B.A. Modern Ballet Graduation Performance 2022 Royal Conservatoire
9 Jun 2022 – 11 Jun 2022
New Athenaeum Theatre, 100 Renfrew Street Glasgow. G2 3DB
The BA Modern Ballet students of the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland will take to the stage this June in the 2022 BA Modern Ballet Graduation Performances.
Featuring stellar performances from all three year groups of the School of Modern Ballet, this is a highlight of the year for our talented modern ballet students.
Programme:
The dancers will perform a range of newly commissioned work and existing repertoire in classical ballet, contemporary and jazz.
Choreography will include:
- Excerpt from La Sylphide
- New work by Nick Shoesmith
- Owen Montague
- New work by Constant Vigier
- Jazz
- New work by Diana Loosmore
- New work by Julian Moss
- Fabrice Maufrais
- Amy Groves (student choreographer)
Each two-hour performance will have a 20-minute interval.
This section: Dance, Events, Fairs, Festivals and Fundraisers, Pat's Home Page Blog, What's On Glasgow West End: cinema, clubs, theatre, music, events, festivals, community and more
Related Pages
- Storytelling For Adults, Alexandria
- The Scotland Channel presents Hillhead Hoolie
- Heritage Festival West Dunbartonshire- Speakeasy
- Paintings on Railings at West Fest
- Westfest 2026 – Step into the Arlington Baths
- Creative Heritage Cafe – Dalmuir
- The Wizard of the Kremlin at GFT
- Children’s Walk for Gaza, Glasgow Green
- WestFest 2026: Full Programme Announced
- Everbody to Kenmure Street at GFT
- Connected Community Talk: Stolen Stories
- National Theatre Live: All My Sons
- Old Kilpatrick Graveyard, Walk and Talk
- Foraging Walk at The Saltings, Old Kilpatrick
- W. Davidson Climate Change Blog: Super El Nino on the Way?
- Writing Short Stories like Agnes Owens with Kirstin Innes
- Mayday: That Sinking Feeling, University of Glasgow – live performance
- Book Launch: The History of Working-Class Courtship, Marriage and Divorce in Scotland, 1855-1939
- Celebrating the Music of John Martyn
- Responding to Alasdair Gray’s ‘Lanark’ University of Glasgow