Misplaced Pages

Principal dancer

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
(Redirected from Principal ballerina) Dancer who holds the highest rank within a professional dance company
Sarah Lamb, a principal dancer with the Royal Ballet in London.

A principal dancer (often shortened to principal) is a dancer at the highest rank within a professional dance company, particularly a ballet company.

A principal may be any gender. The position is similar to that of soloist; however, principals regularly perform not only solos, but also pas de deux as well as headlining performances they participate in. Principal dancers can be hired into a dance company or can also be a company dancer that is a corps de ballet dancer that gets promoted from within the company. That process can take multiple performance seasons or even years to achieve based on skill level and company interest. It is a coveted position in the company and the most prominent position a dancer can receive. The term is used mostly in ballet but can be used in other forms as well, such as modern dance. They are usually the star of the ballet. The term senior principal dancer is sometimes used as well.

Synonyms and origin

The Italian derived term prima ballerina (female dancers) (primo ballerino for male dancers) or the French derived term premier danseur (male dancers) have been used to denote similar levels of prominence to the Principal Dancer. In the Paris Opera Ballet, principal dancers receive the title of Danseur Étoile.

France

Detailed article: Paris Opera Ballet.

The title of premier danseur is awarded to the dancer who reaches the second-highest rung in the Paris Opéra ballet hierarchy, after having been a sujet.

As early as 1803-1804, the title was used by Jean-Georges Noverre as a synonym for “premier sujet”, the highest echelon of the ballet company, before being replaced by “étoile” at the end of the 19th century.

Current principal dancers

Royal Ballet

(as of 2023-2024 seasons)

American Ballet Theatre

(as of 2023-2024 seasons)

Martha Graham Modern Dance Company

(as of 2018-2019 seasons)

Miami City Ballet

(as of 2023-2024 seasons)

  • Nathalia Arja
  • Dawn Atkins
  • Hannah Fischer
  • Samantha Hope Galler
  • Ashley Knox
  • Jennifer Lauren
  • Steven Loch
  • Yuliia Moskalenko
  • Stanislav Olshanskyi
  • Alexander Peters
  • Chase Swatosh

New York City Ballet

(as of 2023-2024 seasons)

Bolshoi Ballet Company

  • Alyona Kovalyova
  • Ekaterina Krysanova
  • Anna Nikulina
  • Evgenia Obraztsova
  • Eleonora Sevenard
  • Anastasia Stashkevich
  • Yulia Stepanova
  • Svetlana Zakharova
  • Artemy Belyakov
  • Vladislav Lantratov
  • Artem Ovcharenko
  • Igor Tsvirko
  • Semyon Chudin
  • Mikhail Lobukhin
  • Denis Rodkin
  • Egor Gerashchenko
  • Vyacheslav Lopatin
  • Denis Savin

Principal Dancers in two or more Companies

  • Olga Smirnova
  • Tamara Rojo
  • Diana Vishneva
  • Roberto Bolle
  • David Hallberg
  • Isaac Hernandez
  • Jurgita Dronina
  • Vladimir Malakhov
  • Polina Semionova
  • Evan McKie
  • Alessandra Ferri
  • Maria Kochetkova
  • Svetlana Lunkina
  • Carlos Acosta
  • Sylvie Guillem
  • Daniil Simkin
  • Nina Ananiashvili
  • Yolanda Correa
  • Julian Mackay
  • Lucia Lacarra
  • Matthew Golding
  • Marijn Rademaker
  • Igor Zelensky
  • Julio Bocca

References

  1. "Senior Principal dancer". English National Ballet. Archived from the original on March 17, 2011. Retrieved March 4, 2011.
  2. "the definition of danseur noble". www.dictionary.com. Retrieved 2019-03-26.
  3. "Meet our Dancers". Miami City Ballet. Retrieved 2023-03-08.
  4. "Meet our Dancers | New York City Ballet". www.nycballet.com. Retrieved 2023-03-08.
Ballet
General information
Terminology
Ballet by genre
Ballet by region
Technique
Occupations and ranks
Ballet apparel
Awards
Organisations
Publications
Related articles
Lists
Ballets
Characters
Companies
Dancers
Schools


Stub icon

This dance-related article is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Categories: