Dance history is being made at the Musée Grévin thanks to Guillaume Diop, the first Black Étoile dancer of the Paris Opera Ballet, who unveiled his wax statue on Monday, September 22, 2025, at the famous wax museum. With this tribute, the Musée Grévin immortalizes his appointment to the highest rank within the prestigious company.
It was indeed in the costume of Albrecht – the lovesick suitor of the tragic Giselle – that, just over two years ago, the young dancer was promoted to Étoile. Alongside Dorothée Gilbert, who performed as Giselle, he wrote a new chapter in the history of the Paris Opera Ballet.
Yet at the time of this consecration, Guillaume Diop was still only a Sujet – in other words, a junior soloist promoted from the corps de ballet. Like several illustrious Étoiles before him, such as Hugo Marchand and Dorothée Gilbert, he failed his first promotion competition to the rank of Coryphée (a confirmed member of the corps de ballet). In June 2021, three years after joining the company, he landed his first true solo role while still just a Quadrille substitute in the corps de ballet. That year, he performed Romeo for the first time opposite Étoile Léonore Baulac in Rudolf Nureyev’s ballet set to Prokofiev’s sublime score.
It was partly due to a series of injuries suffered by other dancers during the 2022–2023 season – notably during performances of Swan Lake – that Guillaume Diop emerged as a potential future Étoile. When the company embarked on its tour in South Korea, he was chosen to perform Albrecht alongside the celebrated Dorothée Gilbert, nearly twenty years his senior. It was then that he was officially named Étoile of the Paris Opera Ballet.
Today, he reprises this iconic role in the Paris Opera Ballet’s 2025–2026 season, on October 18 and 28, 2025. In addition, he will appear in the contemporary dance program Contrastes, running from December 1 to 31, 2025.
Pour découvrir Guillaume Diop dans Giselle, cliquez ici !
Et pour le voir dans le programme Contrastes, c’est ici !
Et pour en savoir plus sur l’actualité de l’Opéra de Paris, cliquez ici !
Guillaume Diop – c – Virginie Ribaut / Musée Grévin













