Dancers are back on the stage in West Yorkshire
The Northern Ballet have staged their first performance with a live audience since lockdown began.
Dancers in West Yorkshire are back on the stage - as the Northern Ballet has staged their first performance since lockdown rules came in earlier this year.
It's believed to be the first major dance show in the UK for a live paying audience since lockdown started.
The company, which is celebrating its 50th anniversary, performed excerpts from a number of ballet classics at the Leeds Playhouse on Wednesday night.
The Iconic Classics performance on Wednesday included dances from Don Quixote, Swan Lake, Le Corsaire and Giselle.
It was the Leeds-based company's first live performance in more than seven months, since the world premiere of choreographer in residence Kenneth Tindall's Geisha in March, and was thought to be the first in the UK in front of a paying audience.
David Nixon, artistic director of Northern Ballet, said:
"Although we are still far from business as usual, we are thrilled to be able to return to the stage and present a significant run of live performances.
"The year has been incredibly difficult for everyone and the arts is one industry that has been badly affected by Covid-19.
"It is vital for our dancers to be able to return to performing and we feel fortunate that they are now able to do so.
"We recognise the challenges faced by our industry in ensuring the safety of staff and patrons and the financial viability of holding performances with reduced socially distanced audiences.
"So many arts organisations are still fighting for their existence and countless people have been made redundant.
"We hope that successfully holding our performances will contribute to setting a path for the curtain to lift on more live performance across the UK.''
Earlier this month, the Royal Ballet performed a one-off live-streamed performance at the Royal Opera House in front of a specially invited small audience, including students and health workers.
The Northern Ballet, which was awarded £744,798 from the Government's Cultural Recovery Fund, will perform three different hour-long mixed programmes until October 24, followed by four full-length performances of David Nixon's Dangerous Liaisons between October 28 to 31.