Authors: Lucy Moore
85
âplayed the chord'
: D. Monteux,
It's All in the Music: The Life and Work of
Pierre Monteux
(London, 1966), p. 77.
86
âall solicitude as'
: Rambert,
Quicksilver: The Autobiography of Marie Rambert
, p. 57.
86
âWhat grace coupled'
: K. Kopelson,
The Queer Afterlife of Vaslav Nijinsky
(San Francisco, CA, 1997), p. 113; see also Steegmuller,
Cocteau
, p. 84 and J. Cocteau,
The Cock and the Harlequin
(
Le Coq et l'Arlequin
), translated by R. H. Myers (London, 1921), p. 42.
87
âthe “lowest sort”'
: V. Stravinsky and R. Craft,
Stravinsky in Pictures and
Documents
(London, 1960), p. 26.
87
âthat sets itself' quotation continued, but in a better translation, in Homans
,
Apollo's Angels: A History of Ballet
, p. 290.
87
âin perfect ⦠of execution'
: Fokine,
Memoirs of a Ballet Master
, p. 194.
88
âThe costumier ⦠and glamorous'
: M. Sert,
Two or Three Muses
(London, 1953), p. 129.
88
âOnly Monteux'
: Monteux,
It's All in the Music: The Life and Work of Pierre
Monteux
, p. 76.
89
âenchanted'
: Benois,
Reminiscences of the Russian Ballet in London
, p. 337.
90
âOnly the swinging'
: Nijinska,
Early Memoirs
, p. 373.
90
âOf the once bright-red cheeks'
: Nijinska,
Early Memoirs
, p. 373.
90
âA friend ⦠very clear'
: E. Denby quoted in Paul Magriel,
Nijinsky, Pavlova, Duncan: Three Lives in Dance
(New York, 1977), pp. 19â20.
90
âan entire poem'
: Stravinsky and Craft,
Stravinsky in Pictures and Documents
, p. 67.
90
âamplified the crazy doll'
: Romola Nijinsky,
Nijinsky; and, The last years of Nijinsky
, p. 128.
91
âseemed to have'
: Beaumont,
The Diaghilev Ballet in London
, p. 45.
91
distilling something
⦠its loss: see Garafola,
Diaghilev's Ballets Russes
, pp. 29, 32, 48.
91
âpersonality, the imprisoned genius'
: Keynes,
Lydia Lopokova
, p. 211.
91
âa Hamlet'
: Buckle,
Nijinsky
, p. 159.
91
âto help the actor'
: Valery Bryusov essay quoted in Garafola,
Diaghilev's Ballets Russes
, p. 27.
91
âseen the finest actor'
: Romola Nijinsky,
Nijinsky; and, The last years of Nijinsky
, p. 129.
91
âthe most ⦠ever seen'
: Stravinsky and Craft,
Memories and Commentaries
, p. 37.
92
âthe mythical outcast'
: R. Gathorne-Hardy (ed.),
Ottoline: the Early Memoirs of Lady Ottoline Morrell
(London, 1964), p. 227.
92
âin the midst'
: S. Grigoriev,
The Diaghilev Ballet, 1909â1929
(Harmondsworth, 1953), p. 55.
92
âPeople thought and talked'
: T. Beecham,
A Mingled Chime
(London, 1973), p. 149.
92
âwith their diamond tiaras'
: Charles Ricketts quoted in Buckle,
Diaghilev
, p. 232.
92
society girls
: Lady Diana Cooper actually did; see Melville,
Diaghilev and Friends
, p. 122.
92
âNow I knew'
: M. Green,
Children of the Sun: A Narrative of âDecadence' in England After 1918
(New York, 1977), p. 30.
93
â
Je ne sais pas
'
: M. Draper,
Music at Midnight
(Kingswood, Surrey, 1929), p. 143.
93
âhe ate and drank'
: ibid., p. 188.
93
âAlways he demanded'
: Lifar,
Diaghilev
, p. 299.
94
âthe most rigorous seclusion'
: Romola Nijinsky,
Nijinsky; and, The last years of Nijinsky
, p. 113.
94
âto go ⦠Certainly not'
: Steegmuller,
Cocteau: A Biography
, p. 80.
