Authors: Lucy Moore
109
ânaively ⦠all evening'
: Stravinsky and Craft,
Memories and Commentaries
, p. 36. In Lady Juliet Duff's version of the event, he called her âperroquet', a reference to her aquiline nose. See Buckle,
Nijinsky
, p. 261. 110 comparing her to a giraffe: It was a compliment. âLady Morrell is so tall, so beautiful, like giraffe'; Romola Nijinsky,
Nijinsky; and, The last years of Nijinsky
, p. 187.
110
âHe was so different'
: Gathorne-Hardy (ed.),
Ottoline: the Early Memoirs of Lady Ottoline Morrell
, p. 239.
110
âfrom another world'
: ibid., p. 227.
110
âThere were ⦠his art'
: M. Seymour,
Ottoline Morrell: Life on a Grand Scale
(London, 1998), p. 231.
110
Bedford Square
: see William Plomer's poem, âThe Planes of Bedford Square', which describes Nijinsky watching a game of tennis and crying out, â
Quel décor!
'
110
âno
corps de ballet
'
: Buckle,
Diaghilev
, p. 234, citing Jacques-Emile Blanche's description of the dinner.
111
âA woman and a man'
: Nijinsky,
Nijinsky's Diary
, p. 46.
111
âThe man that I see'
:
Le Figaro
, 14 May 1913, cited in Nijinska,
Early Memoirs
, p. 467.
111
âWhen today one sees a man stroll'
: same interview cited in Garafola,
Diaghilev's Ballets Russes
, p. 59. See also Parker,
Nijinsky
, p. 111.
111
âwaltz with changing partners'
: M. Hodson,
Nijinsky's Bloomsbury Ballet
(Hillsdale, NY), p. 263.
111
âThe Faun is me'
: Nijinsky,
Nijinsky's Diary
, p. 207.
112
âSin'
: Scheijen,
Diaghilev
, p. 268.
112
âperverted degeneracy'
: Fokine quoted in Buckle,
Nijinsky
, p. 249.
112
âIf we don't lay down the law'
: Scheijen,
Diaghilev
, p. 252, quoting Kessler's diary.
113
â
Il ne supporte plus les désordes sexuels
'
: E. Aschengreen,
Jean Cocteau and the Dance
(Gyldendal, 1986), p. 229 n. from a 1953 entry in Cocteau's journal.
113
âhappy and proud'
: Romola Nijinsky,
Nijinsky; and, The last years of Nijinsky
, p. 182.
114
âfrom hotel to hotel'
: Cocteau,
Journals
, p. 54.
114
âI gave my whole heart to it'
: Nijinsky,
Nijinsky's Diary
, p. 164.
114
âI soon discovered'
: Romola Nijinsky,
Nijinsky; and, The last years of Nijinsky
, p. 17.
114
âwith an aloof, distant air ⦠never warmth'
: ibid., pp. 21â2.
115
âa rather risqué situation'
: C. Debussy,
Letters
, trans. R. Nichols (London, 1987), p. 260, 12 September 1912.
115
âHe replied that'
: Calvocoressi,
Music and Ballet: Recollections of M. D. Calvocoressi
, p. 208.
115
âthe best ⦠tell you'
: Karsavina quoted in Nijinska,
Early Memoirs
, pp. 465â6.
116
âballerina mentality ⦠forgive you'
: Rambert,
Quicksilver: The Autobiography of Marie Rambert
, p. 68.
116
âfelt that ⦠a woman'
: Nijinsky,
Nijinsky's Diary
, p. 201.
117
âcould not compose it ⦠never finished'
: ibid., p. 206.
117
âblank ⦠Debussy's score'
: Grigoriev,
The Diaghilev Ballet, 1909â
1929, pp. 91â2.
117
âWhat beauty ⦠in this?'
: Rambert,
Quicksilver: The Autobiography of Marie Rambert
, p. 56.
117
âsecond installment'
: Garafola,
Diaghilev's Ballets Russes
, p. 63.
118
âMonsieur Dalcroze ⦠young savage'
: Debussy,
Letters
, p. 272, 9 June 1913.
118
âhad some ⦠and immature'
: Grigoriev,
The Diaghilev Ballet, 1909â1929
, p. 91.
