Artyom Abashev
Polikushka: Dmitry Sobolevsky
Akulina: Maria Alexandrova
Ilya: Jonah Paul Cook
Aksinya: Ksenia Ryzhkova
The Moscow Sretensky Monastery
This performance is dedicated to the cherished memory of Vladimir Shklyarov
Jonah Paul Cook and Ksenia Ryzhkova shared the stage with Vladimir, bound by artistic collaboration, partnership and a warm friendship. When the ballet Polikushka was still in its early conception, the part of the protagonist was created by Jonah Cook specifically for Vladimir. His human qualities, his virtuoso technique and his wide acting range – from the tragic to the comic – were to lend the image of Polikey vitality and emotional depth.
Here, on the stage that was so dear to him, on the eve of a day of remembrance, the company of the Sevastopol Opera and Ballet Theatre dedicates its performance to Premier of the Mariinsky Theatre, Vladimir Shklyarov.
Premiere of this production: 12 August 2025, IX International Festival of Opera and Ballet Chersonesos, Sevastopol
Running time: 1 hour 50 minutes
The performance has one interval
The dramatic ballet Polikushka (2025) is based on Leo Tolstoy’s novella of the same name.
“I have not changed a thing in Tolstoy’s work – it remains exactly as he wrote it,” says choreographer Jonah Paul Cook. “My task was simply to bring it to the stage, to adapt the story for ballet, to tell it through the language of the body, without words.”
For the English choreographer, formerly a principal dancer with the Bayerisches Staatsballett and the Ballett Zürich, this is not his first encounter with literature: in May 2025 he premiered a production of Emily Brontë’s Wuthering Heights at the Sevastopol State Opera and Ballet Theatre.
The dramatic action in Polikushka revolves around two characters: Polikey, a serf fatally undone by a cruel twist of fate, and Ilya, a peasant youth destined for a happier lot. Cook’s choreographic language gives physical form to the protagonists’ inner struggles against the inexorable turns of destiny. The atmosphere of Russian village life is evoked on stage through chamber works by Sergei Rachmaninoff, as well as Russian folk and Cossack songs performed by the Choir of Moscow’s Sretensky Monastery.
The highlighting of performances by age represents recommendations.
This highlighting is being used in accordance with Federal Law N436-FZ dated 29 December 2010 (edition dated 1 May 2019) "On the protection of children from information that may be harmful to their health"