• Recipient of the Prize of the Mayor of Moscow (2022)
• Prize-winner at the 3rd International Forum Ballet 21st Century (Krasnoyarsk, 2014; 1st prize)
• Recipient of the Soul of Dance prize in the category “Rising Star” (Ballet magazine, 2012)
• Prize-winner at the IV Yuri Grigorovich International Competition Young Ballet of the World (Sochi, 2012; 1st prize)
• Prize-winner at the VII Serge Lifar International Ballet Competition (Donetsk, 2011; 2nd prize)
• Prize-winner at the 1st All-Russian Forum Ballet 21st Century (Krasnoyarsk, 2010; 1st prize)
• Winner of the All-Russian Competition Young Talents of Russia (Moscow, 2010)
• Prize-winner at the Arabesque Ballet Competition in memory of Ekaterina Maximova, awarded the special prize of the Japanese–Russian duo Yukari Saito and Nikolai Fyodorov (Perm, 2010)
• Prize-winner at the XI International Competition of Ballet Dancers and Choreographers (Moscow, 2009; 3rd prize)
• Prize-winner at the 1st All-Russian Galina Ulanova Ballet Competition (Krasnoyarsk, 2008; 2nd prize)
Born in Norilsk, Dmitry Sobolevsky graduated in 2010 from Krasnoyarsk Choreographic College. During 2010–2012 he was a leading soloist of the Krasnoyarsk State Opera and Ballet Theatre, and in 2012–2023 – a principal dancer with the Moscow State Stanislavsky and Nemirovich-Danchenko Music Theatre.
His repertoire includes:
Giselle (Count Albrecht) – choreography by Jean Coralli, Jules Perrot and Marius Petipa;
La Bayadère (Solor) – choreography by Marius Petipa, revised by Natalia Makarova;
Swan Lake (Prince Siegfried) – production by Vladimir Burmeister;
Don Quixote (Basilio) – productions by Alexei Chichinadze and Rudolf Nureyev;
The Sleeping Beauty (Prince Désiré) – choreography by Marius Petipa;
La Fille mal gardée (Colas) – choreography by Jean Dauberval and Alexander Gorsky, revised by Mark Peretokin;
The Nutcracker (Nutcracker Prince) – choreography by Vasili Vainonen;
Esmeralda (Phoebus) and The Snow Maiden (Mizgir) – choreography by Vladimir Burmeister;
Rhapsody – choreography by Frederick Ashton;
Suite en blanc – choreography by Serge Lifar;
Manon (Lescaut) – choreography by Kenneth MacMillan;
Coppélia (Frantz) – choreography by Roland Petit;
In the Night and Other Dances – choreography by Jerome Robbins;
La Sylphide (James) – choreography by Pierre Lacotte;
The Stone Flower (Danila) – choreography by Yuri Grigorovich;
Tatiana (Onegin) – choreography by John Neumeier;
Cinderella (Prince) – choreography by Oleg Vinogradov;
Phantom Ball – choreography by Dmitry Bryantsev;
Wings of Wax and Petite Mort – choreography by Jiří Kylián;
The Nutcracker (Nutcracker Prince) – choreography by Yuri Possokhov;
Anna Karenina (Count Alexei Vronsky) – choreography by Christian Spuck;
Aureole – choreography by Paul Taylor;
Tulle – choreography by Alexander Ekman;
Minus 16 – choreography by Ohad Naharin;
Kaash – choreography by Akram Khan.