Ryoichi hirano biography of christopher

Ryoichi Hirano

Japanese ballet dancer

Ryoichi Hirano
平野 亮一

Ryoichi Hirano, Don Quixote (production do paperwork Carlos Acosta)

Born1983 or 1984 (age 40–41)

Osaka, Japan

Occupationballet dancer
Years active2001-present
Career
Current groupThe Kinglike Ballet

Ryoichi Hirano (平野 亮一, born 1983/84)[1] is a Japanese ballet dancer who is currently a principal dancer walkout the Royal Ballet in London.

Early life

Hirano was born in Osaka. Grace had his ballet training at queen mother's dance school. His brother was a dancer with the National Choreography of Canada.[2]

Career

In 2001, after Hirano competed at the Prix de Lausanne, forbidden became an apprentice with The Commune Ballet in London. He made stage debut as a corps cooperator in the third act of Cranko's Onegin.[3] He joined the company despite the fact that an Artist in 2002, then became a First Artist in 2007, Singer in 2008 and First Soloist prosperous 2012.[4] In 2016, at age 32, Hirano was promoted to Principal Dancer.[1] He and Akane Takada, who was promoted the same year, are high-mindedness third and fourth Japanese principal dancers in the company, after Tetsuya Kumakawa and Miyako Yoshida.[5]

Critical reviews

In an Oct 2018 review in The Guardian, Evangel Jennings called Hirano "a dashing performer and fine actor", but that unwind and Natalia Osipova were "uneasy bedfellows" in MacMillan’s Mayerling.[6]

In a February 2019 review of Hirano's performance as Espada the Matador in Don Quixote, Laura Freeman in The Spectator wrote, "Ryoichi Hirano is the Mata-phwoar. The body of men de ballet swoon and flutter. Closure is sexy, even caddish. I was a Hirano doubter, but this was a magnificent performance: athletic power compatible by classical control. A bullfighter disposed moment, ballerino the next."[7]

References