Authors: Lucy Moore
Spring 1913 saw the company back in Monaco and Nijinsky working again on
Jeux
, this time with his two ballerinas, Karsavina and Ludmila Schollar, who was to replace Bronia. Debussy had finally finished the music, after wrestling through the autumn to convey
âa rather risqué situation
! Even though in a ballet immorality passes through the ballerina's legs and ends in a pirouette.'
Although shouting, crying, gesticulating wildly and occasionally throwing furniture were accepted facts of Ballets Russes rehearsals (Michel Calvocoressi, finding that a group of Russian choristers was not responding to his direction, asked Walter Nouvel why;
âhe replied that
it was probably because I spoke to them politely'), Nijinsky was particularly bad at successfully communicating his ideas to the dancers. As ever with him, while the movements looked simple, they were difficult to execute and unlike the persuasive Fokine, Nijinsky never learned how to sweep dancers along with him in his conception of a ballet.
All her subtlety and intelligence could not help Karsavina understand what Nijinsky was trying to achieve if he could not explain it to her. She and Schollar were reluctant collaborators and Vaslav and Karsavina,
âthe best
of friends both onstage and off', argued frequently during rehearsals. âOnce I asked “What's next?” and Nijinsky said to me, “You should have known yourself a long time ago! I will not tell you!”'
Marie Rambert, a young teacher from the Dalcroze Institute with a
dance background (she had studied with Isadora Duncan and, briefly, with the Paris Opéra's Madame Rat), was employed by Diaghilev in late 1912 to help Nijinsky work with the dancers, principally on
Le Sacre du printemps
but also on
Jeux
, her communication skills (she was Polish and Nijinsky's first language was Polish, and she spoke excellent Russian and French) as important as her Dalcrozian training. She described an argument in which, when Karsavina asked Nijinsky to explain something to her, he exploded at her for having a
âballerina mentality
'.
âHow dare you insult that great artist?' Diaghilev said to him. âYou are nothing but a guttersnipe to her, go at once and beg her to forgive you.' Vaslav appeared with a huge bunch of flowers and peace was restored â but the subtext may have been more complicated than this. In a confused passage in his diary,
*
Nijinsky confessed that he had always admired Karsavina (and her beautiful body) but never dared approach her, because he
âfelt that
one could not court her' â for her honesty, as he put it, and because she was married. Even though it was a loveless marriage, her virtue was well known to be unassailable â another reason I suspect the idealistic Nijinsky would have been attracted to her.
When they quarrelled, Vaslav was unhappy because he sensed Diaghilev trying to influence Karsavina against him, having noticed that secretly he âwas courting her ⦠I wept bitterly because I loved Karsavina as a woman'. By this stage Nijinsky and Karsavina had worked closely together for five years. In a rare group photograph taken in Monte Carlo in April 1911 after a lunch party with Stravinsky, Diaghilev and some others at the Riviera Palace Hotel, they are standing so close together that his head is under her wide-brimmed hat. They look relaxed and
happy, at ease with one another, almost flirtatious. Although Karsavina did not dance in
Faune
, I see her as the Nymph the Faun desires but doesn't â can't â pursue. When he remembered working on
Jeux
, Vaslav described longing â perhaps for Karsavina â making him so weak he
âcould not compose
' it. âIn that ballet you can see three young people feeling lust.'
He was also feeling harried: racing to complete
Le Sacre du printemps
at the same time meant that he ânever finished'
Jeux
.
Sacre
was the great focus of 1913 and
Jeux
was just one of its victims. The ballet was still incomplete three days before its premiere and Nijinsky was exhausted and
âblank
' in the rehearsal rooms until Grigoriev suggested a run-through, âin the hope of stimulating his invention. This luckily produced the desired effect,' remembered Grigoriev. Typically, he thought Nijinsky was âbaffled by Debussy's score'.
For all the strains on their relationship and the distance between them, Diaghilev was still in thrall to Nijinsky's magic. Marie Rambert described sitting next to Diaghilev as they watched Nijinsky rehearse that spring. Diaghilev was mesmerised, almost unaware of her presence. Under his breath she heard him exclaim,
âWhat beauty
!' and âIsn't he at his most perfect in this?' as Vaslav went through each of his roles.
