The Imperial Mariinsky Theatre and its predecessor, the Bolshoi Kamenny Theatre, hosted the premieres of many of the operas of
Mikhail Glinka,
Modest Mussorgsky, and
Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky. At the behest of the theatre director
Ivan Vsevolozhsky, both the
Imperial Ballet (ballet arrived at the Mariinsky theater in 1870) and the
Imperial Opera were relocated to the Mariinsky Theatre in 1886, as the Bolshoi Kamenny Theatre was considered unsafe. World premieres given at the house included
Mussorgsky's opera
Boris Godunov in 1874,
Tchaikovsky's operas
The Queen of Spades in 1890 and
Iolanta in 1892, the revised version of
Prokofiev's ballet
Romeo and Juliet in 1940, and
Khachaturian's ballet
Spartacus in 1956. Other notable productions included
Rimsky-Korsakov's opera
The Golden Cockerel in 1909 and Prokofiev's ballet
Cinderella in 1946 (with
Natalya Dudinskaya). The imperial and Soviet theater was the home of numerous theatre directors, impresarios, conductors, and musicians.
Theatre directors:
Ivan Vsevolozhsky (Director of Imperial Theatres, 1881 to 1898),
Alexander Skibnevsky (1946–1947).
Conductors:
Mikhail Zhukov (1932–35), Israel Chudnovsky and others.
Ballet: The
ballet school of the Mariinsky Theatre spawned the careers of artists
Mathilde Kschessinskaya,
Olga Preobrajenskaya,
Anna Pavlova,
Tamara Karsavina,
Vaslav Nijinsky, and
George Balanchine, students of the
Imperial Ballet School and style, and, under and after the teachings of
Agrippina Vaganova, artists
Marina Semyonova,
Galina Ulanova,
Rudolf Nureyev,
Natalia Makarova,
Mikhail Baryshnikov,
Irina Kolpakova,
Galina Mezentseva,
Altynai Asylmuratova, as well as more recent dancers of renown
Ulyana Lopatkina,
Diana Vishneva, and
Svetlana Zakharova, students of the school as now named, the
Vaganova Academy of Russian Ballet. Guest Soloist: Reza Fekri ==Mariinsky Theatre today==