Dancers and Staff

スタッフ&ダンサーDancers and Staff

Artistic Director

斎藤 友佳理
さいとう ゆかり - Yukari Saito

 母のもとで6歳よりバレエを始め、ロシアに短期留学を繰り返し、M.セミョーノワやE.マクシーモワに師事。1987年、東京バレエ団入団。詩情あふれる典雅な踊りとドラマティックな表現力でたちまち大輪の花を咲かせる。

Yukari Saito was appointed Artistic Director of The Tokyo Ballet in 2015.

Born in Yokohama, Kanagawa Prefecture, Saito began her ballet training at the age of six with her mother who was a professional dancer. From the age of 16, she frequently visited Moscow to take lessons with Marina Semionova and Ekaterina Maximova. After gaining stage experience both within and outside Japan, she joined The Tokyo Ballet in 1987. Her poetic and dramatic expression was quickly rewarded.

While touring Europe with The Tokyo Ballet in 1988, Saito was chosen to dance the role of Lady Kaoyo, the heroine of Maurice Béjart's The Kabuki, and greatly impressed dance critics throughout Europe. In "Béjart's Ballet Gala" also held in 1988, she performed Bugaku with dancers of the Béjart Ballet Lausanne at Béjart's request. Her artistic excellence inspired another great choreographer John Neumeier to create Seven Haiku of the Moon, which premiered in 1989. During The Tokyo Ballet's Russia tour in 1992, she danced the leading role in La Sylphide at the Bolshoi Theatre, the Mariinsky Theatre and the Kiev National Shevchenko Theatre, drawing lavish praise from Russian critics who called her a "Japanese Marie Taglioni".

During her 28 years with The Tokyo Ballet, Saito danced a full range of the Company's principal roles. She performed many world premieres and The Tokyo Ballet's premieres including John Neumeier's Seasons -The Colors of Time (2000) , Spring and Fall (2000), Lady of the Camellias (2004), Maurice Béjart's Bhakti III (2000), Jiří Kylián's Dream Time (2000), Vladimir Vasiliev's Don Quixote (2001), Frederick Ashton's The Dream (2005), Pierre Lacotte's La Fille du Danube (2006), Natalia Makarova's La Bayadère (2009) and John Cranko's Onegin (2010). She was also acclaimed as a guest artist at major theaters around the world.

In 2002, Saito published an autobiography titled Yukaryusha to portray her life as a dancer, mother and woman. Since 2004, she has been a member of the jury at The Russian Open Ballet Competition "Arabesque". In 2009, she graduated from the Moscow State Academy of Choreography with highest honors in ballet master and ballet teaching, and obtained ballet teaching qualifications.

Her awards include the Hattori Chieko Award, the Tokyo Shimbun's Dance Arts Award, the Kanagawa Bunka Award and the Medal of Honor with Purple Ribbon awarded by the Japanese government.