Emeralds, rubies and diamonds. Glittering gems made of stardust forged in the furnace of the earth have fired humanity’s imagination for millennia. In 1966, they inspired George Balanchine to create ...
Performances in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by Original cast members talk about their experiences making the three-part plotless ballet, which opens New York City Ballet’s 75th anniversary season.
Boston Ballet will present George Balanchine’s Jewels, running November 6–16, 2025, at the Citizens Opera House. Returning to Boston for the first time since 2014, the ballet unites three distinct ...
See The Sarasota Ballet in April for Program 6 Portraits of Expression, featuring Balanchine’s Emeralds and Who Cares? and MacMillan’s Las Hermanas. Presented by Sarasota Ballet What’s This? March 5, ...
The company’s annual performances at the Kennedy Center are a highlight for dance in DC, with live music by the Kennedy Center Opera House Orchestra and richly-costumed dancers performing outstanding ...
Through his art, George Balanchine — a Russian immigrant to the United States called the father of American ballet — was happy upon occasion to pay tribute to the red, white, and blue. But in “Jewels, ...
Two principal dancers will say farewell in the 2026-27 season, which features the revival of Balanchine’s “Pithoprakta” and ...
Through his art, George Balanchine — a Russian immigrant to the United States called the father of American ballet — was happy upon occasion to pay tribute to the red, white, and blue. But in “Jewels, ...