Jeux
premiered in Paris in May at the grand opening of Gabriel Astruc's modern new theatre, the Théâtre des Champs-Elysées. The set was a large grey-green garden, an open space â not intimate enough, Bronia thought, for Nijinsky's subtle
pas de trois
in which so much is implied or implicit. Bakst's costume designs were rejected at the last minute â for some reason he had planned to have Vaslav in a red wig and unflattering long shorts â so instead he wore a white version of his practice clothes while Jeanne Paquin designed the girls' white tennis dresses. Again, the dancers barely touched; again the theme of male innocence and female knowledge was repeated. This
âsecond
instalment of Nijinsky's erotic autobiography [revealed] no less urgently than
Faune
, the power of desire, the ambiguity of sexual identity, and his aversion to intercourse itself'.
Debussy walked out during thin applause (and some snide laughter),
later raging against
âMonsieur Dalcroze
⦠one of music's worst enemies' and the âyoung savage' Nijinsky. Although he was willing to admit the ballet
âhad some
good choreographic ideas in it', and that âif he had had more time in which to work on it, Nijinsky might well have made something of it', Grigoriev found
Jeux
âhelpless and immature'. Pierre Monteux was even more brutal; he thought
Jeux
asinine.
The reviewers were underwhelmed too, criticising
Jeux
's slightness, the contemporary dress and the strange quality of the movements.
âEverything in the choreography
was new â free movements and positions of the body applied to classical ballet technique' â but it was not especially successful. Audiences were so accustomed to seeing Nijinsky as something otherworldly, unreal â an animal, a puppet, a bird, an Indian deity, a flower, even a slave; roles that may have dehumanised and emasculated him but somehow lifted him out of the sphere of ordinary life â that perhaps they could not get used to seeing him as something close to themselves, simply a young man of their own time; or perhaps without taking a leap into another world he could not achieve the transformation they had come to expect of him.
Nijinsky was conscious of its weaknesses and touchingly grateful for any support he received. One night, soon after
Jeux
's opening, the artist Valentine Gross encountered Nijinsky backstage after performing
Spectre
.
âHe was like a crumpled rose
in pain, and there was no one near him. I was so touched that I left him alone and said nothing. Then he saw me and sprang up like a child taken by surprise and came smiling toward me. As he stood beside me in his leotard sewn with damp purplish petals, he seemed a kind of St Sebastian, flayed alive and bleeding from innumerable wounds. In a halting but quite accurate French he began to tell me how pleased he was with some pastels I had made of
Jeux
and to thank me for the article I had written to go with them.'
In fairness to Nijinsky, as Richard Buckle would put it, watching the first performances of
Jeux
must have been as strange a sensation as tasting
âJapanese food
for the first time'. Though its choreography has been seen as Nijinsky's least effective work,
Jeux
's importance lies in its place as the first contemporary ballet and the forerunner of neoclassicism,
associating Nijinsky irredeemably with modernism. The choreographer John Neumeier saw
Jeux
as a visual version of Gertrude Stein's
âRose is a rose
is a rose is a rose' â with Nijinsky saying âI am here, I am here, I am here'.
Jeux
's modernist style was in line with other interests they were pursuing at the time. Vaslav and Diaghilev had met Marinetti and the Futurists in Italy two years earlier, when they were rehearsing
Petrushka
, and in the first plan for
Jeux
, sent to Debussy, a Futurist-inspired dirigible crashed in the background to bring the games of love to a close. They were also fascinated by the ultra-modern, atonal music of the iconoclastic composer Arnold Schoenberg, hoping in early 1913 that he would provide a score for them.
In December 1912, the poet and librettist Hugo von Hofmannsthal wrote to Richard Strauss about an idea they had discussed with Diaghilev and Nijinsky for a new ballet based on the story of Joseph and Potiphar's wife (yet another tale of an experienced femme fatale trying to entrap an innocent youth).
âI must make
myself the spokesman of Nijinsky, who implores you to write the most unrestrained, least dance-like music in the world, to put down pure Strauss for this leaping toward God which is a struggle for God. To be taken by you beyond all bounds of convention is exactly what he longs for; he is, after all, a true genius and just where the track is uncharted, there he desires to show what he can do.'
Finally, looking back from a post-war vantage point,
Jeux
also contains within it a powerful sense of impending doom: some kind of premonition that flirtations in a moonlit pleasure garden were more precious than anyone in 1913 could imagine.
