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  1. Fyodor Vasilyevich Lopukhov (Russian: Фёдор Васильевич Лопухов; 20 October 1886, Saint Petersburg – 28 January 1973, Leningrad) was a Soviet and Russian ballet dancer and choreographer.

    • Russian
    • 1905–1960
  2. The Limpid Stream (Russian: Светлый ручей, also translated as The Bright Stream), Op. 39, is a ballet in 3 acts, 4 scenes, composed by Dmitri Shostakovich on the libretto by Adrian Piotrovsky and Fyodor Lopukhov, with choreography by Fyodor Lopukhov.

  3. Four of the Lopukhov children became ballet dancers; one of them, Fyodor Lopukhov, was a chief choreographer for the Mariinsky Theatre from 1922 to 1935 and again from 1951 to 1956. Lydia trained at the Imperial Ballet School, where she almost immediately became a star pupil.

  4. 7. Feb. 1973 · MOSCOW, Feb. 6Fyodor V. Lopukhov, one of the foremost figures in Russian ballet, died last week in Leningrad, it was announced today. He was 86 years old. Mr. Lopukhov is widely credited with...

  5. 13. Jan. 2015 · An exhibition in London examines “The Bolt,” a ballet choreographed in 1931 by Fyodor Lopukhov to a score by Shostakovich, and why it was banned in the Soviet Union. Credit... GRAD and St ...

  6. The most prolific choreographer of the early Soviet period, Fedor Lopukhov was associated with two seemingly contradictory developments in Soviet ballet in the 1920s: his interest in experimental dance, especially his theories of the relationship between movement and music, and his work to restore the ballets of the late nineteenth and early ...

  7. Soviet ballet. …the daring choreographic experiments of Fyodor Lopukhov (1886–1973) and others. Despite the official imposition of “socialist realism” as the criterion of artistic acceptability in 1932, ballet gained enormous popularity with the Soviet people.