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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Māris_LiepaMāris Liepa - Wikipedia

    Māris Rūdolfs Liepa (27 July 1936 – 26 March 1989) was a Soviet Latvian ballet dancer who was born in Riga and died in Moscow. He graduated from Riga Choreography School where he was taught by Valentin Blinov (Russian: Валентин Блинов). He performed in Moscow for the first time in 1950.

  2. Māris Rūdolfs Liepa (dzimis 1936 . gada 27. jūlijā Rīgā, miris 1989 . gada 26. martā Maskavā) bija latviešu baleta mākslinieks un kinoaktieris. Biogrāfija. Dzimis 1936. gadā Rīgā Nacionālās operas skatuves strādnieka Eduarda Liepas ģimenē. Dzīvoja Rīgā, Skolas ielā, 18. [1] . Baleta mākslas pamatus apguva Rīgas Horeogrāfijas skolā.

  3. Maris-Rudolf Eduardovich Liepa (born July 27, 1936, Riga, Latvia—died March 25, 1989, Moscow, Russia, U.S.S.R.) was a Soviet ballet dancer who performed with the Bolshoi Ballet for more than 20 years. Liepa studied in Riga and at the Bolshoi ballet school (in 1961 renamed the Moscow Academic Choreographic School).

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Learn about the life and career of Maris Liepa, a Latvian-born ballet star who danced with the Bolshoi and revived Fokine's Spectre de la rose. Find out his roles, awards, and marriages in this comprehensive entry from The Oxford Dictionary of Dance.

  5. Liepa was the principal dancer of the Bolshoi Ballet in Moscow and a man of principle. Born on 27 July in Riga, Latvia Maris was a sickly child. His mother wanted him to become a doctor. But with the intention of improving his health the child was taken to the Latvian Opera and Ballet school.

  6. Māris Rūdolfs Liepa (27 July 1936, Riga – 26 March 1989, Moscow) was a Soviet Latvian ballet dancer. He studied at Riga Choreography School where he was taught by Valentin Blinov (Russian: Валентин Блинов). He performed in Moscow for the first time in 1950.

  7. Choreographer Aivars Leimanis has been the Latvian National Ballet’s artistic director since 1993. He has focused his attention on both, revivals of classical ballets and collaborative projects with renowned choreographers, including Krzysztof Pastor, Marco Goecke, Edward Clug, Radu Poklitaru, Hans van Manen, Christian Spuck, and Petr Zuska.