94
âchildishly spoiled'
: Stravinsky and Craft,
Memories and Commentaries
, p. 35.
94
âon the pretext'
: Nijinska,
Early Memoirs
, p. 339.
94
â
mon petit
'⦠restless
: Count Harry Kessler and Kuzmin quoted in Scheijen,
Diaghilev
, p. 238.
94
âthought I went out ⦠horrible'
: Nijinsky,
Nijinsky's Diary
, p. 18.
94
âI received a moral blow ⦠a beast'
: ibid., p. 20.
95
âYou have slapped ⦠of China'
: Karsavina,
Theatre Street
, p. 285 and Buckle,
Nijinsky
, p. 156. This took place in 1910. I am assuming that
Diaghilev used the feminine pronoun because it simply wouldn't have been acceptable to use the male. Whatever he may have thought Karsavina understood about his personal life, I don't think he would ever have referred to it directly with her. In the unlikely case he had said âhe', she would almost certainly have changed it herself for publication.
96
âThat's not so great ⦠the ballet'
: Benois,
Reminiscences of the Russian Ballet in London
, p. 318.
97
âcarry out my artistic ideas'
: Lifar,
Diaghilev
, p. 142.
97
âOh, he was like the rest of them'
: C. Spencer,
Léon Bakst
(London, 1978), p. 98.
97
lacked taste
: from Haskell,
Ballet Russe
, p. 74. Since Haskell relied heavily on Walter Nouvel's interpretation of events, we can assume that Diaghilev's âclose collaborator' to whom Haskell credits this assertion was Nouvel.
97
âsweetly sentimental'
: Nijinska,
Early Memoirs
, p. 315.
97
âLeaping to his feet'
: Lifar,
Diaghilev
, p. 146.
97
Meyerhold
:
Faune
transposed to the dance stage Meyerhold's âstatic Theatre' with its âtwo-dimensionality, stylised posture, foreshortened stage, depersonalised performing style, totalising design, and slow “signifying” movement'. Garafola,
Diaghilev's Ballets Russes
, p. 54.
97
âmoving bas-relief'
: Haskell quoted in Garafola,
Diaghilev's Ballets Russes
, p. 52.
98
âthe source ⦠own way'
: Nijinska,
Early Memoirs
, p. 315.
98
âlaboratory experiments in'
: Haskell,
Balletomania
, p. 82.
98
âExplaining is the wrong word'
: Rambert,
Quicksilver: The Autobiography of Marie Rambert
, p. 59.
98
âwithout any preparation ⦠the movement'
: Nijinska,
Early Memoirs
, p. 316 (phrases cited in different order from original source).
99
âunexpected and unusual severity'
: ibid., p. 328.
99
âremoteness of music'
: Buckle,
Nijinsky
, p. 164.
100
âcompensate for'
: Scheijen,
Diaghilev
, p. 241.
100
perfectly musically literate
: see also S. C. Berg,
Le Sacre du printemps: Seven Productions from Nijinsky to Martha Graham
(Ann Arbor, MI, 1988), p. 26.
100
âmusic made visible'
: C. W. Beaumont,
Bookseller at the Ballet: Memoirs 1891 to 1929
(London, 1975), p. 100.
100
âthe courage to stand still'
: Buckle,
Diaghilev
, p. 251.
100
âhorribly decadent'
: Stravinsky,
Stravinsky in Conversation with Robert Craft
, p. 165.
101
âshe never makes one forget'
: Buckle,
Nijinsky
, p. 214.
101
âOh, Mathildoshka ⦠two feet'
: Romola Nijinsky,
Nijinsky; and, The last years of Nijinsky
, p. 160.
102
âalmost as a priest ⦠uncanny feeling of apprehension'
: Romola Nijinsky,
Nijinsky; and, The last years of Nijinsky
, p. 16.
102
âWhen she unfolded'
: Karsavina in Drummond (ed.),
Speaking of Diaghilev
, p. 18.
103
âdancers dreaded'
: Grigoriev,
The Diaghilev Ballet, 1909â1929
, p. 66.
103
âUp to then ⦠choreographic plan'
: Nijinska,
Early Memoirs
, p. 427.
