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Ninette de Valois

 
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia: Dame Ninette de Valois

(born June 6, 1898, Blessington, Co. Wicklow, Ire. — died March 8, 2001, London, Eng.) Irish-born British dancer, choreographer, and founder of the precursor to the Royal Ballet. She appeared in revues and pantomimes from 1914 before joining the Ballets Russes as a soloist in 1923. She founded the Academy of Choreographic Art in 1926 to teach movement to actors and cofounded the Camargo Society in 1930. In 1931 she founded and directed the Vic-Wells Ballet; this became the Sadler's Wells Ballet (1946 – 56) and later the Royal Ballet (1956), which she directed until 1963. She choreographed many ballets in the 1930s and '40s and remained active with the company until 1971.

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Biography: Ninette de Valois
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In the space of a quarter-century, Ninette de Valois (1898 - 2001) made Britain's Royal Ballet into one of the leading dance companies in the world. Starting it virtually from scratch in the late 1920s, de Valois worked tirelessly to make what was originally the Vic-Sadler's Wells Opera Ballet a first-class performance troupe, and then secured its future by convincing England's cultural guardians to grant it a charter so that it became the Royal Ballet. For her achievement she has been termed the mother of modern British ballet, and a tribute to her on the occasion of her hundredth birthday by "New Statesman" writer John Percival called her "a phenomenon: a woman who changed the whole history of her art."

Mimicked the Famous Pavlova

De Valois was the stage name she adopted as a young dancer. She was born Edris Stannus on June 6, 1898, outside an Irish village near Blessingham in County Wicklow. Her father was an officer in the British Army, and at the time of her birth the family was living on an estate called Baltiboys. It was there that the wife of one of the estate's herdsmen taught the very shy child an Irish jig, which she then aptly demonstrated at a party before returning to the folds of her caretaker's skirts, where she preferred to hide. In 1905, the Stannus family returned to England and settled in a seaside town called Walmer. She started taking dance classes as a child, though she suffered a bout of polio that occasionally made practice sessions painful, and took up the study of ballet in earnest at the age of 13 with a teacher named Lila Field. By 1912, she was dancing in Field's "Wonder Children" troupe, and during their performances she often demonstrated her imitation of famed Russian ballerina Anna Pavlova and the "Dying Swan," Pavlova's signature role.

De Valois received her schooling at home, with a governess. Keenly interested in ballet as a career, she lacked role models at the time, for there was no genuine English ballet tradition during this era. London performances were generally the province of touring French or Russian companies. Instead de Valois served as a dancer in pantomime performances at London's Lyceum Theatre during the World War I years, and began teaching classes as well. Around 1917, she decided to change her name to something that sounded more French, in the hopes that it might boost her career, and her mother devised "Ninette de Valois" based on the family's French genealogical ties.

Danced at Covent Garden

It was in the corps de ballet in London opera performances that de Valois first made her mark upon the stage. She became a principal dancer for the Beecham Opera and Ballet Company, and danced with the companies of Leonide Massine and Lydia Lopokova during this era. In 1919, she was the principal dancer during the opera season at London's Covent Garden. Still training rigorously under renowned ballet masters, a new door opened for her when she began working with Enrico Cecchetti, who was affiliated with the renowned Ballets Russes de Serge Diaghilev. The Ballets Russes was credited with revolutionizing classical dance by merging the grace for which French ballet was known with a Russian verve. In 1923, she joined the Diaghilev company herself, and the two years she spent with it would change her career. Based in Paris but with a strong Russian tradition, the Ballets Russes performed works written specifically for it by composer Igor Stravinsky, and Pablo Picasso created some of its stunning sets.

In Britain, there was little of the same exciting cultural atmosphere compared to Paris, and de Valois was determined to change this. To start with, she established a small ballet school, called the Academy of Choregraphic Art, in London in 1926, in order to train new dancers for a future dance company. She then began to place her students in opera productions, or in the professional theater, which gave them performance training. Teaming with Lilian Baylis, the founder of the prestigious Old Vic theater, de Valois found additional training ground for her dancers in the opera ballets staged at that venue. A company was formed, the Vic-Sadler's Wells Opera Ballet, which gave its first full programme in 1930. Her company's home became the Sadler Wells theater, also in London.

