Jelko Yuresha (9 May 1937 – 8 July 2020) was a British ballet dancer and choreographer. He and his wife, ballerina Belinda Wright, toured internationally as "Ambassadors of Dance" for the United Kingdom from 1966 to 1977.
In 1959 he partnered with Wright for the first time at a Royal Command Performance before Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother.
He studied dance under Mile Jovanović in Zagreb and soon after was accepted by the International Ballet School in Kaštel Kambelovac near Split at the end of 1952 where he came under the tutelage of Ana Roje, the Prima Ballerina of the Croatian ballet. Yuresha advanced rapidly through the corps de ballet to soloist with prominent roles.
Yuresha made his professional debut as a first guest artist with the newly formed Irish Theatre Ballet in Dublin. At the 1959 Hastings Musical Festival held in the White Rock Theatre, Hastings, England, he performed his own choreography in a pas de deux. He was awarded first prize at the festival.
He joined London Festival Ballet (today English National Ballet) in 1959. On 23 June 1959, Yuresha partnered with Belinda Wright at a Royal Command Performance before Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother in Manchester. He danced in the BBC Eurovision production of Sleeping Beauty with the legendary prima ballerina Margot Fonteyn starring in the title role on 20 December 1959.
Yuresha joined the Royal Ballet in 1962, the same month as another Eastern European émigré, Rudolph Nureyev, joined the company. Wright followed Yuresha to the Royal Ballet, and the pair continued their dance partnership in dozens of performances. Yuresha danced with the Royal Ballet until 1965. He worked with some of the top choreographers and directors of the era, including Frederick Ashton, Vladimir Bourmeister, Serge Lifar, Leonid Massine, and Bronislava Nijinska.
Massine chose Yuresha for the lead role in Le Bal des Voleurs (Thieves' Carnival) at Covent Garden in 1963, where he partnered with Carla Fracci. Other important roles included Signor Midas in John Cranko's The Lady and the Fool, Albrecht in Giselle, and the prince in Sleeping Beauty, which he danced with Belinda Wright. In 1971 he worked with Nijinska in her production of Les Noces (The Wedding) the final time the remarkable ballet was personally directed by her.
The couple's daughter, Annabel Lisa Yuresha, was born in 1962 in London. She became an actress, appearing in the Doctor Who story
/ref> After a short maternity leave, Wright returned to the stage. On leaving the Royal Ballet, Yuresha and Wright toured England, Scotland, and Ireland as guest stars with the Harlequin Ballet 1965–1966.
In 1967 Yuresha and Wright were invited to represent England as "Ambassadors of Dance" of the British government. For ten years they traveled the world under the auspices of the British Council, performing in grand theaters of cosmopolitan cities and humble venues in developing nations. They introduced audiences large and small to the art of ballet. Their tours took them to Cuba, Cyprus, Greece, Israel, Mozambique, New Zealand, Venezuela, and many other cities. They toured across Europe, Southeast Asia, and Central America. In Barbados they danced in a school hall. In the high altitudes of Bogota and Mexico City they had to use oxygen masks in rehearsals and off stage. Yuresha and Wright presented dances from Swan Lake, Nutcracker, Sleeping Beauty, and Don Quixote. Dancing pas de deux and other forms of dance, the partners were often the first ballet dancers the audiences had ever seen in a live performance.
Yuresha restaged Variations for Four in 1999 for American Ballet Theatre at the Metropolitan Opera House in New York. He has since staged it at the Théâtre des Champs-Élysées in Paris, the K-ballet in Japan, and at schools in Europe and the United States. In October 2016 he choreographed the piece in Moscow at the Grand Kremlin Palace gala for the "Stars of Ballet in the 21st Century."
He continued part-time choreography work in 1984 with Cinderella to Prokofiev's music for the Icelandic National Ballet. His choreography career has taken him to Austria, China, and New Zealand where he has staged Pas de Sylph, La Peri, and Giselle. In 1994 Yuresha began work with National Ballet of Panama and makes frequent trips to Panama City. In 2013 he staged La Peri and worked on a production of Vasily Medvedev's Coppelia, as well as other works.
He served as a judge and advisor at the Valentina Kozlova International Ballet Competition (VKIBC). Competitions that Yuresha participated were held in Brussels, New York, and New Orleans.
As a writer Yuresha has contributed to Dancing Times, Ballet Today UK, The Dance Chronicle USA, London Evening Standard, and other publications.
The papers of Jelko Yuresha and Belinda Wright were donated to the Jerome Robbins Dance Division of the New York Public Library in 2007. This includes correspondence, programs, articles, costume and set designs, sketches, and photographs. His correspondence is also included in Chicago's Newberry Library Ann Barzel Papers. Yuresha has donated the couple's costumes and original artwork to the Zagreb Museum of Arts and Crafts.
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