Tamara Karsavina (1885–1978)
Author of Theatre Street: The Reminiscences of Tamara Karsavina
About the Author
Image credit: George Grantham Bain Collection (Library of Congress)
Works by Tamara Karsavina
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 1885-03-10
- Date of death
- 1978-05-26
- Gender
- female
- Nationality
- Russian Empire
UK - Birthplace
- St. Petersburg, Russia
- Place of death
- Beaconsfield, Buckinghamshire, England
- Places of residence
- St. Petersburg, Russia
London, England, UK - Education
- Imperial Ballet School
- Occupations
- ballerina
ballet teacher
dancer
memoirist - Relationships
- Fokine, Michel (partner, choreographer)
Nijinsky, Vaslav (partner)
Fonteyn, Margot (pupil) - Organizations
- Russian Imperial Ballet
Ballets Russes - Short biography
- Tamara Karsavina was born in St. Petersburg, the daughter of Anna Iosifovna and Platon Konstantinovich Karsavin, a famous principal dancer and teacher with the Russian Imperial Ballet. He had been a pupil of Marius Petipa. Among his own students was Michel Fokine, a future partner and choreographer for his daughter. Although originally her father opposed her becoming a dancer, he relented and became her first teacher. In 1894, she was accepted at the Imperial Ballet School, studying with great masters such as Enrico Cecchetti. She graduated early and was accepted into the Imperial Ballet's corps de ballet. She rose swiftly through the ranks to become a leading ballerina, performing in the entire Petipa repertory, including the dual role of Odette-Odile in Swan Lake. She was acclaimed for her technical skill and the wit, intelligence, and emotion she showed in her dancing. In 1909, she began dancing in Paris regularly with Serge Diaghilev's Ballets Russes. She's best known today for the many famous roles she created in this company, including the title role in Fokine's ballet The Firebird, partnered by Vaslav Nijinsky. Karsavina left Russia permanently after the Russian Revolution and settled in Paris. In 1918, a year after divorcing her first husband, she remarried to the British diplomat Henry James Bruce, with whom she had a son. She helped found the British Royal Academy of Dancing in 1920. Karsavina retired in the 1920s but occasionally assisted with the revival of ballets in which she had danced and helped to create new ones. In 1959, she advised Sir Frederick Ashton on his important revival of La fille mal gardée for the Royal Ballet. She also coached Margot Fonteyn. Her writings included articles on technique for the journal Dancing Times and the text Classical Ballet: The Flow of Movement (1962). She published a memoir called Theatre Street (1930), named for the street where the Imperial Ballet School was located.
Members
Statistics
- Works
- 3
- Members
- 92
- Popularity
- #202,476
- Rating
- 4.0
- ISBNs
- 10