Cultivated New Talent

De Valois worked with her company choreographer, Frederick Ashton, to create new ballet works, while also staging several Russian classics that were a first for Britain. Initially, she danced in some of the productions herself, but by her mid-thirties she ceded the stage to a new generation of talent. These dancers included Alicia Markova from the Ballet Russes, who became the prima ballerina of de Valois's company in the 1930s, and British star Margot Fonteyn. De Valois's last stage role was in Ashton's A Wedding Bouquet of 1937; the lengthy list of duties she had taken on in addition to running her company by then were added to her new role as a wife after her 1935 marriage to a physician, Arthur Connell.

De Valois's company's reputation grew during the 1930s, and made its debut at Covent Garden with Sleeping Beauty in 1939. The careers of dancers like Fonteyn and her longtime stage partner, Robert Helpmann, were enhanced immeasurably by the prominent positions they held in de Valois's company, and new generation of composers and choreographers also benefited from these first acclaimed years. For a number of years, de Valois shared choreography duties with others, and programs such as The Rake's Progress ballet, based on the work of eighteenth-century British painter William Hogarth, were considered her best work. Her ambitions, however, were for her company: she hoped that it would eventually become the true national ballet of England, an institution reflecting the country's culture, history, and spirit through the presentation of classic ballet works for the stage but also serving as a testing ground for important new creations.

Became Royal Ballet

The years of World War II served as the tragic impetus that helped make de Valois's dream a reality. During the difficult war years, her company made extensive tours of England, which served to boost wartime morale and gave the company an excellent reputation outside of London. In 1946, her Sadler's Wells Ballet was chosen to reopen the Royal Opera House at Covent Garden with Sleeping Beauty, which featured Fonteyn. De Valois once recalled in an interview the overpowering smell of mothballs coming from the audience that night, since Londoners' formal clothes had been so long in storage. The British royal family was there that night as well, and the Sleeping Beauty engagement was sold out for weeks.

After that unparalleled success, de Valois's company was made the resident ballet corps of the Royal Opera House, which in essence meant it was formally recognized as Britain's leading ballet company. The recognition launched an entirely new era for the company, and for de Valois as well: suddenly, she was forced to deal with an array of Royal Opera House executives and governing committees, but the formidable director seemed to possess the necessary skills. She led her company over an illustrious decade, and then in 1956 managed to secure a Royal Charter, which formally created the Royal Ballet from her company. The charter, perhaps more importantly, also assured it a permanent future past her own leadership tenure. Wishing to maintain ties to the Sadler's Wells theater, she established a second company there, which after several permutations became the Birmingham Royal Ballet. The Sadler's Wells Ballet School, meanwhile, became the Royal Ballet School, and she would serve as its life governor for the remainder of her life.

De Valois's legacy in British dance is an important one. She was the first to present a full evening of ballet, which had not been done before in London, by working with noted theater impresario Sol Hurok. Her students went on to impressive careers themselves, and the influence of her company eventually reached all the way to the National Ballet of Canada and Australian Ballet. She also traveled to Turkey in the late 1940s, at the invitation of its government, to establish the Turkish School of Ballet and Turkish State Ballet in Ankara. Dance aficionados also credit her mettle with indirectly altering the direction of New York City's American Ballet Theatre. Her eye for talent remained sharp, and she was the first to give recent Russian émigré Rudolf Nureyev his first job outside of the Soviet Union in 1962. "Without her, the history of English ballet this century would be very different - a more cautious, insular, hidebound thing, lacking in the injections of Russian physicality and French avant-gardisme that made it cosmopolitan and endlessly refreshed with outside influences," declared John Walsh in London's Independent newspaper.

Celebrated Milestone Birthday

A woman in possession of such mettle inevitably cultivated a few detractors, and de Valois was known to be imperious and exceedingly blunt with her students at times. Clive Barnes, writing for Dance magazine, assessed her post-performance career by granting that "as a choreographer, few of de Valois's works will survive . . . but as a builder of companies she was in a class of her own. She was ruthless and charismatic, and like many pragmatic leaders, she probably destroyed as many careers as she made."

