Authors: Lucy Moore
Nicholson, J.,
The Perfect Summer
(London, 2006)
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Nijinsky
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â,
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â,
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Nijinsky and Romola
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Nijinsky's Diary
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Oliveroff, A.,
Flight of the Swan: A Memory of Anna Pavlova
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Ostwald, P.,
Vaslav Nijinsky: A Leap into Madness
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Parker, D.,
Nijinsky
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Pages of My Life
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Radiguet, R.,
Count Orgel's Ball
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Rambert, M.,
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Reiss, F.,
Nijinsky: A Biography
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Richardson, J.,
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, vol. 2,
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â,
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â (ed.),
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â,
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Wright, N.,
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This book began with an article about the Ballets Russes that I hoped to write but never did, so the first people I want to thank won't have any idea why: Charlotte Sinclair of
Vogue
; Elinor Hughes and Tim Morley, who, promoting the Diaghilev exhibition at the Victoria and Albert Museum in 2010, encouraged my growing interest in Nijinsky even though I couldn't find anyone to commission me to write about him; and Deirdre Fernand, who unwittingly gave me the final push when she suggested that despite my being neither a dance critic nor a dancer, writing a book about ballet need not be an impossible dream.
Many people helped and advised me while I worked on the book. I am grateful to the staffs of the British Library; the library of the Victoria and Albert Museum and its Theatre Collection at Blythe House; Bob Kosovsky and Amy Schwegel of the New York Public Library, music and dance divisions respectively; Tom Clark; Fiona Porter; Pieter Symonds and Arike Oke of the Rambert Ballet Company and Ann Stewart, whom I met through them, as well as Marc Farah, for putting me in touch with Pieter in the first place. Nuala Herbert gave me a valuable insight into the
Rite of Spring
and Pell Mountain lent me Russian books that I could not have seen elsewhere. My father, John Moore, stepfather, Josh Miller, and Lady Bateman read the book in draft and supplied me with important corrections.
Living in Simon and Lucy Harrison's house while I wrote the book gave me the gift of a study with a door I could close behind me. And Haydee Dullas
ensured that I never worried about my children when I was thinking about Nijinsky. Most of all, though, I am indebted to my husband, whose unfailing love and support make everything possible; work is the least of it.
Grateful thanks are due to Andrew Franklin, Daniel Crewe, Penny Daniel, Valentina Zanca and everyone at else Profile Books as well as Jane Robertson, who negotiated my typescript, and with all of whom it has been a delight to work at every stage. Pryor Dodge of the Dodge Collection, and Dr Hans-Michael Shäfer of the Neumeier Foundation provided most of the exquisite photographs and drawings which illuminate the book. Andrew Kidd has been (as expected) the best of agents: I hope there will be many more projects like this in our future together.
One of the greatest pleasures of this book was working again with the late Peter Carson, who commissioned it and continued to edit and support it even after retiring. I count myself immensely privileged to have been one of his writers.
Frontispiece: Nijinsky in
Le Spectre de la Rose
by Valentine Hugo (Paris, 1912). Sketch: Stiftung John Neumeier â Dance Collection.
3. Nijinsky in Paris, 1909. Photo: Roger Pryor Dodge Collection
5. Igor Stravinsky and Nijinsky, by Bert, 1911. Photo: Roger Pryor Dodge Collection
7. Nijinsky as the Rose,
c
. 1911. Photo: © RIA Novosti/Alamy
8. Nijinsky as the Faun by Bert, 1912. Photo: Roger Pryor Dodge Collection
12. Nijinsky seated by a piano, New York, 1916. Photo: Roger Pryor Dodge Collection
While every effort has been made to contact copyright-holders of illustrations, the author and publishers would be grateful for information about any illustrations where they have been unable to trace them, and would be glad to make amendments in further editions.
Page references for footnotes are followed by f, those for endnotes by n
A
à la recherche du temps perdu
(Proust)
53
,
68
Acis and Galatea
27
â8
Acocella, Joan
201
,
205
,
209
,
210
,
221
,
259
Acton, Harold
248
Afanasyev, Alexander
127
Aga Khan
105
â6
Alba, Duke of
182
Alexander III
10
Alfonso, King of Spain
177
,
182
,
193
Ansermet, Ernest
214
Apollo
79
Après-midi d'un faune, L'
72
,
81
â2,
90
,
99
â104,
116
,
129
,
173
,
271
n
and beauty
134
Bronia
222
Chaplin
188
Karsavina
122
Rambert
242
reaction
111
â13,
249
â50,
274
n
Armida's Pavilion see Pavillon d'Armide, Le
Ashton, Frederick
234
Astruc, Gabriel
Le Chabanais
67
and Fokine
77
and Karsavina
68
Larue's
66
Le Sacre du printemps
142
Théâtre des Champs-Elysées
122
,
137
â8,
150
Théâtre du Châtelet
54
â5,
57
in Vaslav's diary
206
Auric, Georges
215
f
Avril, Jane
250
B
Bakst, Léon
and Aga Khan
105
L'Après-midi d'un faune
100
,
101
,
102
,
106
,
108
,
109
,
113
ballets
116
Le Chabanais
67
Cléopatra
59
â60
and Diaghilev
214
and Duncan
23
and Fokine
100
La Légende de Joseph
125
Mavra
216
Mir iskusstva
41
Petrushka
91
Prince Igor
60
â1
Le Sacre du printemps
144
,
145
,
150
Schéhérazade
77
The Sleeping Princess
216
Le Spectre de la rose
85
â6
Vaslav's dismissal
173
Venice
80
Bakunin, Mikhail
24
Balanchine, George
79
,
227
,
234
,
243
,
246
,
252
Ballet Rambert
242