Powered By Blogger

22 junio 2010

SOFIA GUMEROVA . Biography


BIOGRAPHY

Born in Moscow.
Graduated from the Vaganova Academy of Russian Ballet and joined the Mariinsky theatre in 1995.

Her repertoire includes:
La Sylphide (Sylphide);
Giselle (Giselle, Monna);
Le Corsaire (Medora, Pas de trois of Odalisques);
La Bayadère (Nikia, Gamzatti´s Grand pas, Pas de trois from the scene The Kingdom of Shadows);
The Sleeping Beauty (Princess Aurora, fairy Candide, Princess Florina);
Swan Lake (Odette-Odile, Big swans, Two swans);
Raimonda (Raimonda, Clemans, Hentiette, Grand pas Hungriest);
Grand pas from "Paquita" (variation);
Don Quixote (Kitri, Street dancer, Lady Dryad);
The Fountain of Bakhchisarai (Young Women);
Pas de quatre;
Pas de six from Esmeralde;
The Swan;
Chopiniana (Prelude, Mazurka);
The Legend of Love (Mekhmeneh Bahnu);
Apollo (Terpsichore, Polyhimnia, Calliope);
Jewels (Emeralds, Rubies),
Theme and Variations;
Symphony in C (I part);
Serenade (soloist);
Prodigal Son (the Siren);
Scotch Symphony;
The Four Temperaments;
La Valse;
Goya-Divertissement (Princess Alba);
Cinderella (Female Dance), Le Poème de l´Extase, chpreography by Alexei Ratmansky;
Dolce, con fuoco;
In the middle somewhat elevated;
Reverence.

Has toured with the Mariinsky Theatre to Germany

19 junio 2010

ULIANA LOPATKINA . Biography


BIOGRAPHY

Uliana Lopatkina was born in Kerch, Ukraine, in 1973. She graduated from Vaganova Ballet Academy (class of Prof. Natalia Dudinskaya). Joined Mariinsky Theatre in 1991. Became Principal in 1995.

Repertoire includes:
Swan Lake (Odette-Odile), Giselle (Myrtha, Giselle), Sleeping Beauty (La Fee de Lilac), La Bayadere (Nikia), Le Corsaire (Medora), "Paquita" Grand Pas (Soloist), Pas de Quatre (Marie Taglioni), Raymonda (Raymonda, Clemance), "Dying Swan", Anna Karenina (Kitty), The Fountain of Bakhchisarai (Zarema), Sheherazade (Zobeide), Symphony in C (IIth movement), Serenade, Jewels (Diamonds), In the Night (IIIth movement), Le Jeune Homme et La Mort, Goya-Divertissement (Death), Le Baiser de la Fee (Fee), Poeme de l`Extase, The Sounds of Empty Pages (by Neumeier). She has toured with the Kirov Ballet throughout the world.

Awards:
Honored Artist of Russia (2000).
First prizewinner at the Academy's 1991 Competition.
Recipient of a number of international awards including the 1998 Evening standard Award for "Outstanding achievement in ballet".
Russian State Award (1999).
Laureate of BALTIKA prize (2001).

RUTA JEZERSKYTE . Biography


BIOGRAPHY

Ruta Jezerskyte was born in Kaunas, Lithuania in 1977.

She studied at the Vilnius Ballet School, Lithuania, then in the Boston Center for Dance, USA and Koln International Sommerakademie Des Danzes, Germany.

After the graduation, in 1995 she became a soloist with the Vilnius Opera and Ballet Theatre, Lithuania. In 1999 — coryph?e and in 2000 grands sujet with Het Nationale Ballet. Her repertoire included soloist roles in Cinderella (Ashton), La Sylphyde (version by Bjorn), Swan Lake (version by Van Dantzig).

She danced also in ballets of Hans van Manen, Krzystof Pastor, Toer van Schajk, Peter Wright.
R?ta Jezerskyte often participates in guest gala-performances: Gala with the Bolshoi Ballet, Moscow, Gala with the Vilnius Opera and Ballet Theatre, Lithuania.

