Difference between revisions of "Dame Margot Fonteyn" - New World Encyclopedia

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:''"Dame Margot" redirects here. For the medieval trouvère, see [[Dames Margot and Maroie]].''
 
:''"Dame Margot" redirects here. For the medieval trouvère, see [[Dames Margot and Maroie]].''
'''Dame Margot Fonteyn de Arias''', [[Order of the British Empire|DBE]], (May 18, 1919, Reigate, Surrey, [[England]] -  February 21, 1991,  [[Panama City]], [[Panama]]), the English [[assoluta]], was considered the greatest [[ballerina]] of her time.  
+
'''Dame Margot Fonteyn de Arias''', [[Order of the British Empire|DBE]], (May 18, 1919, Reigate, Surrey, [[England]] -  February 21, 1991,  Panama City, [[Panama]]), the English [[assoluta]], was considered the greatest ballerina of her time.  Her career spanned over forty years, highly unusual for a professional ballerina.  More significantly, the beauty of Fonteyn's dancing had the power to bring tears to the eyes of her audience members.  At a moment when most ballerina's would be facing retirement, Fonteyn met and began dancing with Rudolph Nureyev.  Their on stage partnership spanned nearly twenty years.  
  
 
== Early life ==
 
== Early life ==
 
Fonteyn was born Margaret ("Peggy") Hookham to an English father and an Irish mother who was the illegitimate daughter of Brazilian businessman Antonio Fontes. Her Brazilian ancestry explains her exotic appearance and supplied a motivation for her eventual Latin American marriage and residence. Early in her career, Margaret transformed Fontes into Fonteyn (a surname her brother adopted as well) and Margaret into Margot; thus her stage name.
 
Fonteyn was born Margaret ("Peggy") Hookham to an English father and an Irish mother who was the illegitimate daughter of Brazilian businessman Antonio Fontes. Her Brazilian ancestry explains her exotic appearance and supplied a motivation for her eventual Latin American marriage and residence. Early in her career, Margaret transformed Fontes into Fonteyn (a surname her brother adopted as well) and Margaret into Margot; thus her stage name.
  
She joined the [[Royal Ballet]] (then called the [[Sadler's Wells Theatre]]) while still a teenager, after having been trained by some of the greatest teachers of the day - [[Olga Preobrajenskaya]] and [[Mathilde Kschessinskaya]], both of whom trained under [[Marius Petipa]] himself. By 1939, she was the company's star and the inspiration for many of Sir [[Frederick Ashton]]'s ballets, such as ''[[Ondine]]'', ''[[Daphnis and Chloe]]'', and ''[[Sylvia (ballet)|Sylvia]]''. She was especially renowned for her portrayal of Aurora in [[Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky|Tchaikovsky]]'s ''[[Sleeping Beauty]]''. Televised versions of ''Sleeping Beauty'' and Ashton's version of ''[[Cinderella]]'' are now available on [[DVD]]. Fonteyn also worked with the choreographer [[Roland Petit]] and later in life, [[Martha Graham]]. In 1949, the Royal Ballet toured the United States and Fonteyn became an instant celebrity.
+
Margot lived in China during her childhood for a time.  It was in China that she began to study ballet. Upon her return from China, she studied ballet under some of the greatest teachers of the day: Olga Preobrajenskaya and Mathilde Kschessinskaya, both of whom trained under the great [[Marius Petipa]]. She joined the Royal Ballet (then called the Sadler's Wells Theatre) while still a teenager.  By 1939, only twenty years old, she was the company's star. Fonteyn was also the inspiration and muse for many of Sir Frederick Ashton's ballets, such as ''Ondine'', ''Daphnis and Chloe'', and ''Sylvia''. She was especially renowned for her portrayal of Aurora in [[Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky|Tchaikovsky]]'s ''Sleeping Beauty''. Televised versions of ''Sleeping Beauty'' and Ashton's version of ''Cinderella'' are now available on [[DVD]].
  