118
âEverything in the choreography'
: Nijinska,
Early Memoirs
, p. 445.
118
âHe was like a crumpled rose'
: Buckle,
Diaghilev
, p. 256.
118
âJapanese food'
: ibid., p. 250.
119
âRose is a rose'
: Hodson,
Nijinsky's Bloomsbury Ballet
, p. 5.
119
âI must make'
: Buckle,
Diaghilev
, p. 238.
120
âentranced ⦠and Nijinsky'
: L. M. Easton,
The Red Count
(Berkeley, CA, 2002), p. 202.
120
âBowls of monstrous strawberries'
: ibid., p. 203.
120
originator of the initial concept
: Rambert,
Quicksilver: The Autobiography of Marie Rambert
, p. 63; P. Hill,
Stravinsky and the Rite of Spring
(Cambridge, 2000), pp. 4â6; Scheijen,
Diaghilev
, p. 212.
122
âto present the power'
: N. Misler in Bowlt, Z. Tregulova and N. R. Giordano (eds),
Feast of Wonders
, p. 77.
122
âsome unconscious folk memory'
: P. C. van den Toorn,
Stravinsky and The Rite of Spring
(Oxford, 1987), p. 12.
123
âthe foot ⦠to honour'
: Lifar,
Serge Diaghilev
, p. 200; letter from NR to SD.
123
âthe picture of'
: van den Toorn,
Stravinsky and The Rite of Spring
, p. 3.
123
âthey were wild about it'
: Hill,
Stravinsky and the Rite of Spring
, p. 26.
123
âdull, rumbling explosions'
: Lifar,
Ma Vie
, p. 5.
123
âthe violent Russian spring'
: Stravinsky,
Stravinsky in Conversation with Robert Craft
, p. 164.
123
âextraordinary new ⦠conduct it.”'
: Monteux,
It's All in the Music: The Life and Work of Pierre Monteux
, pp. 88â9.
124
âWhen they finished ⦠the roots'
: Hill,
Stravinsky and the Rite of Spring
, p. 27.
124
âby a beautiful nightmare ⦠some jam'
: Debussy,
Letters
, p. 265; 5 November 1912.
124
ânew forms must be created'
: Stravinsky and Craft,
Stravinsky in Pictures and Documents
, p. 30.
125
âwas as helpless as a child'
: Grigoriev,
The Diaghilev Ballet, 1909â1929
, p. 76.
125
âsomething he brought'
: Sokolova in Drummond (ed.),
Speaking of Diaghilev
, p. 145.
125
âtwice as fast'
: Rambert,
Quicksilver: The Autobiography of Marie Rambert
, p. 58.
126
âidea of the ballet'
: L. Kirstein,
Dance: A Short History of Classic Theatrical Dancing
(New York, 1969), p. 114.
126
âincessantly thinking out new ballets'
: Gathorne-Hardy (ed.),
Ottoline: the Early Memoirs of Lady Ottoline Morrell
, p. 227.
127
âAs I danced'
: Nijinska,
Early Memoirs
, p. 450.
127
âNijinsky works with passionate zeal'
: Stravinsky and Craft,
Stravinsky in Pictures and Documents
, p. 92.
127
âGentlemen, you do not have to laugh'
: T. F. Kelly,
First Nights
(New Haven, CT, 2000), p. 281.
128
âwith little bits of paper'
: Sokolova,
Dancing for Diaghilev
, p. 42.
128
âis the life of the stones'
: Macdonald,
Diaghilev Observed by Critics in England and the United States, 1911â1929
, p. 90; Nijinsky interviewed by the
Pall Mall Gazette
, 2 February1913.
128
âdeclared his feud'
: Karsavina,
Theatre Street
, p. 236.
129
âthe artist who loves all shapes'
: Nijinsky,
Nijinsky's Diary
, p. 56.
129
â
La grace, le charme
'
: Magriel,
Nijinsky, Pavlova, Duncan: Three Lives in
Dance, p. 20.
129
âAnother vision than'
: E. Burns (ed.),
Gertrude Stein on Picasso
(New York, 1970), p. 65.
129
âunable to reach them'
: Nijinska,
Early Memoirs
, p. 461.