Ruta Jezerskyte is a laureate of some awards: Prix de Lausanne, Switzerland (1994),
National award of St. Cristopher (1998), Silver medal International Ballet Competition, Jakson, USA (1998), Bronze medal International and Modern Dance Competition, Nagoya, Japan (1999).

In January 2002 R?ta Jezerskyte received a prominent Dutch Alexandra Radius prize for her atistic achivements.

NINA GERSHMAN - The Israel Ballet . Biography


BIOGRAPHY

Nina Gershman is a graduate of The Choreographic Institute in Krasnoyarsk, Russia (Vaganova Syllabus). From 1987 to 1992 she was the 1st soloist at the Krasnoyarsk Ballet and Opera Theatre. In 1992 Nina immigrated to Israel with her family and joined The Israel Ballet. From 1992 to 2008, her repertoire includes Cinderella (Yampolsky / Prokoffiev) – Cinderella, Giselle (Perrot / Adam) – Giselle, Nutcracker (Yampolsky / Tchaikovsky) Sugarplum Fairy and Grand Pas de Deux, Don Quixote (Petipa / Minkus) – Street Dancer, Balanchine Ballets – Principal dancer in – Serenade, Symphony in C, Square Dance, La Valse and The Four Temperaments. Roles created by Nina Gershman: Gurrelieder (Yampolsky / Schoenberg) – Tove, Medea (Yampolsky / Luigi Nono) – The Princess, Ni-Na (Yampolsky / Saint-Saens).

TAMARA TOUMANOVA . Biography


BIOGRAPHY

Tamara Toumanova (Tumanishvili) was born in 1919 by Georgian parents (on a railway train between Siberia and Shanghai escaping Russia!). She studied in Paris with Olga Preobrajenska. She was engaged for De Basil's Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo by George Balanchine in 1932 and was one of the three famous "baby ballerinas". She was a guest artist with the American Ballet Theatre 1944-45, the Paris Opéra Ballet 1947 and 1950, De Cuevas Company 1949, La Scala 1951 and 1952, London Festival Ballet 1952 and 1954. She danced all the classical roles.

TAMARA KARSAVINA . Biography


BIOGRAPHY

Tamara Karsavina was born in St Petersburg in 1885. She studied with the Imperial Ballet School for Cecchetti, Gerdt and Johansson, and also with the Caterina Beretta in Milan. She graduated into the Mariinsky Theatre in 1902 as a soloist and was promoted to ballerina in 1909. She stayed with the Mariinsky until 1918, while she was also a leading ballerina of Diaghilev's Ballets Russes from its beginning in 1909 until 1922. Between 1909 and 1914 (paired with Nijinsky until 1913) she created many famous roles like in Fokine's Les Sylphides (first version 1908), Cleopatre (1909), Carnaval (1910), Firebird (1910), Le Spectre de la Rose (1911), Narcisse (1911), Petrushka (1911), Le Dieu bleu (1912), Thamar (1912), Papillon (1912), Daphnis et Chloe (1912) and Le Coq d'or (1914), Nijinsky's Jeux (1913), Massine's Le Tricorne (1919) and Pulcinella (1920).

Married a British diplomat in 1917 and moved to London. She became a major influence in British ballet as vice-president of the Royal Academy of Dancing, and as advisor to the Royal Ballet stagings of Diaghilev ballets as well as The Nutcracker, Giseele and La Fille mal gardée. She also coached Margot Fonteyn in The Firebird and Giselle. Her autobiography Theatre Street was published in 1930.

SVETLANA BERIOSOVA . Biography


BIOGRAPHY

Svetlana Beriosova was born in Kaunas, Lithuania 1932. Her family emigrated to USA 1940 where she was trained by her father who was a ballet dancer. Joined Grand Ballet de Monte Carlo 1947. Moved to England and joined the Sadler's Wells Ballet Company in 1950. She was appointed prima ballerina in 1955.

Repertoire includes: Trumpet Concert, The Prince of the Pagodas, Antigone, Perséphone, Ondine, Baiser de la fée, Swan Lake, The Sleeping Beauty, Giselle, Coppelia, Sylvia and Cinderella.

