Iana Salenko

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Iana Salenko
Born (1983-07-19) 19 July 1983 (age 38)
Kiev, USSR (now Ukraine)
Citizenship
  • Ukrainian
  • German
EducationPisarev Ballet School
Occupationballet dancer
Partner(s)Marian Walter
Children2
Current groupBerlin State Ballet
Former groupsDonetsk Opera and Ballet Theatre
Kiev Ballet

Iana Salenko (Ukrainian: Яна Саленко; born 19 July 1983)[1] is a Ukrainian-German ballet dancer. She is a principal dancer at the Berlin State Ballet.[2]

Early life[]

Salenko was born and raised in Kiev, USSR. She has five siblings, and her parents worked in a restaurant. She started with gymnastics and folk dancing. When she was 12, her father took her to a ballet school. Though it was a late start, Salenko began to focus on ballet. In 1995, at age 14, she was invited to attend the Vaganova Academy of Russian Ballet in St. Petersburg, but her mother believed it was too far away, so she trained at Vadim Pisarev's school in Donetsk, which is 400 miles away from Kiev. At age 15, became one of Pisarev's dance partner, and danced at his company, Donetsk Opera and Ballet Theatre. She had an eating disorder, which led to her become very weak and injured. Pisarev's sister, who was the director of the school, fed her and took her to therapy, and she soon recovered. She graduated in 2000.[2][3][4]

Career[]

Salenko became a soloist at Donetsk Opera and Ballet Theatre after she graduated. Two years later, in order to be closer to her family, she moved to Kiev Ballet as a principal dancer. After meeting her future-husband Marian Walter, Salenko auditioned for the Berlin State Ballet, where he was based. She was initially rejected by Vladimir Malakhov, the company's director. Diana Vishneva convinced Malakhov to let Salenko to join the company. She was offered a demi-soloist contract in 2005, and became a soloist the following year. [2][4]

After dancing the title role in Cinderella, Salenko became a principal dancer in 2007. As a principal, she danced lead roles in many productions including Swan Lake and The Nutcracker. She originated the role of Aurora in Nacho Duato's reconstruction of The Sleeping Beauty. Her frequent partners include Walter and Daniil Simkin.[4]

In 2013, she made her Royal Ballet debut as Don Quixote, partnering Steven McRae. Salenko said was offered a full-time contract at The Royal Ballet, but declined it in order to let her son finish school in Germany, but she became a regular guest, and returned to dance in other productions, such as Tchaikovsky Pas de deux, The Two Pigeons and Giselle.[4][5][6]

As a guest artist, Salenko has also performed in galas and companies in Croatia, Russia, Italy, Poland, The Netherlands, Taiwan, Germany, Slovakia and Slovenia.[2][4][5]

Repertoire[]

Awards[2][]

  • 2002 1st Prize and Diaghilew-Price Serge-Lifar-Competition Kiev
  • 2004 1st Prize ÖTR Contest Vienna
  • 2004 1st Prize and Makharova-Price at the Arabesque-Competition
  • 2004 3rd Prize at the International Ballet Competition in Varna
  • 2005 1st Prize at the International Ballet Competition in Helsinki
  • 2005 1st Prize at the International Ballet Competition in Nagoya

Personal life[]

Salenko is married to Marian Walter, also a principal at Berlin State Ballet, whom she met at a competition. They are parents of two children. Salenko is a citizen of both Ukraine and Germany.[4][7]

Filmography[]

  • The Nutcracker (choreography: Vasily Medvedev and Yuri Burlaka, after Lev Ivanov), Berlin State Ballet, 2014: as Clara,[8] with Marian Walter
  • Tschaikovsky Pas de Deux (choreography: George Balanchine), Royal Ballet,[9] 2015, with Steven McRae
  • The Sleeping Beauty (choreography: Nacho Duato), Berlin State Ballet, 2015: as Princess Aurora,[10] with Marian Walter

References[]

  1. ^ "Iana Salenko". deballet.com. de Ballet. Archived from the original on 22 February 2014. Retrieved 15 February 2014.
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f "Iana Salenko". Berlin State Ballet. Retrieved 14 May 2020.
  3. ^ "Iana Salenko". Zarely. Retrieved 14 May 2020.
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f "Tiny Dancer, Giant Career". Dance Magazine. 1 November 2015.
  5. ^ Jump up to: a b c "Iana Salenko". Royal Opera House. Retrieved 14 May 2020.
  6. ^ "The Royal Ballet's star duo reveal how they've become the best pairing in years". The Independent. 27 October 2015.
  7. ^ "Iana Salenko on Instagram: "New interview about Motivation