Raymonda wants love and a career-SF Ballet gives her both
Tamara Rojo's Raymonda reframes the 19th-century heroine with feminist agency, replacing fatal romance with career ambitions and a Florence Nightingale–style nursing role.
Raymonda wants love and a career-SF Ballet gives her both
Tamara Rojo's Raymonda modernizes the 1898 heroine with a feminist lens, adding career ambition and removing fatal outcomes while preserving classical choreography.
Raymonda wants love and a career-SF Ballet gives her both
Raymonda is reimagined through a feminist lens, granting the heroine career agency, removing fatal consequences, and shifting focus from noble duty to personal choice.