De Valois retired as Royal Ballet director in 1963, and was succeeded in the post by Ashton. A number of subsequent leaders seemed to lack their distinct vision, and in later years, the company she had founded failed to maintain the pristine reputation and critical plaudits it had once enjoyed under her direction. Nevertheless, even in her advanced years de Valois continued to attend dance performances and remain enthusiastic about the world of ballet. "I'm not one of those people who say, 'They don't know how to dance these days,' " she told Walsh in the Independent, "because they do know, and they're much better than we ever were. I hate these oldies who say there aren't any good dancers now."

De Valois was made a dame by Queen Elizabeth II, and also received the rarer Order of Merit and Companion of Honour designations. Always known as "Madam" by her former students and colleagues, she was honored on her hundredth birthday with a BBC television tribute, Call Me Madam. She authored three books, Invitation to the Ballet in 1937; Come Dance with Me, which appeared twenty years later; and Step by Step, published in 1977. She died on March 8, 2001, at her home in London. Her Times of London obituary asserted that she "leaves, for future British dancers, the prospect of a career that did not exist when she was young; for audiences, two great companies that would not have existed without her; and for her country, a national asset beyond price."

Books

International Dictionary of Ballet, 2 vols., St. James Press, 1993.

Periodicals

Dance, February 1994; February 1997; August 1998; June 2001; July 2003.

Economist, March 17, 2001.

Financial Times, November 8, 2003.

Independent (London, England), June 6, 1998.

New Statesman, June 5, 1998.

Times (London, England), May 27, 1998; March 9, 2001.

Dictionary of Dance: (Dame) Ninette de Valois
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Valois, (Dame) Ninette de (orig. Edris Stannus;b Baltiboys, Ireland, 6 June 1898, d London, 8 Mar. 2001). Irish-born British dancer, choreographer, teacher, and ballet director. Founder of the Royal Ballet and one of the great figures in 20th-century dance. She studied with Lila Field, Édouard Espinosa and Cecchetti in London, later with Nikolai Legat. She made her professional debut in 1914, dancing in Jack and the Beanstalk, a pantomime at the Lyceum Theatre in London. Revues and pantomimes provided her early employment; then in 1919 she appeared in the Covent Garden Opera season and in 1922 appeared as a principal dancer with the Massine-Lopokova company in their London season. She joined Diaghilev's Ballets Russes in 1923 and stayed with the company until 1925, returning as a guest artist the following year. With Diaghilev she created roles in Nijinska's Les Biches, Les Fâcheux, and Le Train bleu and in Balanchine's Le Rossignol. She also danced with Anton Dolin's company (1926) and with the Covent Garden Opera (1928). In 1926 she opened her own school in London, the Academy of Choreographic (sic) Art, and began her association with Lilian Baylis at the Old Vic, a relationship that provided the foundation for what would become the Royal Ballet. De Valois gave movement classes to the actors at Baylis's theatre and her dancers appeared in the opera productions. She also worked as a dancer and choreographer for the Abbey Theatre in Dublin (where she collaborated with W. B. Yeats) and the Festival Theatre in Cambridge. She made her first ballet at the Old Vic, Les Petits Riens, in 1928. In 1931 she closed her school and moved over to the official school linked to the newly re-opened Sadler's Wells Theatre; it eventually became the Royal Ballet School. She now had a company based at the Wells, the Vic-Wells Ballet, which gave regular performances. It later became the Sadler's Wells Ballet which, in 1946, moved to the Royal Opera House. In 1956 the company became the Royal Ballet. She also founded a second company in 1946, first called the Sadler's Wells Opera Ballet, then Sadler's Wells Theatre Ballet, Sadler's Wells Royal Ballet and, in 1990, Birmingham Royal Ballet. She continued to dance until 1937, and created roles in Ashton's Regatta (1931), Les Rendezvous (1933), and A Wedding Bouquet (1937). She choreographed for the Camargo Society and Ballet Club (later Ballet Rambert). She created many ballets for her own company, including The Rake's Progress, Checkmate, and The Prospect Before Us. She also brought the Petipa-Ivanov classics into the repertoire, thus helping the great Russian Ballet heritage to become established in the West. Under her direction, both the Royal Ballet and the Royal Ballet School became internationally recognized as leading dance institutions. She was artistic director of the Royal Ballet until she retired in 1963, although she continued to work at the Royal Ballet School. She was founder and director of the Turkish School of Ballet in Ankara (1948) and the Turkish State Ballet (1956). A list of her ballets includes Danse sacrée et danse profane (mus. Debussy, Camargo Society, 1930), La Création du monde (mus. Milhaud, Camargo Society, 1931), Job (mus. Vaughan Williams, Camargo Society, 1931), The Jackdaw and the Pigeons (mus. Bradford, Vic-Wells, 1931), Narcissus and Echo (mus. Bliss, Vic-Wells, 1932), The Origin of Design (mus. Handel, arr. Beecham, Camargo Society, 1932), The Wise and Foolish Virgins (mus. Atterberg, Vic-Wells, 1933), Bar aux Folies-Bergère (mus. Chabrier, Ballet Rambert, 1934), The Haunted Ballroom (mus. G. Toye, Vic-Wells, 1934), La Jarre (mus. Casella, Vic-Wells, 1934), The Rake's Progress (mus. G. Gordon, Vic-Wells, 1935), The Gods Go a-Begging (mus. Handel, arr. Beecham, Vic-Wells, 1936), Barabau (mus. Rieti, Vic-Wells, 1936), Prometheus (mus. Beethoven, Vic-Wells, 1936), Checkmate (mus. Bliss, Vic-Wells, 1937), Le Roi nu (mus. Françaix, Vic-Wells, 1938), The Prospect Before Us (mus. Boyce, arr. Lambert, Vic-Wells, 1940), Orpheus and Eurydice (mus. Gluck, Sadler's Wells Ballet, 1941), Promenade (mus. Haydn, arr. Evans, Jacob, Sadler's Wells Ballet, 1943), Don Quixote (mus. R. Gerhard, Sadler's Wells Ballet, 1950), At the Fountainhead (mus. Tuzun, Turkish State Ballet, 1964), Sinfonietta (mus. Kodalli, Turkish State Ballet, 1966), and The Wedding of Harlequin (with Ashton, Ballet for All, 1973). Author of Invitation to the Ballet (1937), Come Dance With Me (1957), and Step by Step (1977). Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire 1951. Chevalier de la Légion d'honneur, 1950. Erasmus Prize, 1974. Companion of Honour, 1983. Order of Merit, 1992.

