Olga Preobrajenska

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Birth Date:
02.02.1871
Death date:
27.12.1962
Length of life:
91
Days since birth:
55966
Years since birth:
153
Days since death:
22400
Years since death:
61
Patronymic:
Iosif
Person's maiden name:
Ольга Иосифовна Преображенская
Extra names:
Olga Iosifovna Preobrajenska born Preobrazhenskaya
Categories:
Ballerina, ballet dancer
Nationality:
 russian
Cemetery:
St Geneviеve des Bois

Olga Iosifovna Preobrajenska born Preobrazhenskaya (Russian: Ольга Иосифовна Преображенская; 2 February [O.S. 21 January] 1871 – 27 December 1962) was a well-known Russian ballerina of the Russian Imperial Ballet and a noted ballet instructor.

Biography

She was born in Saint Petersburg as Olga Preobrazhenskaya (the final syllable of her surname was dropped to shorten her name for professional purposes, and she used the French transliteration, Preobrajenska).

Olga—born frail and with a crooked spine—was an unlikely prima ballerina. But she had dreams of being a dancer, and for years her parents tried unsuccessfully to get her enrolled in dance school. The selection committee repeatedly rejected her as a candidate. But after three years of trying, her parents succeeded and the 8-year-old Olga entered the Imperial Ballet School in 1879.

Despite her physical shortcomings, Preobrazhenskaya grew strong with training under master instructors Marius Petipa, Lev Ivanov and Anna Johansson. She developed excellent turnout and toe point, though her hunched back remained troublesome. She was also naturally expressive, bringing new life to a "hackneyed" repertoire, and exhibited the desired softness and grace of a dancer.

In addition to her love of dance, Preobrazhenskaya had musicality to go with it; she studied singing, performed opera arias, and played the piano masterfully.

In 1892, she made her debut in Kalkabrino, the first of her many performances in Petipa creations, which included Bluebeard (1896), Les Millions d'Arlequin (1900) and Les Saisons (1900). She also performed in Ivanov and Gerdt's Sylvia (1901), Nikolai and Sergei Legat's The Fairy Doll (1903), and Mikhail Fokin's The Night of Terpsichore and Chopiniana (1908).[2]

In 1895, she began to make international appearances, including in Paris, London and the United States. In 1900, she achieved the title of prima ballerina. One of her finest moments as a performer was dancing at Milan's famed La Scala theatre. She received critical acclaim and audience adoration, no small feat for a Russian ballerina trained in the Italian school.

She then began to pay more attention to ballet instruction; in 1914, she began her teaching career in Saint Petersburg, where her pupils included Alexandra Danilova. In 1921, following the Russian Revolution and the establishment of the Soviet Union, she emigrated and taught for two years in Milan, London, Buenos Aires and Berlin, before finally settling in with the large white émigré community in Paris.

For the next several decades, she was one of the most prominent ballet teachers in Paris, instructing Irina Baronova, Tamara Toumanova and Igor Youskevitch. She finally retired in 1960; she died two years later, aged 91. She was buried in the Russian Orthodox section of the Sainte-Geneviève-des-Bois Russian Cemetery.

Pupils

  • Alberto Alonso
  • Irina Baronova
  • Maurice Béjart
  • Alan Bergman
  • Alexandra Danilova
  • Adam Darius
  • Vladimir Dokoudovsky
  • André Eglevsky
  • Margot Fonteyn
  • Paul Grinwis
  • Maina Gielgud
  • Serge Golovine
  • Anna Kami
  • Hélène Kirsova
  • Lilian Lambert
  • Milorad Miskovitch
  • Yvonne Mounsey
  • Nadia Nerina
  • Nicholas Orloff
  • Georges Skibine
  • Wladimir Skouratoff
  • Daniel Spoerri
  • Ludmila Tcherina
  • Tamara Tchinarova
  • Nina Tikhonova
  • Tamara Toumanova
  • Georgette Tsinguirides
  • Nina Vyroubova
  • Margarete Wallmann
  • Belinda Wright
  • Igor Youskevitch
  • Nina Youskevitch
  • Vera Zorina
  • George Zoritch
  • Igor Scwezzoff

Source: wikipedia.org

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