Ralph Fiennes and Liv Tyler in Onegin (1999)
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Ralph Fiennes and Liv Tyler in Onegin (1999)

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Costume designed by John Bright and Chloe Obolensky for Liv Tyler in Onegin (1999)
From Kerry Taylor Auctions
Ludmila Pagliero, Mathieu Ganio
Onegin
photo El Beweging
- Happy birthday to Ralph Fiennes, goddamnit. 🎉 Here, take this, I think I’ve said more than enough with this.
(This is majority of his roles put in chronological order. And then also some of my favest performances of his also put in chronological order)
John Cranko's Onegin, The Royal Ballet Photo: Andrej Uspenski

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Vadim Muntagirov and Fumi Kaneko in Onegin (Royal Ballet 2025)
- photos by Andrej Uspenski
A Romanov Eugene Onegin: Ella, Nicholas, and a Staged Memory
In the winter of 1890, St. Petersburg’s aristocratic circles witnessed a curious experiment in art and society: a staged performance of Pushkin’s Eugene Onegin mounted not in a professional theatre, but within the intimate, glittering world of the Russian court. Among the performers was the young Grand Duchess Elizabeth Feodorovna — “Ella” - who had only recently joined the Romanov family through her marriage to Grand Duke Sergei Alexandrovich. Opposite her stood the Tsarevich, Nicholas Alexandrovich, heir to the throne and future Tsar Nicholas II.
The production was organized by Grand Duke Konstantin Konstantinovich (“KR”), poet, playwright, and diarist, whose entries allow us a glimpse behind the curtain.
Konstantin Konstantinovich describes in his diary the lively preparations, the excitement of the young performers, and the blending of family intimacy with cultural ambition:
“The rehearsal has brought much joy. All of us are carried away by Pushkin’s words, and there is something touching in the sight of the Tsarevich himself speaking the verses with simplicity and sincerity. Ella, in her part, is radiant — her quiet dignity and purity give her Tatiana a natural grace. One forgets that this is merely an amateur performance.”
Pushkin’s verses, deeply familiar to every educated Russian, were given fresh life when spoken by members of the imperial family themselves. For the court audience, this was no mere entertainment: it was a symbolic blending of national literature, dynastic ritual, and personal sentiment.
Ralph Fiennes as Evgeny Onegin (Onegin, 1999)