Retired from stage 1975.

18 junio 2010

TANAQUIL LE CLERCQ . Biography


BIOGRAPHY

Tanaquil Le Clercq was born in Paris 1929. She studied at the School of American Ballet. Principal dancer of the New York City Ballet. She was George Balanchine's fifth wife. In 1956 she became permanently paralyzed by polio while touring in Europe.

Repertoire includes:
The Four Temperaments, Symphonie Concertante, Symphony in C, Elegie, Bourrée Fantasque, Jones Beach, La Valse, Caracole, The Nutcracker, Divertimento No. 15 (all by Balanchine).

She died December 31, 2000, in New York City.

17 junio 2010

SUE JIN KANG . Biography


BIOGRAPHY

Sue Jin Kang was born in 1967 in Korea. After initial ballet lessons in her native country, she studied with Marika Besobrasova at the Académie de Danse classique in Monte Carlo. In 1985, she won the Prix de Lausanne. In 1986, she became a member of the Stuttgart Ballet, where she was appointed Soloist in 1994 and Principal Dancer in 1997.

Repertoire includes:
Juliet in Romeo and Juliet, Tatiana in Onegin, Katherina in The Taming of the Shrew, the Diva in Poème de l´extase, the Lady in The Lady and the Fool (John Cranko), Marguerite Gautier in The Lady of the Camellias (John Neumeier), Pamina in The Magic Flute (Maurice Béjart), Aurora in Sleeping Beauty, Giselle in Giselle (Sir Peter Wright), Esmeralda in The Hunchback of Notre Dame (Taneo Ishida), the title role in Mata Hari (Renato Zanella), Cinderella in Cinderella, Titania in A Midsummer Night's Dream (Jean Christophe Blavier) and Queen Isabella in Edward II (David Bintley). In addition, she has danced leading roles in ballets by Jirí Kylián (Nuages, Symphony in D, Return to a Strange Land and Forgotten Land), George Balanchine (Chaconne, Tchaikovsky Pas de Deux, The Four Temperaments, Stravinsky Violin Concerto and Symphony in C), Hans van Manen (Grosse Fuge and In and Out) and William Forsythe (Love Songs and The Vertiginous Thrill of Exactitude), John Cranko's Bolchoi, Legende and Autumn as well as in John Neumeier's Now and Then, Glen Tetley's Voluntaries, Nacho Duato's Rassemblement, Christophe Maillot's Vers un Pays Sage, Sir Kenneth MacMillan's Song of the Earth, Renato Zanella's La Chambre, Uwe Scholz' Bartók Piano Concerto No. 1 and Jerome Robbins' The Concert.

Awards:
Prix de Lausanne 1985.
Prix Benois de la Danse 1999.

15 junio 2010

SUZANNE FARRELL . Biography


BIOGRAPHY

Suzanne Farrell was born in Cincinatti 1945. She joined New York City Ballet 1961. Left NYCB 1970 and danced 4 years with the Ballet du XXe Siècle in Brussels, Belgium. In 1975 she rejoined the New York City Ballet and began another period of creative activity with Balanchine. Her technical virtuosity, spontaneity and exceptional musical sensitivity made her the perfect Balanchine ballerina.

Repertoire includes:
Serenade, Don Quixote, Movements for Piano and Orchestra, Meditation, Tzigane, Vienna Waltzes, Mozartiana, Schumann’s Davidsbundlertanze.

After her reconciliation with Balanchine in 1975 she stayed with the New York City Ballet until she retired from performing in 1989.

SUSANNE GRINDER . Biography


BIOGRAPHY

Susanne Grinder was born in Denmark in 1981. She trained at the Royal Danish Theatre Ballet School. In 1988 she became an apprentice, in 2000 she was assigned to the Corps de Ballet of the Royal Danish Ballet, and during the Bournonville Festival in 2005 she was promoted to soloist. She is furthermore an upper-secondary college graduate in the subjects of Danish, Philosophy, Social Sciences and Visual Arts.