FAUNE
AND
JEUX
were not the only ballets with which Diaghilev was preparing to entrust his young friend. In Vienna in 1912 they met Hugo von Hofmannsthal to discuss a ballet Richard Strauss might write for them (which became
La Légende de Joseph
) and Hofmannsthal was
âentranced
' by their all-night conversations, writing to his friend Harry Kessler that âsince the evening of this Saturday I have actually only existed with no one else but Diaghilev and Nijinsky'. A few months later, in Paris (about the time of
Faune
's premiere), they sat up together again, this time accompanied by Kessler, Reynaldo Hahn and Marcel Proust, debating which biblical story should accompany Strauss's composition and Bakst's Veronese-inspired setting. The backdrop of Larue's was almost exotic enough to inspire a ballet of its own, to read Kessler's description:
âBowls of monstrous strawberries
stood on the table, glasses of champagne and liquors glittered in all colours; the Aga Khan, the richest Muslim prince of India, sat, arriving from a masked ball, at the corner in an oriental costume completely covered with fabulous genuine pearls, and even larger rubies and emeralds ⦠A belated pair danced the tango.'
As early as 1910, Nicholas Roerich and Igor Stravinsky had been talking about a ballet that would show the ancient spring rites of
pre-historic Russia, a great sacrifice as enacted by a Slavonic tribe. Both claimed to have been the
originator of the initial concept
for
Le Sacre du printemps
, and quite possibly they came up with similar ideas simultaneously; Stravinsky said a vision of
Sacre
came to him in a dream. What is clear is that during the spring of 1910, when both were in Paris, they had discussed their shared passions for Russia and for the primitive and embarked on the development of a ballet that at this early stage they called the âGreat Sacrifice'.
Diaghilev was irritated that they had come up with the idea without his involvement and though he insisted that he was interested in it, he pressed for
Petrushka
to be produced first, partly because he wanted to tempt Benois back to work with him again and partly because prioritising a ballet of his choice would bind Stravinsky closer to him. Roerich could wait. For the time being, the Great Sacrifice was put aside and it was not until the following September that Stravinsky settled down in a pensione in Clarens to begin composing it in earnest.
In the meantime he, Roerich and Diaghilev corresponded about their aims for the piece. Nicholas Roerich, whom Nijinsky called the Professor and whom Karsavina described as a prophet, was one of the most interesting of Diaghilev's collaborators. Diaghilev had known him since their college days in the early 1890s and he had been one of the
miriskusniki
. A distinguished painter and occasional set designer (he had staged the opera
Prince Igor
for Diaghilev), he was also a respected scholar, a writer, philosopher, mystic and anthropologist whose earliest passion had been excavating shamanic burial mounds. His paintings were almost exclusively concerned with ancient landscapes and their primitive inhabitants, hunting, fishing and participating in rituals.
In 1910 Roerich had written an essay setting out his thoughts on ancient Slavonic fertility festivities, when the people would go into the woods and array themselves in fresh greenery before dancing and singing to celebrate the coming of spring. He believed that enduring folk customs such as ritualistic dancing when the crops were sown, or in some places stripping a girl naked and leading her on horseback through the newly planted fields before burning her effigy, were literal remnants
of Russia's original pagan culture. What he wanted, writes the historian Nicoletta Misler, was
âto present the power
of images as the survival of memory'.
The following year he painted a study for a mosaic for the church at Princess Tenisheva's Talashkino estate called
The Forefathers
, which showed a man sitting on a sacred hill playing a wood or bone pipe to a group of bears hypnotised by his music â a reflection of the Slavonic tradition that men were descended from bears. Stravinsky came to work with Roerich at Talashkino where he met the singer and
gusli
player S. P. Golosov, who was also studying there. While Stravinsky composed, Roerich studied the Princess's large collection of folk art, embroidery and clothing for inspiration for the costumes for the tribal dancers who would enact their ancient mysteries. Although Stravinsky would later claim he had tapped into
âsome unconscious folk memory
' for the traditional melodies that he abstracted for use in
Sacre
, it is likely that Roerich and Golosov pointed Stravinsky in the direction of folk songs that were ethnologically appropriate for the piece, right for the season and the ceremony they planned to portray.