Cesare Pugni (Italian pronunciation: ['t?e?zare 'pu??i, 't???-]; Russian: ?????? ????, romanized: Cezar' Puni; 31 May 1802 in Genoa – 26 January [O.S.
14 January] 1870) was an Italian composer of ballet music, a pianist and a violinist.
In his early career he composed operas, symphonies, and various other forms of orchestral music.
Pugni is most noted for the ballets he composed for Her Majesty's Theatre in London (1843–1850), and for the Imperial Theatres in St.
Petersburg, Russia (1850–1870).
The majority of his ballet music was composed for the works of the ballet master Jules Perrot, who mounted nearly every one of his ballets to scores by Pugni.
In 1850 Perrot departed London for Russia, having accepted the position of Premier maître de ballet of the St.
Petersburg Imperial Theatres at the behest of Carlotta Grisi, who was engaged as Prima ballerina.
Cesare Pugni followed Perrot and Grisi to Russia, and remained in the imperial capital even after Grisi's departure in 1853 and Perrot's departure in 1858.
He composed myriad incidental dances such as divertissements and variations, many of which were added to countless other works.
Of Pugni's original scores for the ballet, he is best known today for Ondine, ou La Naïade, (also known as La Naïade et le pêcheur) (1843); La Esmeralda (1844); Catarina, ou La Fille du Bandit (1846); The Pharaoh's Daughter (1862); and The Little Humpbacked Horse (1864).