Cinderella
A little magic goes a long way in this delightful fairytale. Set to Sergei Prokofiev’s passionate and expansive score, Ben Stevenson’s Cinderella has captivated audiences with its compelling portrayal of this cherished story.
Follow Cinderella as she overcomes loneliness, the abuses of her vain stepfamily, finds love, and makes her own dreams come true. Experience this classic story that blends humor, heart, and hope–one where wishes come true, courage triumphs over cruelty, and a lost slipper leads to a happily ever after.
Single tickets go on sale June 2026
Art-Reach ACCESS tickets will be available in two phases: the first release on July 14, 2026, and the second release will be on Thursday, January 21, 2027 (six weeks before the opening night). To participate in the ACCESS Program, patrons must pick up their tickets at the Academy of Music box office and present a valid ACCESS card. ACCESS tickets can be purchased online using a promo code, by calling the Box Office at 215.893.1999, or in person at the Box Office window.
Run time:
Approximately 2 hours and 6 minutes, including two intermissions
Performances By Date
* Student Matinee Performance
Ben Stevenson, a native of Portsmouth, England, received his dance training at the Arts and Educational School in London. He appeared with the Sadler’s Wells Royal Ballet and English National Ballet where, as a principal dancer, he performed lead roles in all the classics.
He has received numerous awards for his choreography, including three gold medals at the International Ballet Competitions. For his contributions to international dance, Mr. Stevenson was named an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (O.B.E.) by Queen Elizabeth II in December 1999.
In April 2000, he was presented with the Dance Magazine Award. Mr. Stevenson assumed the artistic directorship of Texas Ballet Theater in July 2003. Previously, he served as artistic director of Houston Ballet (1976-2003), elevating the company from a regional troupe to an internationally acclaimed ensemble.
Customarily stingy with praise, Igor Stravinsky pronounced his compatriot, Sergei Prokofiev, the greatest Russian composer of his day – after himself. Like Stravinsky, Prokofiev decided at a young age that he would devote his life to music. At eleven years old he worked with the eminent composer, Reinhold Glière. Only two years later, Prokofiev enrolled at the Saint Petersburg Conservatory, where he studied composition, piano, organ, and conducting.
Prokofiev’s professional life coincided with some of the most turbulent events in his country’s history. In 1913 he traveled to Paris and London, where he met Sergei Diaghilev, director of the Ballets Russes, under whose guidance the young composer wrote his first
ballet score, Chout (The Buffoon). After returning briefly to Russia, Prokofiev decided again to flee his war-torn homeland. He journeyed to San Francisco, then to Chicago (where he composed The Love for Three Oranges), and finally back to Paris. But because in the West it was economically necessary to spend more time concertizing than composing, Prokofiev made the important and fateful decision in 1936 to move his family permanently to Moscow, where the Soviet government promised him financial security. A few short years later, Prokofiev’s existence was anything but secure, when his music, along with that of Dmitri Shostakovich and Aram Khachaturian, was labelled “degenerate” by the Soviet government.
Relentlessly productive until the end of his life, Prokofiev composed seven symphonies, many concertos and sonatas, a great deal of film and incidental music, nine ballets (including Prodigal Son, Romeo and Juliet, and Cinderella) and a whopping fourteen operas.
– Beatrice Jona Affron