Two of the world’s most celebrated dancing partners, Natalia Osipova and Ivan Vasiliev are to be re-united this summer at the London Coliseum from 6-9 August. They will appear in Sergei Danilian’s production of Solo for Two: three diverse pieces including two world premieres commissioned by the Segerstrom Center for the Arts and Ardani Artists.
The evening will open with a piece to be confirmed, followed by Passo by Ohad Naharin, artistic director of Batsheva Dance Company. Naharin has choreographed more than 20 works for Batsheva and its junior division, Batsheva Ensemble. Naharin has also worked with Nederlands Dans Theater, Ballett Frankfurt, Paris Opéra Ballet, Cedar Lake, and Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater. The evening will conclude with a new work by Arthur Pita named Facada. Pita is a highly talented and versatile choreographer and director. He has created works for Johannesburg’s Dance Umbrella, Resolution! and Spring Loaded at The Place, Royal Shakespeare Company, Phoenix Dance Theatre, CandoCo Dance Company and The Metamorphosis for The Linbury Studio Theatre Royal Opera House.
Osipova graduated from the Bolshoi Ballet Academy and joined the Bolshoi Ballet the same year, going on to reach the position of Principal Dancer. She has been a guest artist with the Mariinsky Ballet, Teatro alla Scala, Paris Opéra Ballet and American Ballet Theatre, and is currently a principal dancer with the Royal Ballet and American Ballet Theatre. Her vast repertoire includes Nikiya, Aurora, Juliet, Medora, Kitri, Swanilda and Giselle amongst many others.
Vasiliev is currently a principal dancer with American Ballet Theatre, having studied at the Dnepropetrovsk Ballet School in Ukraine and later at the Belorussian State Choreographic College in Minsk. In 2006, he was invited to join the Bolshoi Ballet as a soloist, making his debut with the Company, at age 17, and was soon promoted to the rank of principal dancer. Vasiliev has been a guest artist at the International Rudolf Nureyev Festival in Kazan and has appeared with the Novosibirsk Opera and Ballet Theater Mikhailovsky Ballet in St. Petersburg.
Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.