Irish Literature Companion: Dame Ninette De Valois
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De Valois, Dame Ninette [orig. Edris Stannis] (1898-2001), dancer and choreographer; born in Blessington, Co. Wicklow, she was a soloist with Sergei Diaghilev's Ballets Russes in 1923. She established a ballet school at the Abbey Theatre in 1927, with Yeats's encouragement; and mounted ballet programmes from 1928 to 1933, as well as dancing in Yeats's plays. In 1931 she founded the Vic-Wells Ballet Company in London and the Sadler's Wells School. The company eventually became the Royal Ballet in 1956 and she was made a Dame of the British Empire in 1957.

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Dame Ninette de Valois
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Valois, Dame Ninette de (văl'), 1898-2001, English ballet director, b. County Wicklow, Ireland. She was originally named Edris Stannus. After attaining distinction as a dancer, most notably in Diaghilev's Ballets Russes (1923-26), she became choreographic director of both the Abbey Theatre and the Old Vic Theatre in 1926, the year she founded the Academy of Choreographic Art. With dancers from the school de Valois established (1931) the Vic-Wells Ballet (later the Sadler's Wells Ballet and the Royal Ballet), which she directed for more than three decades (1931-63). She also founded a sister company, which became the Birmingham Royal Ballet. She was a noted choreographer as well; her best-known works date from the 1930s and include Job (1931), The Rake's Progress (1935), and Checkmate (1937). De Valois did much to increase the prestige of ballet in England, and in 1951 she was made a Dame of the British Empire. She retired in 1964 and was named Life Governor of the Royal Ballet. She wrote Invitation to the Ballet (1937) and Come Dance with Me (1957).
Wikipedia: Ninette de Valois
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Ninette de Valois

Ninette de Valois at age 16
Born Edris Stannus
6 June 1898(1898-06-06)
Baltiboys, County Wicklow, Ireland
Died 8 March 2001 (aged 102)
Barnes, London, England
Occupation Choreographer, dancer and company director
Years active 1900s-1990s
Spouse(s) Arthur Connell

Dame Ninette de Valois, OM, CH, DBE (6 June 1898 – 8 March 2001) was an Irish dancer, teacher, choreographer and director of classical ballet. She danced professionally with Serge Diaghilev's Ballets Russes, later settling in England. She is most noted for establishing The Royal Ballet, one of the foremost ballet companies of the 20th century and one of the leading ballet companies in the world today. She also established the Birmingham Royal Ballet and Royal Ballet School. As one of the creators of modern British ballet, she is widely regarded as one of the most influential personalities in ballet history.

