Galina Samsova

Galina Samsova

Patrick Bissell and Galina Samsova dancing the lead roles at the premiere of Cheri at the 1980 Edinburgh Festival.
Born Galina Samtsova
(1937-03-17) 17 March 1937
Soviet Union Stalingrad, Soviet Union
Occupation Ballet dancer
Spouse(s) Alexander Ursuliak (1960-?)
André Prokovsky (1972-1981)

Galina Samsova (born 17 March 1937) is a Russian ballet dancer and company director, now retired.

Early life and training

Born Galina Martinovna Samtsova in Stalingrad (now Volgograd) in southwestern Russia, she began ballet training at an early age. She studied at the Kiev Opera Ballet School with Natalia Verekundova and in 1956 graduated into the Kiev Opera Ballet, where she eventually became a soloist. In 1960 she married the Canadian-Ukrainian dance teacher Alexander Ursuliak and moved with him to Canada. The following year, 1961, she joined the National Ballet of Canada in Toronto, having simplified the spelling of her maiden name from Samtsova to Samsova. Hired as a soloist, she was soon promoted to principal dancer and was cast in leading roles in Swan Lake and Giselle as well as in works by Balanchine, Tudor, and Cranko.[1]

Performing career

In 1963, Samsova was visiting London when she was recommended to Raymundo de Larraín, nephew of the marquis de Cuevas, for the title role in his lavish new production of Prokofiev's Cinderella, to be choreographed by Vaslav Orlikovsky and presented at the International Dance Festival in Paris. Making her western European debut in the role, which she danced almost every day for a month, Samsova won the festival's gold medal for a performance by a female dancer (Rudolf Nureyev won the gold medal for a male dancer).[2] Her lyrical interpretation of Cinderella also resulted in invitations to give guest performances in many companies, including the Marseille Opera Ballet and London Festival Ballet.

Galina Samsova and David Adams in Corsaire

Samsova joined London Festival Ballet as a guest artist in 1964 but soon became a permanent member of the company, serving as its principal ballerina for nearly a decade, until 1973. While there, she formed a partnership with David Adams, performing in virtuosic showcases such as Spring Waters and the Medora-Ali pas de deux from Le Corsaire, evening-length classics such as Swan Lake and The Sleeping Beauty, and many other works. The pair won the gold medal at Il Festival de la Opera, Madrid, for their performance of Giselle. In 1966 Samsova went to Johannesburg, South Africa, to dance as guest star in yet another production of Cinderella, staged by French choreographer Françoise Adret for PACT/TRUK Ballet.[3] The role of Prince Charming in this production was taken by André Prokovsky, a Franco-Russian dancer whom Samsova had met in Marseille and who would soon begin to play a large part in her life. Not only her partner on stage, he would become her second husband, after her first marriage failed.

During her later years with London Festival Ballet, Samsova formed an acclaimed partnership with Prokovsky. They danced together in numerous works in the company repertory, creating leading roles in The Unknown Island (1969) by Jack Carter, in Othello and La Péri (both 1971) by Peter Darrell, and in Dvořák Variations (1970) and Mozartiana (1973) by Ronald Hynd. Samsova and Prokovsky married in 1972 and left London Festival Ballet in 1973 to direct and perform in their own troupe. This soon grew into the New London Ballet, a classical company of fourteen dancers that toured extensively in Britain and overseas with a repertory consisting mostly of newly created works. After the company disbanded in 1977, owing to unmeetable demands of the musicians' union in London,[4] Samsova followed Prokovsky to Italy, where he had accepted the directorship of the Rome Opera Ballet for two years.[5] Besides dancing with that company, Samsova made guest appearances with companies in France, Germany, Hong Kong, Canada, the United States, South Africa, and England.

In 1978 she danced as a guest with Sadler's Wells Royal Ballet (now called Birmingham Royal Ballet) before joining the company as a principal and teacher two years later, in 1980.[6] During her ten years with this troupe she staged the grand pas from act 2 of Paquita (1980) and mounted, in collaboration with Peter Wright, a production of Swan Lake (1981).[7]

Later life

After retiring from the stage, Samsova became the artistic director of the Scottish Ballet in Glasgow in 1991, succeeding its founder, Peter Darrell, who had died in 1987. Samsova increased the emphasis on the classics in the repertory, mounting her own version of act 3 of Raymonda (1990), and introduced neoclassic works by Balanchine, Robert Cohan, and Mark Baldwin, among others. She resigned her post in 1997.[8] Since then, Samsova, divorced from Prokovsky in 1981, has made her home once again in London, where she has been a mentor to rising young dancers. She has also continued her career as a juror at international ballet competitions in Paris, Moscow, Kiev, Shanghai, and Jackson, Mississippi.[9]

See also

References

  1. Jane Pritchard, "Samsova, Galina," in International Dictionary of Ballet, edited by Martha Bremser (Detroit: St. James Press, 1993), vol. 2, pp. 1239–42. Contains pertinent biographical information and an extensive chronology of roles performed from 1961 to 1990.
  2. Renée Renouf, "Galina Samsova: Dancer, Director, Jackson Competition English Juror," interview, Ballet Magazine (July 2002).
  3. Claude Conyers, "I Shall Remember Her Running," Ballet Review (New York), vol. 1, no. 5 (1966), pp. 13–23. A detailed description of Samsova's performance in this production.
  4. Renouf, "Galina Samsova" (2002), p. 2.
  5. Emma Manning, "Prokovsky, André," in International Dictionary of Ballet (1993), vol. 2, pp. 1153–56.
  6. Alastair Macaulay, "In Quest of the Muse: The Sadler's Wells Royal Ballet," Dancing Times (London), vol. 71 (November 1981).
  7. Barbara Newman and Leslie Spatt, Sadler's Wells Royal Ballet: Swan Lake (London, 1983).
  8. "Scottish Ballet," in The Oxford Dictionary of Dance, compiled by Debra Craine and Judith Mackrell (Oxford University Press, 2000).
  9. Renouf, "Galina Samsova" (2002), p. 3.

External links

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