Kyiv City Ballet stops in Hampton Roads as war rages at home - VPM News
The Suffolk stop is one of the earliest on Kyiv City Ballet’s first U.S. tour, which began last week in North Carolina.

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On Feb. 23, members of the Kyiv City Ballet got on a plane to Paris. They didn’t know it at the time, but their flight was one of the last out of Ukraine before Russia invaded.

“On the next day, on the 24th, we realized that our country [was] being bombed,” said Ivan Kozlov, founder and artistic director of the ballet company.

They had gone to France for a three-week tour, but weren’t able to return home and ended up staying much longer — through earlier this month. In the meantime, they performed to sold-out crowds throughout Europe.

Now, the dancers are in Hampton Roads. It’s one of the earliest stops on the Kyiv City Ballet’s first U.S. tour, which began last week in North Carolina. The ballet company arrived in Suffolk on Monday and has been working with local students to teach ballet and share Ukrainian culture.

Mayor Mike Duman said in a statement the city is “privileged to welcome” the ballet.

“Our community has watched the events in Ukraine with despair, and now it is our honor to offer a safe respite for these dancers, at least for a few days, while they share their art with us,” Duman said.

The residency at the Suffolk Center for Cultural Arts includes a performance Wednesday night of three Ukrainian ballets, including a folk dance titled “Men of Kyiv” and a newly choreographed dance called “Tribute to Peace.” 

Kozlov said the latter was specially planned just before the U.S. tour.

“This is about peace, about love,” he said. “We would love to see a world like this without war anywhere and without any problems.”

The local stop will then wrap up with a performance of “Swan Lake” on Thursday night.

Kozlov said there are about three dozen dancers on the tour ranging in age from 18 to about 37. For some, it’s their first time in the States. Others have traveled here in the past with other companies — as Kozlov did when he was a dancer before starting his company in 2012.

“We’re trying to show our culture all over the world,” he said.

Dancing — given the situation back home — is difficult, he added.

“But it’s motivating, you know, that we represent our country right now," Kozlov said. "We’re working, we’re dancing. We’re fighting for our country from the stage.”

Read the original story on WHRO's website.

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Written by

Katherine Hafn…

September 21 2022, 11:34

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