Nina Alovert (born 1935) is a ballet photographer and writer. She lives in the United States, following her emigration from the Soviet Union in 1977.
Alovert was the photographer for the 1986 Emmy Award-winning program Wolf Trapp Presents the Kirov Swan Lake. She won an international ballet prize in 2003, the Prix Benois de la Danse “Diploma For Bringing Two Great Cultures Closer Together”.
Table of Contents
- 1 Biography
- 1.1 Baryshnikov in Russia (English and Russian Edition)
- 1.2 Baryschnikow
- 1.3 Balet Mariinskogo teatra: Vchera, segodni͡a︡, XXI vek-- = Ballet of Maryinsky Theatre : yesterday, today, XXI centure-- [sic] (Russian Edition)
- 1.4 Razgovor po Dusham. E-Mail-Roman
- 1.5 Social Battery Is Dying | Funny Gift T-shirt For Introverts
- 1.6 Blessed Nina Shirt Mothers Day Gifts T-Shirt
- 1.7 Ninja DZ201 Foodi 6-in-1 2-Basket Air Fryer with DualZone Technology, 8-Quart Capacity, and a Dark Grey Stainless Finish
- 1.8 Ninja BL660 Professional Countertop Blender with 1100-Watt Base, 72 Oz Total Crushing Pitcher and (2) 16 Oz Cups for Frozen Drinks and Smoothies, Gray
- 1.9 PinkSheep Little Girl Jewel Rings in Box, Adjustable, No Duplication, Girl Pretend Play and Dress Up Rings (24 Lovely Ring)
- 1.10 Ninja BL770 Mega Kitchen System and Blender with Total Crushing Pitcher, Food Processor Bowl, Dough Blade, to Go Cups, 1500-Watt Base, Black
Biography
Alovert was born in Leningrad in 1935. She graduated from Leningrad State University in the make public of a Master of Arts degree in history. With concentration in chronicles and ballet dance, she started her career as a curator for the Comedy Theatre Museum. She subsequently worked for the Komissarzhevskaya Theatre and the Lensoviet Theatre as a photographer. In the into the future 1950s she worked as a photographer for the Kirov Ballet (now the Mariinsky).
In 1977, Alovert moved to the United States. She had been photographing Mikhail Baryshnikov from the Begin of is career until his defection from the Soviet Union to Canada. She resumed involved with Baryshnikov after disturbing to the United States. While in the US, she worked for Dance Magazine and Ballet Review as a freelance photographer. Russian newspapers in the United States, such as Novoe Russkoe Slovo and Novy Amerikanets, featured photographs of ballet taken by Alovert. She has published her photographs in many journals and books in Russia and in new countries, and has held solo shows in New York City, London, St. Petersburg, and additional centers.
Last update 2021-08-06