Susanne Grinder has performed in most of the repertoire ballets of the Royal Danish Ballet. Among her roles are Juliet in Romeo and Juliet, title role in The Little Mermaid, Eleonora in The Kermesse in Bruges, the Russian girl in Serenade, the Shepardess in The Nutcracker, and the Girl in Turandot’s Dream. She has also performed the Pas de trois in The King’s Volunteers on Amager, the Pas de Sept in A Folk Tale, the Pas de cinq in Abdallah, the Pas de Six in Napoli, and the Pas de Six (and role as Fairy) in The Sleeping Beauty. She has also appeared in Violin Concerto, Jazz, Swan Lake, La Sylphide, Romeo and Juliet, Giselle, Fearful Symmetries, Symphony in C, Etudes, Vers un Pays Sage and Digital Secrets.

Awards and honours:
The Bartholin Grant in 2001 and the Albert Gaulbier Grant in 2004.

13 junio 2010

IRMA NIORADZE - Mariinsky Ballet Theater


SVETLANA ZAKHAROVA and ANDREI UVAROV


DIANA VISHNEVA and IGOR KOLB


LUCIA LACARRA - Munich Ballet


ULIANA LOPATKINA - Kirov Ballet


LESIA NOVIKOVA - Mariinsky Ballet Theater


HEE SEO - American Ballet Theater


IRINA DVOROVENKO - Australian Ballet Theater


KARA HANRETTY - Ballet Arizona

SOFIA FEDOROVA . Biography



BIOGRAPHY

Sofia Fedorova was born in Moscow 1879. She graduated from the Moscow Theatre School (pupil of V. Tikhomirov) into the Bolshoi Ballet in 1899. A striking dark beauty, called "Fedorova II" since her sister Olga graduated earlier. Her strength was an outstanding theatrical personality rather than her technique. Had her first great success replacing Ekaterina Geltser in Don Quixote in 1900. Her most memorable role was her Esmeralda in Gorsky's Gudule's Daughter. Other fine roles where Mercedes and Street Dancer in Don Quixote, the Gypsy dance in The Humpbacked Horse, Khita in Gorsky's Fille du Pharaon, snake charmer in Salammbo and Lise in La Fille Mal Gardée. In 1913 Gorsky tailored a Giselle for her, omitting some technical difficulties, which she danced with almost nightmarish realism. But it was too much for her and nervous strain caused her to refuse the classical parts. Later she ceased to attend classes and rehearsals, and was forced to leave the Moscow stage in 1917. She left Moscow 1919 for St Petersburg and after her husbands death in 1922 she settled in Paris. She danced with Diaghilev's Ballets Russes in 1909-1913 and 1928, triumphing in Fokine's Polovtsian Dances from Prince Igor (1909) and Scheherazade (1910). Also danced with Anna Pavlova's company in 1925 and 1926.
After a total nervous collapse in 1930 she lived in obscurity.

12 junio 2010

ROSELLA HIGHTOWER . Biography


BIOGRAPHY

Rosella Hightower was born in 1920 in Ardmore, OK, USA. She studied with Dorothy Perkins in Kansas City. Danced with Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo 1938-41, American Ballet Theatre 1941-5, Massine's Ballet Russe Highlights Co. 1945-46, Original Ballet Russe 1945-46. In 1947 she joined the de Cuevas Ballet. As it's prima ballerina she toured the world and was one of the most popular dancers in Europe. She had an enormous repertory, including many creations for Taras, Bournonville's La Sylphide and Sleeping Beauty. She danced the Black Swan Pas de deux with Rudolf Nureyev in his London debut in 1961.

Since 1962 she has directed the Centre de Danse Classique in Cannes which attracts dancers from all over the world and where many of her famous collegues give guest classes.

SARA VAN PATTEN . Biography


BIOGRAPHY
Sarah Van Patten was born and raised in Boston, Massachusetts USA, where at the age of six, she began taking dance classes with Barbara Mullen, a local teacher. She trained at Boston Ballet and began performing at age 8 in their annual performance of The Nutcracker. By age 10, Sarah was studying with Jacqueline Cronsberg and performing classical ballet repertoire with the Massachusetts Youth Ballet. She spent her summers studying with Jean-Pierre Bonnefeux, Violette Verdy, and Patricia McBride at The Chautauqua Institution.

