Yuri Fyodorovich Fayer[a] (17 January [O.S. 5 January] 1890 – 3 August 1971, born Aria)[b][citation needed] was a Soviet conductor specializing in ballet. He was the chief ballet conductor at the Bolshoi Theatre from 1923 to 1963.[1]
Yuri Fayer was born in Kiev on 17 January 1890 (ns).[3] He was an early starter on the violin, giving his first concert at age 11, joining the Kiev Opera orchestra at 14, and entering the Moscow Conservatory at 16. He was unable to complete his studies, as he needed to work to make ends meet. He worked at the opera house in Riga and formed his own touring orchestra, before returning to Moscow in 1914 and re-entering the Conservatory, while also playing violin at the Bolshoi Theatre. His earlier experience as a conductor stood him in good stead, and before long he was asked to conduct at the Bolshoi, where he became an institution.[3] In 1923 he became chief ballet conductor at the Bolshoi, a post he retained for 40 years, until 1963.
Fayer met frequently with Sergei Prokofiev while he was writing his ballet Romeo and Juliet.[6] The composer's original conception was one in which the protagonists do not die. Yuri Fayer was one of those who convinced the composer to change the ending.[7] He led the Bolshoi Ballet's first staging of the ballet (it had had its world premiere in Czechoslovakia).
In November 1945, he directed the world premiere of Prokofiev's ballet Cinderella.[8]
In February 1954, eleven months after the composer's death, saw Fayer premiering Prokofiev's ballet The Tale of the Stone Flower.
Glière's The Red Poppy (1949; he worked with Glière during the writing of the work, and it was he who suggested using the folksong "Little Apple" in the final Russian Sailors Dance[6])