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American Ballet Theatre 'excited' about return to China in November

The US national ballet company will return to the stage in China next month for the first time in a decade, in the latest push for cultural exchanges between the two countries amid their continuing tensions.

Led by artistic director Susan Jaffe, the American Ballet Theatre (ABT) will perform in Beijing and Shanghai in early November, when they will present audiences with a full production of Giselle, perhaps the most beloved early romantic ballet in the world.

The ABT is also the first major US art group to perform in China's national theatre, where art performances from abroad have only recently resumed after the Covid-19 pandemic.

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Jaffe - the company's principal dancer for 22 years until 2002 - said the company was excited to be returning to China after a decade.

"For us, it's a very joyful experience to bring our art form and our company to China for the people," she said from her office in New York.

According to Jaffe, all of the ABT's 85 dancers will join the China tour, which opens at the Shanghai Grand Theatre with five performances from 2-7 November, followed by another five shows at Beijing's National Centre for the Performing Arts from 9-12 November.

Shanghai audiences will also be treated to other selections from the ABT's repertory, in addition to Giselle.

Founded in 1939, the ABT is one of the world's greatest dance companies, performing in more than 480 cities in 45 countries over the course of its 84 years.

The ABT made history in 1960, when it became the first American company to dance in the former Soviet Union as part of then president Dwight Eisenhower's cultural diplomacy initiative - a response to what US diplomats called Moscow's "gigantic propaganda offensive".

It was not until 2000 that the company made its mainland China debut, with its landmark production of La Bayadere, choreographed by the Russian ballerina Natalia Makarova, who fled St Petersburg's Kirov Ballet - now the Mariinsky - in 1970.

The ABT's last appearance in China was in March 2013 at the NCPA, where the dancers were showered with applause and cheers after their performance of Swan Lake.

The latest tour, originally planned for November 2020, was postponed because of the pandemic. Arts organisations around the world are still struggling to recover their audiences after three years of lockdowns.