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At Bolshoi, world ballet stars dance for Ukraine
By ANNA SMOLHENKO and OLGA NEDBAEVA, AFP

Mikhailovsky Ballet dancer Natalia Osipova performs a scene from 'Don Quixote' during a dress rehearsal at David H. Koch Theater, Lincoln Center on November 20, 2014 in New York City. Osipova is one of the dancers to be performing in the Bolshoi's 'Ballet Without Borders', to benefit Ukrainian dancers. Cindy Ord/Getty Images/AFP
During the benefit organized by The Bolshoi's Ukrainian-born prima ballerina Zakharova, dancers from top international companies will perform highlights from a range of ballets.
All proceeds from the sold-out concert will go towards the Kiev State Ballet School in Ukraine where organizers say young dancers are trained in poor conditions.
The gala takes place amid raging tensions between Russia and Ukraine, where Moscow-backed separatists have battled government forces since April.
"I came to support the guys," Osipova, one of the world's most sought-after ballerinas, said ahead of the gala.
"How can one refuse? I recall how terrible it was to enter a dance hall in winter and shiver," said Osipova, the former Bolshoi star who joined Britain's Royal Ballet in 2013.
Zakharova and the producer of the concert Yuri Baranov -- both of whom are Kiev-trained -- hope that proceeds from the gala dubbed "Ballet Without Borders" will help renovate their alma mater.
"It's necessary to help children, no matter what country they live in," Zakharova told AFP.
She said she got the idea for the concert during her visit to Kiev last year.
"The idea was born before the situation became complicated. There was no way back -- these are kids."
Baranov, a Kiev-born soloist at the Bolshoi, said the ballet school in Kiev had largely been neglected for the past 30 years and needed a new roof and windows.
"They work in frigid temperatures," he told AFP, referring to young dancers.
All tickets have been sold out, and three VIP packages ranging between 200,000 and 600,000 rubles ($3,775-$11,000) have also been sold.
Baranov said the organizers had hoped to raise some $300,000 but expect to end up with less than half of that because of the depreciated ruble.
Sensitive project
In a sign of the sensitivity of the project, the organizers have been unable to find a sponsor, Baranov said.
Dancers have also distanced themselves from politics.
"This is an initiative of the artists and not the government or the management," Baranov said.
But political overtones will be hard to miss.
Baranov said one of the pieces -- "Digital Love" by Patrick de Bana -- was created in memory of Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370, which disappeared with 239 people on board in March.
The duet by Zakharova and de Bana -- first performed in China -- is "about distance, distant love," the choreographer was quoted as saying in The Shanghai Daily last summer.
"It’s about love that goes through this electronic world, and trying to send from one side of the world to the other emotions, feelings and connections."
The inclusion of the piece has no political implications, and no relation to the shooting down of Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 with 298 people on board over rebel-held Ukraine in July, Baranov said.
‘Ukrainians conquering world’
In Kiev, Nobuhiro Terada, the Japanese-born artistic director of the Kiev Ballet School, said he was grateful to Zakharova for the event but noted that despite the conditions his school provided world-class training.
"Ukrainians are conquering the world," he said, referring to dancers who trained in Kiev.
He expressed regret that some of the best dancers chose to perform abroad. "This is sad and bad."
Leonid Sarafanov, a principal dancer with the Mikhailovsky Theater in Saint Petersburg, and Alina Cojocaru, the Romanian-born star of the English National Ballet -- who both trained in Kiev -- will take part in the gala. — Agence France-Presse
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