In 2000 at age 15, she joined the Royal Danish Ballet as an apprentice where John Neumeier cast her as Juliet in his Romeo and Juliet. Soon after, she was promoted to the rank of corps dancer, and originated a soloist role in Peter Martin's Halleluiah Junction. Sarah joined San Francisco Ballet as a soloist dancer in 2002 and was promoted to the rank of principal dancer in 2007.

Sarah’s featured roles while at San Francisco Ballet include: Romeo and Juliet, The Four Temperaments, Apollo, Divertimento No. 15, Nutcracker (Sugarplum Fairy, Tea), Nanna’s Lied, Rodeo, Dybbuk, Afternoon of a Faun, Serenade, and Carousel (a Dance).

ROBERTA MARQUEZ . Biography




BIOGRAPHY

Roberta Marquez was born in Brazil and trained at the Maria Olenewa State Dance School, then in 1994 joined the Municipal Theatre Ballet, Rio de Janeiro, becoming a principal in 2002. Her awards include Best Dancer of the Year in the Rio de Janeiro Dance Awards 2001, and Silver Medal and Best Couple in the Moscow International Dance Competition 2000. Roberta Marquez joined the Royal Ballet as principal in 2004.

Her repertory includes Aurora in Makarova’s and Lormeau’s The Sleeping Beauty, Odette/Odile in Makarova’s Swan Lake, Nikiya in Makarova’s La Bayadère, Swanilda in Martinez’s Coppélia, Juliet in Vassiliev’s Romeo and Juliet, Katerina in Cranko’s Taming of the Shrew, Chloé in Skibine’s Daphnis et Chloé, Sugar Plum Fairy in Achcar’s The Nutcracker and Floresta Amazônica, Balanchine’s Serenade, Lifar’s Suite in Blanc and Peter Wright’s production of Giselle.

ROSE GAD . Biography


BIOGRAPHY

Rose Gad was born in Denmark in 1968. She studied at the Ballet School of the Royal Danish Theatre. Joined the Royal Danish Ballet in 1985 and was appointed principal in 1991. In 1997 she left for two years with the Hamburg Ballet before returning to the RDB in Copenhagen.

Reportoire includes;
Title roles in La Sylphide, Manon and Caroline Mathilde, Hilda in A Folk Tale, Eleonora in The Kermesse in Bruges, Odette/Odile in Swan Lake, Juliet in Romeo and Juliet and Aurora in Sleeping Beauty, and further solo roles in Partita, Tchaikovsky Pas de Deux, Symphoy and Transformation, L’après-midi d’un faun, and Mahler’s 5th Symphony.

04 junio 2010

SHOKO NAKAMURA . Biography


BIOGRAPHY

Shoko Nakamura was born in Fukuoka, Japan. At the early age of seven she began her ballet Training at the Chikako Tanaka school in Fukuoka. At age sixteen, after competing and winning the first prize in the Lausanne International Ballet Competition she received a scholarship to be a part of the John Cranko School in Stuttgart, from which she graduated with honors two years later.
Shoko was offered a contract in the Stuttgart Ballet where she performed for two years until she was asked to join The Vienna State Opera. In Vienna she quickly rose to ranks until she became a Principal figure.
Vladimir Malakhov, after seeing her perform in Vienna, offered her to join The Berlin Staatsballett where she has been a Principal Dancer since the year 2006.

PEARL ARGYLE . Biography


BIOGRAPHY

Pearl Argyle was born in Johannesburg, South Africa, in 1910. She studied with Rambert and Legat and made her debut in 1926 with Rambert's company. Then became ballerina with the Camargo Society. Principal dancer with Vic-Wells Ballet 1935-38. She was an early muse to Ashton and created roles in his Facade and Lady of Shalott (1931). She was not a strong technician but noted for her outstanding beauty, especially her exquisite hands and arms.

In 1938 she married a film director and moved to America, where performed in several Broadway musicals. She died sadly when only 36 years old.

