Plisetskaya, whose free-wheeling spirit defied the limits of Soviet-era art, died Saturday of a heart attack in Munich at the age of 89.
Despite her advanced years, the Russian ballet icon had brimmed with energy and her death plunged the Bolshoi Theatre, where she had planned to celebrate her 90th birthday in November, into shock.
"Plisetskaya is forever," said the Bolshoi where Plisetskaya danced well into her 60s. "She was, she is and she will be."
Tributes for Plisetskaya known for her huge eyes, long legs and a flame of red hair, poured in from ballet greats and dance lovers from all over the world.
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"The star of Maya Mikhailovna Plisetskaya, who became the embodiment of the very essence of ballet art for several generations of spectators from all over the world, its refined beauty and regalness, will now shine from heaven," Saint Petersburg's Mariinsky Theatre said in a statement.
"The epoch of Great Ballet Legends comes to an end," dancer Diana Vishneva wrote on Facebook.
Among her most celebrated performances were her roles in Carmen Suite, Anna Karenina, Sleeping Beauty and Bolero, a hymn to eroticism, which she danced at the age of 50.
Her performance of the Dying Swan, famed for the fluidity of her movements, particularly her arms, became her calling card.
The muse of Yves Saint Laurent and Pierre Cardin was born to a Jewish family in Moscow on November 20, 1925.
Those experiences left an indelible impression on the ballerina who was famous for her directness and criticism of Soviet-era brutality in her later years.
"For me personally it is worst than fascism," she said in a televised interview, referring to communism.