Star Russian Dancer Quits Bolshoi Over War

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Prima ballerina Olga Smirnova has quit the Bolshoi in Moscow to join the Dutch National Ballet, it was announced Wednesday, becoming the
biggest star to leave Russia over the war in Ukraine.The 30-year-old's departure from Russia's most prestigious cultural institution carries
echoes of defections during the Cold War.Smirnova, considered one of the greatest dancers of her generation, had already expressed her
opposition to the war on messaging app Telegram earlier this month, saying she "cannot remain indifferent to this global catastrophe."The
Dutch National Ballet confirmed the departure in a statement, saying: "Smirnova was outspoken in her recent denouncement of the Russian
invasion of Ukraine, which is making it untenable for her to work in her native country."In her Telegram post, Smirnova had said: "I am
against war with all the fibres of my soul."It is not only about every other Russian perhaps having relatives or friends living in Ukraine,
or about my grandfather being Ukrainian...
It is that we continue to live as if this were the 20th century."Several foreign performers have quit their positions in Russia since the
invasion, but Smirnova is by far the biggest local star to leave."I never thought I would be ashamed of Russia, I have always been proud of
talented Russian people, of our cultural and athletic achievements
But now I feel that a line has been drawn that separates the before and the after," she wrote on Telegram.At the height of the Cold War, the
Soviet Union suffered a number of embarrassing defections by high-profile performers, most notably the legendary dancer Rudolph Nureyev who
claimed asylum during a visit by the Kirov ballet to Paris in 1961.Many current stars of the Russian stage have refused to criticize the
invasion of Ukraine, including star conductor Valery Gergiev and soprano Anna Netrebko, and have been stripped of their jobs in the West or
had tours canceled.Smirnova said the Dutch National Ballet would be "a good fit" and that she had been considering a move even before the
incredibly sad," said its director Ted Brandsen in the statement.Brazilian dancer Victor Caixeta, 22, who had spent five years at the
Mariinsky Ballet in St
Petersburg, is also joining the Amsterdam-based company.