Contents

Biography

Born Edris Stannus in Baltyboys House, Blessington County Wicklow, Ireland, she was the second daughter of Lillith Graydon-Smith, a British army office and renowned glassmaker. Stannus began ballet lessons in 1908 at age ten while living with her grandmother in Kent, and became noticed throughout England because of her graceful movements. She legally changed her name to Ninette de Valois in 1921. She danced with Serge Diaghilev's Ballet Russes. She retired in 1926 at age 28 in order to promote ballet throughout Europe.

In 1926, de Valois established the Academy of Choreographic Art, a dance school for girls. Her intention was to form a repertory ballet company and school and in 1928, she was engaged by Lilian Baylis to stage dance performances at both the Old Vic and Sadler's Wells theatres in London. She established the Vic-Wells Ballet and Vic-Wells Ballet School in studios at Sadler's Wells theatre and these would become the predecessors of today's Royal Ballet, Birmingham Royal Ballet and Royal Ballet School. The Royal Ballet continues to be recognised as Britain's leading classical ballet company and one of the foremost companies of the 20th century and is based at the Royal Opera House in Covent Garden, London.

Along with Marie Rambert, de Valois is recognised as one of the key visionaries of British ballet. She modelled her company after the Imperial Ballet of Russia, and emphasized dancing a mix of classical ballets and contemporary works. She cultivated talents slowly, and invited Sir Frederick Ashton to be the chief choreographer at her company. Eventually, her company became one of the starriest in the world, with dancers like Margot Fonteyn, Robert Helpmann, Moira Shearer, Beryl Grey, and Michael Somes. In 1949 the Sadler Wells Ballet was a sensation when they toured the United States. Margot Fonteyn instantly became an international celebrity. During early 1950s, with the help of de Valois, the first ballet school of Turkish State Opera and Ballet in Istanbul was established.

De Valois was not one to rest on laurels, though. She made sure that her company had a constant supply of talent, and in later years the company had such stars as Svetlana Beriosova, Antoinette Sibley, Nadia Nerina, Lynn Seymour, and, most sensationally, Rudolf Nureyev. de Valois also invited choreographers like Sir Kenneth MacMillan and George Balanchine to work with her company. She formally retired from the Royal Ballet in 1963, but her presence continued to loom large in the company.

She was known as very stern and formidable, and perhaps for that reason someone gave her the nickname 'Madam.' The nickname stuck, and from then on even in formal articles and interviews she was called 'Madam.' She would good-naturedly sign 'Madam' in correspondence.

In 1935, she married Arthur Connell, an Irish surgeon who died in 1986 but they had no children.[1] Ninette de Valois was the cousin of author Wei Wu Wei.

She continued to make public appearances until her death at age 102 in London.

Choreography

  • Job (1931)
  • Bar aux Folies-Bergère (1934)
  • The Rake's Progress (1935)
  • As You Like It (1936)
  • Checkmate (1937)
  • Every Goose Can
  • The Gods Go A-Begging
  • Barabau
  • The Prospect Before Us (1940)
  • Keloğlan (1950)
  • At the Fountain Head (1963)
  • Çeşmebaşı (1965)
  • Sinfonietta (1966)

Honours and awards

De Valois was made a chevalier of the Légion d'honneur of France in 1950, and was made Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 1951, a Companion of Honour in 1982. In 1992 she was made a member of the Order of Merit.

Awards
Honoris causa degrees

Bibliography

  • De Valois, Ninette (1937). Invitation to the Ballet. London: Bodley Head. OCLC 59460167. 
  • De Valois, Ninette (1957). Come Dance with Me; A Memoir, 1898-1956. London: H. Hamilton. OCLC 4063947. 
  • De Valois, Ninette (1977). Step by Step: The Formation of an Establishment. London: W. H. Allen. ISBN 0491015984. 

See also

References

  1. ^ Staff writers (8 March 2001). "Royal Ballet founder dies". BBC News. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/1209339.stm. Retrieved 2009-02-16. 

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