103
âthe movement he gave'
: Rambert,
Quicksilver: The Autobiography of Marie Rambert
, p. 62.
103
âmerely an extension ⦠that speaks'
: Jacques Rivière quoted in Burt,
The Male Dancer: Bodies, Spectacle, Sexualities
, p. 90.
103
ânever seen him'
: Macdonald,
Diaghilev Observed by Critics in England and the United States, 1911â1929
, p. 88, telegram of 18 April 1912.
104
âYou will see ⦠understood it'
: Nijinska,
Early Memoirs
, p. 431.
104
â“creating” a choreographer'
: Fokine,
Memoirs of a Ballet Master
, p. 202.
104
âThis was a very unhappy'
: Monteux,
It's All in the Music: The Life and Work of Pierre Monteux
, p. 93.
104
âshabby, jealous little group'
: A. Gold and R. Fizdale,
Misia: The Life of Misia Sert
(New York, 1980), p. 156.
105
âwith the weight ⦠and sulky'
: Cocteau,
Journals
, p. 54.
105
300,000 francs
: Garafola,
Diaghilev's Ballets Russes
, p. 187.
105
âdoubts in the wings'
: Nijinska,
Early Memoirs
, p. 434.
105
â
plus nu que nu
'
: Steegmuller,
Cocteau: A Biography
, p. 77.
105
âIn the costume ⦠be human'
: Romola Nijinsky,
Nijinsky; and, The last years of Nijinsky
, p. 170.
106
âintroversion, self-absorbtion'
: Homans,
Apollo's Angels: A History of Ballet
, p. 309.
106
âthrilling. Although his movements'
: Sokolova,
Dancing for Diaghilev
, p. 40.
106
âNobody was certain'
: Romola Nijinsky,
Nijinsky; and, The last years of Nijinsky
, p. 172.
107
âI wish that'
: quoted in Nijinska,
Early Memoirs
, p. 437.
107
âthis wonderful evocation'
: quoted in Buckle,
Diaghilev
, p. 226. For a fuller understanding of this scandal, see Scheijen,
Diaghilev
, pp. 249â51 and Count Harry Kessler's diaries (published in German in 2005).
107
âWICKED PARIS'
: Macdonald,
Diaghilev Observed by Critics in England and the United States, 1911â1929
, p. 78.
107
âsafe haven of'
: Garafola,
Diaghilev's Ballets Russes
, p. 57.
107
âthe seesaw ⦠against instinct'
: ibid., p. 58.
107
âOf course Nijinsky'
: Steegmuller,
Cocteau: A Biography
, p. 73.
107
âadored the ⦠by it'
: Stravinsky and Craft,
Memories and Commentaries
, p. 36.
108
âI did not think'
: Nijinsky,
Nijinsky's Diary
, p. 203.
108
âOnce you mastered'
: L. Sokolova in Drummond (ed.),
Speaking of Diaghilev
, p. 146.
108
âThe sensation'
: Sokolova,
Dancing for Diaghilev
, p. 40.
108
âa refutation ⦠without parallel'
: Oliveroff,
Flight of the Swan: A Memory of Anna
P
avlova
, p. 163.
108
âto his own purpose'
: Rambert,
Quicksilver: The Autobiography of Marie Rambert
, p. 63.
108
â
Je ne suis pas'
: Romola Nijinsky,
Nijinsky; and, The last years of Nijinsky
, p. 136.
108
âin spite of Diaghilev's'
: Benois,
Reminiscences of the Russian Ballet in London
, p. 290.
109
âevolved a sculptural line'
: Massine,
My Life in
Ballet, p. 84.
109
ârevealed not one'
: Lifar,
Diaghilev
, p. 143.
109
âill-concealed impatience'
: Buckle,
Diaghilev
, p. 235.
109
âvery nervous ⦠and jailer'
: Gathorne-Hardy (ed.),
Ottoline: the Early Memoirs of Lady Ottoline Morrell
, p. 227.
109
âsat in the garden'
: Lady Juliet Duff quoted in Buckle,
Nijinsky
, p. 261.
109
âI do not know'
: Nijinsky,
Nijinsky's Diary
, p. 41.