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The Blue Dahlia (French : Le Dahlia bleu ) is a ballet in two acts, with libretto and choreography by Marius Petipa and music by Cesare Pugni , first presented by the Imperial Ballet on May 12 [O.S. April 30] 1860 at the Imperial Bolshoi Kamenny Theatre in St. Petersburg, Russia , with Mariia Surovshchikova-Petipa (as the Blue Dahlia) and Timofei Stukolkin (as Beausoleil).[ 1]
Marius Petipa renewed the first act of this ballet in 1875 for a debut of his daughter, Marie Petipa .
The ballet was revived by Pavel Gerdt for the Imperial Ballet and presented at the Imperial Mariinsky Theatre , St. Petersburg on March 5–18, 1905 with Lubov Egorova (as the Blue Dahlia). Petipa disliked Gerdt's 1905 revival to such a degree that he requested his name be removed from the program.
1847–59
Paquita (*1847, *1881)
Le Diable amoureux (as "Satanella") (*1848)
Leda, the Swiss Milkmaid (1849)
Giselle (*1850, *1884, *1899, *1903)
The Star of Granada (1855)
The Rose, the Violet, and the Butterfly (1857)
Le Corsaire (*1858, *1863, *1868, *1885, *1899)
A Marriage During the Regency (1858)
The Parisian Market (1859, *1861)
1860–79
The Blue Dahlia (1860, *1875)
Terpsichore (1861)
The Pharaoh's Daughter (1862, *1885, *1898)
The Beauty of Lebanon (1863)
The Traveling Dancer (1864)
Florida (1866)
Titania (1866)
Faust (*1867)
The Benevolent Cupid (1868)
The Slave (1868)
Le Roi Candaule (1868, *1891, *1903)
Don Quixote (1869, *1871)
Trilby (1870)
Catarina (*1870)
The Two Stars (1871)
Camargo (1872)
Le Papillon (*1874)
Ondine (as "The Naiad and the Fisherman") (*1874, *1892)
The Bandits (1875)
The Adventures of Peleus (1876, *1897)
La Bayadère (1877, *1900)
Roxana (1878)
Ariadne (1878)
The Daughter of the Snows (1879)
Frizak the Barber (1879)
Mlada (1879, *1896)
1880–99 1900–03
Les Ruses d'Amour or The Trial of Damis (1900)
The Seasons (1900)
Harlequinade (1900)
The Heart of the Marquis (1902)
The Magic Mirror (1903)
The Romance of the Rosebud and the Butterfly (never presented)
an asterisk * indicates a revival.