Carla Fracci's troupe in Rome is famous for its resurrections of long-forgotten ballets, such as Romantic-era gems (Gitana, Figlia del Danubio, Catarina) or rare Balanchines (Le Bal and La Chatte...the latter headed to NYC this fall). They are preparing another major revival -- the 1st well-known Soviet ballet 'hit' on the 1920s, Gliere's 3-act Red Poppy. The Rome Opera's web promises that the new staging will be based on and include surviving segments of well-known Russian versions, such as those by Lavrovsky, Tikhomirov, etc. Nikolai Androsov is the modern-day choreographer pulling it all together, working very much as did Alexei Ratmansky with the 2008 staging of another great Soviet ballet, Flames of Paris -- that is, mixing new choreography with well-known chunks of the original version. Luckily, films of the most important dances remain, e.g., Sailor's Dance, Dream of Tao Hoa, Boston Waltz, etc.
http://operaroma.it/stagione/cartellone_20..._papavero_rosso
Sounds like a potential winner.
