
Fumi Kaneko
Training
- Jinushi Kaoru Ballet School, Osaka
Repertoire
- Princess Aurora
- Odette/Odile
- Juliet
- Giselle
- Manon
- Cinderella
- Kitri
Promotions
- 2012First Artist
- 2013Soloist
- 2018First Soloist
- 2021Principal
Awards
- 2008Gold Medal — Varna International Ballet Competition
- 2009Silver Medal — Moscow International Ballet Competition
- 2010Silver Medal — USA International Ballet Competition
- 2023Best Female Dancer — Critics' Circle National Dance Awards
Biography
Fumi Kaneko is currently listed by The Royal Ballet as a Principal. Fumi Kaneko is a Japanese Principal of The Royal Ballet and one of the company’s most admired recent success stories, with an artistic profile that combines prize-winning early training, steady internal promotion and a repertory that now spans the central ballerina canon. According to her Royal Ballet and Opera biography, Kaneko trained at the Jinushi Kaoru Ballet School in Osaka and established herself on the competition circuit before coming to London: she won the gold medal at the Varna International Ballet Competition in 2008 and silver medals at the Moscow International Ballet Competition in 2009 and the USA International Ballet Competition in 2010. In that same period she danced with the Jinushi Kaoru Ballet Company, already performing roles such as Clara and the Sugar Plum Fairy in The Nutcracker and Kitri in Don Quixote. She joined The Royal Ballet during the 2010/11 season, was promoted to First Artist in 2012, Soloist in 2013, First Soloist in 2018 and Principal in 2021.
The repertory attached to her official biography shows why that progression felt inevitable. Kaneko has danced major classical and dramatic roles including Manon, Cinderella, Odette/Odile, Juliet, Kitri, Tatiana, Sugar Plum Fairy, Aurora and the Lilac Fairy, as well as Hermione in The Winter’s Tale, Mama Elena in Like Water for Chocolate, and prominent roles in Apollo, Mayerling, Symphony in C and a long list of contemporary works. She has also created roles in Twinkle, The Dante Project and Prima, signalling that choreographers and directors see her not simply as an interpreter of canon but as a strong originating artist. Recent press adds a more personal frame to that official picture. A 2026 interview in The Times describes her move from Osaka to London at nineteen, her affection for the city, and her insistence on balancing the pressures of ballet with ordinary routines and home life. The same period of coverage has linked her to dream-role milestones such as Giselle, while the Royal Ballet biography records her 2023 Critics’ Circle National Dance Award for Best Female Dancer. Altogether, Kaneko’s career reflects a dancer who arrived through competition distinction, absorbed the Royal Ballet style from within, and has matured into a principal valued equally for classical line, dramatic gravity and contemporary fluency.
Repertoire
Performances
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Dancer
Marianela – Timeless
The Royal Ballet
Royal Opera House
Dancer
Marianela – Timeless
The Royal Ballet
Royal Opera House
Dancer
Marianela – Timeless
The Royal Ballet
Royal Opera House
Baroness Mary Vetsera
Mayerling
The Royal Ballet
Royal Opera House
Baroness Mary Vetsera
Mayerling
The Royal Ballet
Royal Opera House








