Nijinsky (54 page)

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Authors: Lucy Moore

BOOK: Nijinsky
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Verlaine, Paul
54
,
89

Vestris, Auguste
17
,
59
,
170
,
234

Vienna
145
,
178
,
179
,
218
,
232

Vladimir, Grand Duke
53

Volkonsky, Prince Sergey
38
,
45
,
144

Volny, Maurice
176

Vuillard, Édouard
54

W

Wagner, Richard
143

Walser, Robert
218
,
258

Way of a Pilgrim, The
206

Weber, Carl Maria von
85

Wedding, The
182
,
216
,
220

White, Edmund
248

Wielki Theatre School
7

Wilde, Oscar
95
,
143
,
247

Wilson, Colin
211

Wilson, Edmund
189

Wings
(Kuzmin)
44

Woolf, Virginia
209
,
217
f,
247
,
258

Y

Young, Stark
258

Yusupov, Prince Nikolay
34

Z

Zucchi, Virginia
11

Zuikov, Vasily
63
,
66
,
67
,
96
,
97
,
98
,
120
,
150
,
152

and Rambert
139

Le Spectre de las rose
87
,
89

on
SS Avon
154

Vaslav's marriage
161

Zverev, Nicholas
186
,
190
,
193

1. Nijinsky in the dress uniform of the Imperial Theatre School,
c
.1900. This was taken at the time that Nijinsky, aged eleven, entered the senior schoool as one of six male students in his year and won the coveted scholarship that would fund his education. The silver lyres, the school's insignia, are embroidered on his collar.

2. Nijinsky and Anna Pavlova in the first version of
La Pavillion d'Armide
, 1907. It was as Armida's Favourite Slave, a role written especially for him the year he graduated, that the eighteen year-old Nijinsky in his pearl choker bewitched Prince Lvov and Sergey Diaghilev.

3. Nijinsky in Paris in 1909. Along with the rest of the Ballets Russes, the awkward boy found himself inhabiting ‘an unreal and enchanted world'.

4. Nijinsky in playful mood, posing for publicity stills for the ‘Danse Siamoise' for the photographer Druet in his garden in Paris, 1910.

5. The composer Igor Stravinsky and Nijinsky as Petrushka by Bert, 1911. Even posing off stage Nijinsky is in character, arms handing woodenly by his sides, his feet turned in,
en dedans
, and his expression as blankly quizzical as a puppet's.

6. Bronia Nijinska as the Street Dancer and Ludmilla Schollar as a Gypsy flank Kobelev, the Organ Grinder, in their costumes for
Petrushka
, 1911. Bronia's dance was a parody of Mathilde Kshesinskaya's style, an in-joke only devotees of the Ballets Russes would have understood.

7. Nijinsky as the Rose (1911) with his face made up to resemble ‘a celestial insect, his eyebrows suggesting some beautiful beetle … his mouth was like rose petals'.

8.
Plus nu que nu
: Nijinsky as the Faun by Bert, 1912, wearing a short tail, horns, pointed, elongated ears and the dappled body stocking which, before every performance, Léon Bakst painted directly onto him. He looked, as one observer said, even more than naked. ‘One could not define where the human ended and the animal began'.

9. Playing
Daphnis et Chloë
, a ballet choreographed by Nijinsky's in-house rival, Mikhail Fokine, with its composer Maurice Ravel in Paris, 1912. Note Nijinsky's look of utter concentration.

10. Dancing the turkey trot with Tamara Karsavina while Ludmilla Schollar waits in
Jeux
, 1913, the first ballet set in the contemporary world. Karsavina and Schollar wear white tennis dresses designed by Paquin and Nijinsky is in a white version of his usual practise clothes.

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