129
âthat it was an excellent sign'
: Grigoriev,
The Diaghilev Ballet, 1909â1929
, p. 90.
129
âpagan worship, the religious instinct'
: Gathorne-Hardy (ed.),
Ottoline: the Early Memoirs of Lady Ottoline Morrell
, p. 239.
130
âas if he felt'
: Nijinska,
Early Memoirs
, p. 475.
130
âa wild creature ⦠him before'
: Sokolova,
Dancing for Diaghilev
, p. 38.
131
âIf the work continues like this'
: Stravinsky and Craft,
Stravinsky in Pictures and Documents
, p. 94; 25 January 1913.
131
âYou are the only one â¦
muzhik
'
: Nijinska,
Early Memoirs
, p. 462.
131
âa blackguard, a brigand'
: Rambert,
Quicksilver: The Autobiography of Marie Rambert
, p. 58.
132
âhow exhausting and fatiguing'
: Nijinska,
Early Memoirs
, p. 462.
132
âhimself away with a wild leap'
: Nijinska,
Early Memoirs
, p. 464.
132
âmore than human'
: Bourdelle quoted in Magriel,
Nijinsky, Pavlova, Duncan: Three Lives in
Dance, p. 56.
133
âin that sad delightful ⦠very quickly'
: Lifar,
Diaghilev
, p. 202; G. Astruc,
Le Pavillon des fantômes
(Paris, 1929), p. 286.
133
âI realised that Diaghilev'
: Nijinsky,
Nijinsky's Diary
, p. 110.
133
âgoing through a dreadful period'
: Gold and Fizdale,
Misia: The Life of Misia Sert
, p. 153.
133
âa little in love with him'
: Nijinska,
Early Memoirs
, p. 462.
134
âGet out ⦠and parrots'
: Krasovskaya,
Nijinsky
, p. 267.
134
âNijinsky didn't take'
: Rambert,
Quicksilver: The Autobiography of Marie Rambert
, p. 58.
134
âno danger'
: Nijinska in conversation with Buckle; Buckle,
Diaghilev
, p. 247.
134
âthe greatest tragic dance'
: Rambert,
Quicksilver: The Autobiography of Marie Rambert
, p. 63.
134
âHis movements were epic'
: Marie Rambert to Clement Crisp, 1962; draft of an article for
Dance Research
magazine found in the Rambert Ballet's archive.
134
âpicture-postcard'
: Kirstein,
Nijinsky Dancing
, p. 145.
134
âI think the whole thing'
: Cecchetti and Racster,
The Master of the Russian Ballet
, p. 226.
135
âthe thousand varieties of snobbism'
: Cocteau,
The Cock and the Harlequin
, p. 48.
135
âI am happy to have found'
: âMontjoie' in
Dossiers de Presse
, 29 May 1913, reproduced in Hill,
Stravinsky and the Rite of Spring
, p. 95.
135
âWhatever happens'
: Grigoriev,
The Diaghilev Ballet
, 1909â1929, p. 92.
136
âimpervious and nerveless'
: Stravinsky,
Stravinsky in Conversation with Robert Craft
, p. 46.
136
âYou may think'
: Monteux,
It's All in the Music: The Life and Work of Pierre
Monteux, p. 90.
136
âExceptionally long-sleeved'
: Sotheby's Ballets Russes Catalogue 1972, lot 68 iv.
136
âas irritating to'
: Beaumont,
The Diaghilev Ballet in London
, p. 75.
137
âIf that's a bassoon'
: P. Blom,
The Vertigo Years
(London, 2008), p. 288.
137
âwith a ⦠don't understand it'
: Gold and Fizdale,
Misia: The Life of Misia Sert
, p. 151.
137
âFirst listen!'
: Astruc,
Le Pavillon des
f
antômes
, p. 286.
137
âto exclude the audience'
: T. Scholl,
From Petipa to Balanchine: Classical Revival and the Modernisation of Ballet
(London, 1993), p. 74.
137
âI am sixty years old'
: Romola Nijinsky,
Nijinsky; and, The last years of Nijinsky
, pp. 199â200 and Cocteau,
The Cock and the Harlequin
, p. 49.
137
âan utterly new vision'
: Scheijen,
Diaghilev
, p. 271.