Hélène Bouchet

French ballet dancer
Hélène Bouchet
Born (1980-10-02) October 2, 1980 (age 43)
Cannes, France
EducationÉcole supérieure de danse de Cannes Rosella Hightower
École Nationale de Danse
Career
Current groupHamburg Ballet
Former groupsBallet National de Marseille
English National Ballet

Hélène Bouchet (born 1980) is a French ballet dancer is a principal dancer at the Hamburg Ballet.

Early life

Bouchet was born in Cannes in the south of France. She studied ballet at École supérieure de danse de Cannes Rosella Hightower and at the École Nationale de Danse in Marseille under Raymond Franchetti and Dominique Khalfouni.[1]

Career

After dancing with the Roland Petit's Ballet National de Marseille and English National Ballet, she joined the Hamburg Ballet in 1998. She became a soloist in 2003 and principal dancer in 2005. She had originated a number of roles in John Neumeier's works, including La Barbarina in Death in Venice, Tatiana Larina in Tatiana and Eurydice in Orpheus. She won the Prix Benois de la Danse for the latter.[1]

As a guest artists, she took part in the Tokyo Ballet's 50-year anniversary celebrations, dancing the title role in Romeo and Juliet with Thiago Bordin,[2] and Jewels with the Mariinsky Ballet, as well as in Germany, France, Japan, Luxembourg, U.S., Russia and Argentina.[1] In 2003, wearing a Gypsy dress, Bouchet performed "The Gipsy Tunes" in Mougins, France, with her sister, Diane Bouchet, on violin.[3]

Selected repertoire

Source:[1]

  • Marguerite Gautier, Manon Lescaut and Olympia in Lady of the Camellias
  • Myrtha, Moyna, Zulma and Paesant-Pas de deux in Giselle
  • Princess Natalia, Princess Claire and The Butterfly in Illusions - like Swan Lake
  • Louise, Marie, The Beautiful Girl from Granada, La Fille du Pharaon and Mrs. Stahlbaum in The Nutcracker
  • The good Fairy, A Fairy, Princess Florine and Amors Segen in The Sleeping Beauty
  • Hippolyta/Titania und Helena in A Midsummer Night's Dream
  • Romola Nijinsky, Tamara Karsavina und Olga Preobrajenska in Nijinsky
  • Juliet in Romeo and Juliet
  • Aschenbach's Concepts in Death in Venice
  • A Stepsister in A Cinderella Story
  • The Little Mermaid and Henriette/The Princess in The Little Mermaid
  • Desdemona in Othello
  • Sylvia in Sylvia
  • Julie in Liliom
  • Blanche DuBois in A Streetcar Named Desire
  • The mother in Christmas Oratorio I-VI
  • Woman I in Bernstein Dances
  • Dolly in Anna Karenina
  • Gamzatti in La Bayadère
  • The Sylph in La Sylphide
  • Pink and Mauve in Dances at a Gathering
  • Tatiana in Onegin
  • Third Simphony of Gustav Mahler
  • Afternoon of a Faun
  • Saint Matthew Passion
  • Song of the Earth
  • Jewels – Emerald, Rubies and Diamonds
  • Tchaikovsky Pas de deux
  • Thaïs

Created roles

  • Silvia in Préludes CV
  • La Barbarina in Death in Venice
  • Eurydice in Orpheus
  • Alma in Purgatorio
  • Tatiana Larina in Tatiana
  • The Servant (Désirée von Wertheimstein) in Duse
  • Nocturnes and Nachtwanderung from Songs of the Night
  • Verklungene Feste
  • Night and Echo
  • Unerreichbare Orte
  • Wege
  • A Foreign Sound
  • My Dear Love
  • Renku
  • Countdown

Awards

Source:[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e "Ensemble". Hamburg Ballet. Retrieved 14 May 2020.
  2. ^ Kosaka, Kris (5 February 2014). "Tokyo Ballet turns 50 in romantic style". The Japan Times. Retrieved 23 March 2014.
  3. ^ "Dance Nuit Des Etoiles in Mougins". yesicannes.com. July 2013. Retrieved 23 March 2014.
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