of older ballets, including
Coppélia,
Giselle, and
Le Corsaire. Petipa's revival of the ballet
Swan Lake is perhaps his most famous work for the company. Originally choreographed by
Julius Reisinger for the
Bolshoi Theatre in 1877,
Swan Lake was initially a critical and commercial failure. Petipa sought to revive the ballet with the blessing of
Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky, but the composer died before the new ballet was created. Petipa consequently worked with his brother
Modest Tchaikovsky, who significantly revised the story and rewrote the libretto to the version now commonly performed. The production was choreographed by Petipa and his collaborator
Lev Ivanov. Premiering at the Mariinsky Theatre in 1895, the Petipa/Ivanov/Tchaikovsky production of Swan Lake was a success. Following the
Russian Revolution, the Soviet government decided that the ballet school and company were unwanted symbols of the tsarist regime and closed them both. The ballet company was the first to be re-established, becoming in 1920 known as the State Academic Theatre of Opera and Ballet, with the school re-opening later as the Leningrad State Choreographic School, both in their previous locations. After the assassination of prominent Soviet figure
Sergey Kirov in 1934, the Ballet was renamed the Kirov Ballet in 1935, a name which is still sometimes incorrectly used. After the end of Communist rule, the ballet company and opera company were renamed for the theatre, becoming in 1992 the Mariinsky Ballet and Mariinsky Opera. Both companies are now run by the theatre itself. ==Today==