Such experience of working alone, i come, see my partner for the first time, and we start rehearsing, work, getting used to each other, well, that is, this is also a whole, well, this is such a kitchen, i was always surprised how two completely unfamiliar dancers, a ballerina and a dancer, meet for the first time, often you dont even know each other, after 2 days you are dancing about love, how is this possible, yeah yeah yeah. Well, now, ive already gone through all this, i was already a fairly experienced ballerina and independent, so probably, at that moment i was ready to move to the big theater, the only thing is that if you rewind my life , then from my first appearance at the marinsky theater, 3 months have passed, and i the first invitation came from the bolshoi theater, yes, yes, yes, yes, that is, the first i mean i didnt give my consent. Only the fourth time i gave my consent, each of my visits to moscow on tour brought with it an invitation to me to the bolshoi theater, whe
Absolutely some kind of challenge, i think, which mark donskoy deliberately made so that hook the soviet audience, and it is no coincidence that when this film was seen in italy, it is believed, as the legend says, that it largely influenced the establishment of italian neorealism, a movement in italian cinema that arose last year, in fact, the second world war, which then absolutely influenced all world cinema, when. Is filmed not in a pavilion, but somewhere on location, when we see real life on the screen, because it is no longer possible to recreate life in a pavilion, we see destroyed cities, ruins, we see not even actors very often, but simply models or, well, extras who actually play themselves, all this also partly comes from donskoys rainbow, although of course donskoys actors were mostly actors, well, except for children, and we know, lets say one of these actually is the film. One of the girls who appears on the screen in rainbow grew up to become a Costume Designer and cont
The time when our first satellite was launched, i naturally dont remember, as for gagarins flight, i have a very vivid impression of it from childhood, of course it was complete delight, but then very few realized that, in general, this space is a kind of side effect of the arms race and the military. Structure, because if there werent this, there wouldnt be space. Here it must be said, first of all, that a new era began in august 1945, the nuclear era, the United States had a monopoly on the atomic bomb, and this, of course, made the world very unstable, and of course, no one in the United States expected that the soviet union would be able to create a nuclear bomb in 1949 to go into space, and on october 4, 1957, launching the first satellite, this is how this race in space developed. Hello, this is a historical podcast russiawest on the swing of history, with you Pyotr Romanov and sergey soloviev, today well talk about how the space confrontation between the United States and the so
It will go on to president bidens desk. Watch the vote on cspan2 and we expect to hear from Chuck Schumer live on cspan. Until then, washington journal. Host joining us now is Caroll Doherty of the Pew Research Center here to talk about new research in the Party Identification. Thank you for giving us your time. Guest it is great to be here. We have been studying for quite a while. Party identification is the most basic political measure there is. Which party do you belong to. Which party do you lean toward. We have data going back to the 1990s so we can see how party id has shifted. Host we will get more into the details. There are so many factors that go into how a person identifies. Guest this is one of the most fundamental measures. It starts very young. How are you socialized . How do you grow up . What is your family like . What is their Party Affiliation . All of these are factors in Party Identification. Host the recent research in 2024, you asked people if they leaned democrat
Wifi enabled listings so students from low income families can get the tools they need to get ready for anything. Announcer comcast supports span as a public service, along with these other television providers, giving you a front row seat to democracy. Joining us now is Caroll Doherty of the Pew Research Center here to talk about new research in the Party Identification. Thank you for giving us your time. Guest it is great to be here. We have been studying for quite a while. Party identification is the most basic political measure there is. Which party do you belong to. Which party do you lean toward. We have data going back to the 1990s so we can see how party id has shifted. Host we will get more into the details. There are so many factors that go into how a person identifies. Guest this is one of the most fundamental measures. It starts very young. How are you socialized . How do you grow up . What is your family like . What is their Party Affiliation . All of these are factors in