Claire Calvert

Claire Louise Calvert (born 1988) is an English ballet dancer and is a first soloist at the Royal Ballet.[1]

Claire Calvert
Calvert as the Lilac Fairy in Sleeping Beauty (Royal Opera House, 2017)
Born1988 (age 3233)
OccupationBallet dancer
Current groupThe Royal Ballet

Early life and training

Calvert started ballet training at the age of three. She started attending The Royal Ballet School when she was eleven, where she was coached by Darcey Bussell.[2][3][4] She danced lead roles Raymonda Act III and Jabula on her graduation year.[1] While she was a student, she danced roles such as a swan in Swan Lake, a nymph in The Sleeping Beauty and a snowflake in The Nutcracker at The Royal Ballet.[5]

Career

Calvert graduated into The Royal Ballet in 2007. In 2009, while she was still an Artist, she made her principal role debut, as The Lilac Fairy in The Sleeping Beauty. She was subsequently named First Artist in 2010, Soloist in 2012 and First Soloist in 2016.[1] She has since other principal roles such as the Queen of Dryads and Mercedes in Don Quixote, Lescaut’s Mistress in Manon, Queen of the Willis in Giselle, Hermione in The Winter's Tale, Gypsy Girl in The Two Pigeons, Sugar Plum Fairy and Rose Fairy in The Nutcracker and Mitzi Caspar in Mayerling She has created roles in works including Aeternum and Charlotte Edmonds’s dance film The Indifferent Beak (Deloitte Ignite 14).[1][6]

Selected repertoire

References

  1. "Claire Calvert". Royal Opera House. Retrieved 23 April 2020.
  2. Allied Newspapers Ltd. "The ballerina". Times of Malta. Retrieved 2017-01-16.
  3. "Cupcakes & Conversation with Claire Calvert, Artist, The Royal Ballet". Ballet News. 2009-08-08. Retrieved 2017-01-12.
  4. KatchKadeem (2016-12-27). "Claire Calvert: This Royal Ballerina will wear 'Blobs' for her Sugar Plum Début". KatchKadeem. Retrieved 2017-01-12.
  5. "Behind the Scenes of 'Pas de Deux' and The Royal Ballet". Boodles. Retrieved 23 April 2020.
  6. Jennings, Luke (10 April 2016). "Claire Calvert: When I was little I wasn't saying 'Mummy I want to be a ballerina'". The Guardian.
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