PATRICIA BARKER . Biography




BIOGRAPHY

Patricia Barker was born in Richland, Washington, USA. She trained with Lynne Williams-Mullins prior to studying at Pacific Northwest Ballet School on scholarship. She joined Pacific Northwest Ballet as an apprentice in 1981, became a full company member in 1982 and was promoted to soloist in 1984. She became principal in 1986. She has performed extensively throughout Europe, Asia, Australia and North America.

Her reperoire includes Rubies, Agon, Concerto Barocco and Violin Concerto, Odette/Odile in Swan Lake, Alice in Glen Tetley's Alice in Wonderland, Titania in George Balanchine's A Midsummer Night's Dream, Theme and Variations, Cinderella (which was created for her by Kent Stowell) and Juliet in Stowell's The Tragedy of Romeo and Juliet.

LOUISE NADEAU. Biography



BIOGRAPHY

Nadeau, long a favorite and a principal dancer since 1992, two years after she joined the company, chose her own program Sunday night at McCaw Hall. It was a delicious potpourri of odds and ends, a short survey of some of the ballets Nadeau liked the most in her career at PNB. Inevitably there were ballets of George Balanchine such as “Serenade,” “La Valse,” “Emeralds” and “Rubies” from “Jewels,” “Chaconne,” “La Sonnambula” and “A Midsummer Night’s Dream.” Almost all were staged by Russell. It is little wonder that Joe Norman, a patron of PNB and member of the University of Washington faculty, chose to establish a fund in Nadeau’s honor that would aid PNB in keeping Balanchine’s ballets a central part of its repertory.
But there were plenty of other excerpts to savor. Jerome Robbins’ “West Side Story Suite,” new to the company this season, was revived so that Nadeau who was scheduled to do the role of Anita in the spring but did not because of a sprained ankle, got her chance. The other Robbins’ was a pas de deux taken from his “In the Night.” William Forsythe’s 33-year old “Urlicht,” a deeply romantic pas de deux, set to the last movement of Mahler’s “Resurrection” Symphony, gave Nadeau an opportunity to dance with Olivier Wevers. The final moment was the fourth act of “Swan Lake,” choreographed by Stowell, with a nod to the ballet’s creators, Marius Petipa and Lev Ivanov.
The program ran nearly two and one-half hours. Nadeau did not dance in every work. Her contributions were in “La Valse,” “West Side Story,” “Urlicht,” and “Swan Lake.” The “Dream” excerpt was a videotape of her and Wevers’ doing the central pas de deux in the second act, filmed by BBC in London in 1999 for which the company received rave notices from the normally prickly British press. Larger than life on screen, the two conveyed the richness of Balanchine’s choreography. Every nuance and detail were in full view of the audience. What a clever idea.
So much has been said about Nadeau that anything now seems almost like an anti-climax. Yet, there she was instilling all the mystery and sense of doom in the pas de deux from “La Valse.” Too often the black ambience gets lost in the glamor of the setting — music and dance –but not with Nadeau. Her Anita in “West Side Story” reaffirms her comic talent, which always seems a surprise give the limpid serenity of her lyricism. With “Urlicht,” which finds Forsythe in a very dreamy mood, one sees Nadeau as beautiful as ever, her long line seamless, her body a single instrument, her sense of phrasing controlled but not rigid. I hope the pas de deux, staged by Otto Neubert, a ballet master with PNB, remains in the repertory.
Nadeau was not the only dancer on stage. Half the ballets were performed without her, but somehow her aura permeated the stage. The opening of “Serenade” possessed the enigmatic beauty the ballet deserves. “Chaconne” was more abstract beauty, the sort in which Nadeau specialized over her fruitful career. She danced leading roles in “Rubies” and “Emeralds” but not Sunday. Then it was Mara Vinson in “Emeralds” and Rachel Foster in “Emeralds.” Also in that cast was the extraordinary Ariana Lallone and Jonathan Porretta. So too “Sonnambula,” in which Nadeau made her memorable debut two years ago as the sleep-walking heroine. On Sunday the pas de deux was danced by Miranda Weese and Lucien Postlewaite. Weese is also retiring from the company. She came to PNB not long ago with some injuries. She danced only periodically in her short tenure here but with great effect. One will regret not seeing her next season. Also leaving the company is Jodie Thomas and Anton Pankevitch. Kaori Nakamura and Batkhurel Bold danced effortlessly in “In the Night” as did Carrie Imler and Stanko Milov in “Chaconne.” It should be noted that nine dancers from Nadeau’s VIII class at PNB School danced in “Chaconne.” They were a credit to their teacher.
It is typical of Nadeau’s sense of generosity that when pianist Dianne Chilgren was taking her bow after “In the Night,” Nadeau quietly came on stage, costumed for “Swan Lake,” which was to follow, and carefully leaned into the pit to give her a presentation bouquet in appreciation to the longtime pianist.
Women were the focus of the evening. Only Porretta got a star turn, in “Rubies.” But partner the men did, and well, and they should be mentioned if not already: Jeffrey Stanton in “La Valse” and Karel Cruz” in “Swan Lake.”
So to “Swan Lake,” It was bittersweet. Unlike many other choreographers, Stowell makes something of this act, and Nadeau took full advantage of what she was offered. There was the full glory of her artistry but also the realization that it would be the last time we would see her perform live.

