
-
Germany fall 2-0 to Slovakia in World Cup qualifying opener
-
Cape Verde islanders win to stay on course for World Cup debut
-
Breetzke stars as South Africa edge England by five runs for ODI series win
-
Germany fall 2-0 to Slovakia in 2026 World Cup qualifying opener
-
Flamengo's Henrique out for 12 games for alleged match-fixing
-
Cash on hand to clinch point for Poland against Netherlands
-
Spain thrash Bulgaria in opening 2026 World Cup qualifier
-
Argentine Congress overturns Milei veto on disability funds
-
Japanese star Oda chasing career Slam at US Open
-
Djokovic aims to 'mess up' Sinner-Alcaraz plans at US Open
-
Trump's Fed pick plans to keep White House job while at central bank
-
In face of US 'threat,' how does Venezuela's military stack up?
-
Israel military says controls 40 percent of Gaza City
-
Tennis icon Borg battling cancer says publicity for autobiography
-
Argentina charges Nazi's daughter for concealing decades-old art theft
-
Portugal releases first details of 16 killed in funicular crash
-
US sues power company over deadly Los Angeles wildfire
-
After change of club and Italy coach, fresh beginnings for Donnarumma
-
Levy makes shock decision to quit as Spurs chairman
-
UK court convicts asylum seeker of sexual assault
-
Fashion, cinema stars hail 'love affair' with Armani
-
France star Mbappe calls for players to get more time off
-
Trump's Fed governor pick vows to uphold central bank independence
-
Norris brushes off Dutch setback before Italian GP battle with Piastri
-
In-form Breetzke stars as South Africa post 330-8 against England
-
France says 26 countries commit to Ukraine deployment if peace agreed
-
White House quietly drops WTO, ILO from foreign aid cut list
-
Wales edge Kazakhstan to boost World Cup hopes
-
Ayuso sprints to Vuelta stage 12 victory as tensions ease
-
Could humans become immortal, as Putin was heard telling Xi?
-
Xi tells Kim North Korea's importance to China 'will not change'
-
France detains seven over new cryptocurrency kidnapping
-
Europe pledges postwar 'reassurance force' for Ukraine: Macron
-
Hollywood hails Armani, designer to the stars
-
RFK Jr defends health agency shake up, Democrats call for his ouster
-
Bike-loving Dutch weigh ban on fat bikes from cycle lanes
-
With restraint, Armani stitched billion-dollar fashion empire
-
France, Switzerland agree on Rhone, Lake Geneva water management
-
US trade gap widest in 4 months as imports surged ahead of tariffs
-
Portugal mourns 16 killed in Lisbon funicular crash
-
Alarm in Germany as 'dangerous' Maddie suspect set to walk
-
Italian fashion icon Giorgio Armani dead at 91
-
Pro-Palestinian protests rock Spain's Vuelta cycling race
-
Tourists and locals united in grief after Lisbon funicular crash
-
Comedy writer at centre of UK free-speech row in court on harassment charge
-
Europe leaders call Trump after Ukraine security guarantees summit
-
French museum hit by 9.5 mn euro porcelain heist
-
Berlusconi media group takes control of German broadcaster
-
European court faults France over sexual consent rules
-
Rain adds to misery of Afghan quake survivors

French ballet choreographer Lacotte dies aged 91
Pierre Lacotte, a French choreographer who as a young man helped ballet superstar Rudolf Nureyev defect from the Soviet Union, died aged 91 on Monday, his wife said.
"Our Pierre left us at 4:00 am," said his wife, retired principal dancer Ghislaine Thesmar.
"It's very sad. He still had so many projects and was writing a book."
The artist, known in his later years for his revival of 19th-century ballet productions, passed away in a clinic in the southern town of Seyne-sur-Mer after he suffered a cut that became sceptic, she said.
Born in the French capital in 1932, Lacotte became a star dancer at the Paris Opera Ballet aged just 19.
From the late 1950s, he worked as an independent dancer and choreographer.
In 1961, after becoming friends with Soviet-born ballet legend Nureyev while he was on tour in Paris, Lacotte was among those who helped the dancer escape KGB agents and seek asylum at the capital's Le Bourget airport, according to his account to a BBC documentary.
His role in the famous defection was also recounted in a 2018 biopic titled "The White Crow" directed by Britain's Ralph Fiennes.
After suffering an ankle injury, Lacotte increasingly turned his attention to the archives of the Paris Opera from 1968.
He devoted the rest of his career to bringing back to life forgotten 19th-century productions to the world's greatest stages.
They included "La Sylphide", the first ballet completely on pointe when it was originally produced in 1832.
Lacotte's last work in 2021 was a production of "The Red and the Black" based on the 1830 novel by French writer Stendhal. When it opened, he was 89 years old.
J.Fankhauser--BTB