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City Guide - St Petersburg - Culture | ||
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Culture St Petersburg has a rich cultural tradition of literature and music. Pushkin, Dostoevsky, Gogol, Rachmaninov, Prokofiev, Rimsky-Korsakov and Shostakovich all lived and worked here. In recent years, the removal of state subsidies has hit the cultural life of the city hard with many of the prestigious companies having to spend much time abroad. Theatre and film, which do not travel so easily, have been worst hit. Opera and ballet have long been the bedrock of St Petersburg's cultural tradition. The world-renowned Vaganova Ballet School was founded in 1738, while the wealthy and cultured classes of nineteenth-century St Petersburg strutted their stuff at the opera. Fifteen-day repertoires (in Russian) are posted in the windows of ticketing venues. Tickets for popular venues are limited and often the best seats are sold through hotels and tourist agencies. The cheapest deals, however, are obtained by going direct to the venue or the theatre ticket kiosks or kassas located throughout the city. The largest are at Nevsky prospekt 42 and in the pavilion at the corner of Nevsky prospekt and Mikhailovskaya ulitsa. They are open 1000-1900. Foreign visitors officially pay much more than Russians and although you can get a local to buy your ticket it is worth remembering that a zealous ticket collector may still charge you the difference or throw you out. Music: The Shostakovich Philharmonia is the home of the traditional St Petersburg Academic Symphonic Philarmonic Orchestra. Touring orchestras also perform here. The acoustics at Glinka Maly Zal (Small Hall), Nevsky prospekt 30 (tel: (812) 312 4585), are better than in the vast Bolshoi Zal (Main Hall), Mikhailovskaya ulitsa 2 (tel: (812) 311 7333). St Petersburg State Capella, Naberezhnaya Reki Moika 20 (tel: (812) 314 1058 or 1048), has a small concert hall for classical choral music, small orchestras and solo performances. The house soloists sing at the Sunday services in the Preobrazhensky Cathedral. Terem-Kvartet (tel: (812) 110 4068) is a lively company that presents unusual interpretations of classical works and opera played on traditional Russian instruments at various venues. The opera at the exquisite Mariinsky Theatre, Teatralnaya ploschad 1 (tel: (812) 114 1211), has scarcely changed in a century. The Mussorgsky Opera and Ballet Theatre, Iskusstv ploschad 1 (tel: (812) 219 1949), is the next best for classical performances if tickets for the Mariinsky are unavailable. Lively folk music, including Cossack and Russian dances, is performed daily at 2030 at the Nicholaievsky Palace, Truda ploschad 4 (tel: (812) 312 2600). Theatre: The Bolshoi Drama Theatre, Naberezhnaya Reki Fontanki 65 (tel: (812) 310 0401), presents classical performances of traditional Russian drama. Pazi, the director of the Kommissarzevskaya Theatre, Italyanskaya ulitsa 19 (tel: (812) 311 3102), noted for its colourful costumes and innovative staging, won an international prize for The Lovers' Suicide on the Island of Skynet, based on a Japanese stageplay by Tikamatsu. Buff, Narodnaya ulitsa 1(tel: (812) 263 6767), has three performance areas, presenting variety acts and improvised comedy. Dance: The Mariinsky Company, formerly the famous Kirov Ballet Company, nurtured greats such as Nureyev and Pavlova. Ballet in St Petersburg remains conservative with a repertoire of classics. The Mariinsky, which performs only classical ballet, has the scarcest and most expensive tickets in St Petersburg and performs at the Mariinksy Theatre (see above). The director of Theatre of Ballet, Boris Eifman, enraged classical ballet fans with controversial interpretations of Tchaikovsky. This modern troupe often appears at Oktyabrskaya Concert Hall, Ligovsky prospekt 6 (tel: (812) 275 1273). Film: Foreign films, mostly American, are clumsily dubbed into Russian, although there are still some good Russian and Soviet films to be found. The St Petersburg Times has listings. The Crystal Palace, Nevsky prospekt 72 (tel: (812) 272 2382) screens fairly recent foreign films in the original language. The Avrora, Nevsky prospekt 60 (tel: (812) 315 5254), shows recent American films dubbed into Russian. Anna Karenina, starring Greta Garbo and directed by Edmund Golding in 1927, was set in St Petersburg, as was Eisenstein's October of the same year. Warren Beatty's Reds (1981) charts the same historic events through the eyes of the journalist John Reed. Cultural events: In February and March, Farewell to the Russian Winter marks the end of winter with folk concerts and sleigh rides. The Musical Spring in St Petersburg is an international classical music festival held in April. The Festival of Festivals is an international film festival in June. The highlight of midsummer in St Petersburg are the White Nights, when a ghostly shimmering pallor is as dark as it gets. Many people stay out all night celebrating in the parks and on the river. The Russian Winter Festival around Christmas Day is celebrated with concerts, fireworks and Grandfather Frost. Literary Notes Pushkin, the giant of Russian literature, is widely revered by Russians, many of whom know his poetry by heart. His poem, 'The Bronze Horseman' bring the famous statue of Peter the Great to terrifying life, pursuing the hapless Yevgeny through the streets of St Petersburg. Tolstoy's dislike of St Petersburg, detailed in his sharp insight into the upper ranks of society in Anna Karenina, is matched by Dostoevsky's devastating descriptions of poverty and despair in the slums in Crime and Punishment. He wrote of 'this place, with its tattered population, its dirty and nauseous courtyards and numerous alleys'. The novelist Nikolai Gogol lived at Malaya Morskaya ulitsa 17, just off the Nevsky prospekt. He wrote a novel named after that street, which he described as 'the jewel of our capital'. He also describes the poverty: '... in the earliest morning all St Petersburg smells of hot freshly baked bread and is filled with old women in ragged gowns, making their raids on the churches and on compassionate passers-by.' By the time that the journalist John Reed was chronicling the events of the October Revolution in 1917, in his book Ten Days That Shook The World, hunger still stalked St Petersburg: '...the crowds thickened towards gloomy evening, pouring in slow voluble tides up and down the Nevsky, fighting for newspapers. Mysterious individuals circulated among the shivering women, who waited in queue, long cold hours for bread and milk, whispering that the Jews had cornered the food supply.' |