01 junio 2010

PAMELA MAY. Biography


BIOGRAPHY - (1917 - 2005)

Pamela May was born on Trinidad in 1917. She studied with Freda Grant in London, Olga Preobrajenska and Lubov Egorova in Paris, and De Valois at the Sadler's Wells Ballet School from 1933. Made her debut at the Vic-Wells Ballet in 1934 and quickly became and leading dancer. Promoted to ballerina in 1952. A versatile dancer that danced all the leading classical roles. She was also a great Lilac Fairy and Myrtha. Created roles in de Valois's Checkmate (1937), The Prospect before us (1940), Orpheus and Eurodice (1941) and Don Quixote (1950), in Ashton's Les Patinateurs (1937), A Wedding Bouquet (1937), Horoscope (1938), Dante Sonata (1940), The Wanderer (1941), Symphonic Variations (1946) and Cinderella (1948).

She taught at the Royal Ballet School 1954-1977.

OLGA ZABOTKINA. Biography





BIOGRAPHY

Olga Zabotkina was born 1936 in Leningrad. She studied at the Leningrad Choreographic School (class of N. A. Kamkova and V. K. Ivanova). She graduated and joined the Kirov Ballet (now Mariinsky) in 1953 and danced with them until 1978. She was an extremely beautiful character dancer. She can be seen on video in the role of the Queen in the filmed Sleeping Beauty from 1964, in which Alla Sizova dances Aurora. Among her repertoire are Mercedes and Street Dancer in Don Quixote and character roles in Spartacus, Gayane, Legend of Love, Swan Lake, Raymonda, Stone Flower, Laurencia and Egyptian Nights.

Awards:
Honoured Artist of the RSFSR in 1960

OLGA SPESSIVTSEVA. Biography


BIOGRAPHY

Olga Spessivtzeva was born in Rostov, Russia, in 1895. She was a pupil of Sokolova, Fokine and Vaganova and graduated in 1913 and became soloist with the Mariinsky ballet in 1916. She was an exquisite romantic dancer with perfect technique, ideally suited for Giselle and Odette-Odile.

In 1916 she toured USA with Diaghilev, replacing Tamara Karsavina, and danced with Nijinsky. In 1921 she danced Aurora in Diaghilev's famous The Sleeping Princess in London. From 1924 to 1932 she danced mainly at the Paris Opéra Ballet. In 1932 she made another historical guest appearance in London dancing Giselle with Anton Dolin. She also toured in Buenos Aires and Australia.

Moved to USA in 1939 and after showing signs of depression she suffered a nervous breakdown in 1943 and was placed in a mental hospital. Not until 20 years later was she discharged with great help from Anton Dolin and Felia Doubrovska and settled in the Tolstoy Farm outside New York. She died peacefully there 1991.
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...