 
== Dancing with Rudolf Nureyev and others==
 
== Dancing with Rudolf Nureyev and others==
In the 1940s, she and [[Robert Helpmann]] formed a very successful dance partnership, and they toured together for several years. In the 1950s, she danced with [[Michael Somes]]. But her greatest partnership emerged at a time when many (including the head of the Royal Ballet, [[Ninette de Valois]]) thought she was about to retire. In 1961, [[Rudolf Nureyev]] defected to the West, and on February 21, 1962, he and Fonteyn first appeared on stage together, in a performance of ''[[Giselle]]''. It was a great success; during the curtain calls Nureyev dropped to his knees and kissed Fonteyn's hand, cementing an on-and-offstage partnership which lasted until her 1979 retirement. Fonteyn and Nureyev became known for inspiring repeated frenzied curtain calls and bouquet tosses.
+
In the 1940s, she and Robert Helpmann formed a very successful dance partnership, and they toured together for several years. In the 1950s, she danced with Michael Somes. But her greatest partnership emerged at a time when many (including the head of the Royal Ballet, Ninette de Valois) thought she was about to retire. In 1961, [[Rudolf Nureyev]] defected to the West. On February 21, 1962, he and Fonteyn first appeared on stage together in a performance of ''Giselle''. It was a great success.  During the curtain calls, Nureyev dropped to his knees and kissed Fonteyn's hand, cementing an on-and-offstage partnership which lasted until her 1979 retirement. Fonteyn and Nureyev became known for inspiring repeated frenzied curtain calls and bouquet tosses.
  
Ashton choreographed ''[[Marguerite and Armand]]'' for them, which no other couple danced until the 21st century. They debuted [[Kenneth MacMillan]]'s ''[[Romeo and Juliet]]'', although MacMillan had conceived the ballet for [[Lynn Seymour]] and [[Christopher Gable]]. Fonteyn and Nureyev appeared together in a film version of ''[[Swan Lake]]'' and Kenneth MacMillan's ''Romeo and Juliet'', as well as ''[[Les Sylphides]]'' and the ''[[Le Corsaire Pas de Deux]]''.  
+
Ashton choreographed ''Marguerite and Armand'' for them.  No other couple danced this ballet until the 21st century. The pair debuted Kenneth MacMillan's ''[[Romeo and Juliet]]'', although MacMillan had conceived the ballet for Lynn Seymour and Christopher Gable. Fonteyn and Nureyev appeared together in a film version of ''Swan Lake'' and Kenneth MacMillan's ''Romeo and Juliet'', as well as ''Les Sylphides'' and the ''Le Corsaire Pas de Deux''.  
  
Despite their differences in background, temperament, and a nineteen-year difference in age, Nureyev and Fonteyn became close lifelong friends and were famously loyal to each other. Fonteyn would not approve an unflattering photograph of Nureyev. In 1967, they were arrested after a performance in [[San Francisco]], when the police raided a [[Haight-Ashbury]] party to which they had been invited. They remained close even after she retired to a Panama cattle farm, talking on the phone several times a week even though her farmhouse did not have a telephone. When she was treated for cancer, Nureyev paid many of her medical bills and visited her often, despite his busy schedule as a performer and choreographer, as well as his own health problems (he was HIV positive and succumbed to [[AIDS]] in 1993). In a documentary about Fonteyn, Nureyev said that they danced with "one body, one soul" and that Margot was "all he had, only her." An observer said that "If most people are at level A, they were at level Z."
+
Despite their differences in background, temperament, and a nineteen-year difference in age, Nureyev and Fonteyn became close lifelong friends and were famously loyal to each other. Fonteyn would not approve an unflattering photograph of Nureyev. In 1967, they were arrested after a performance in San Francisco, when the police raided a Haight-Ashbury party to which they had been invited. They remained close even after she retired to a Panama cattle farm, talking on the phone several times a week even though her farmhouse did not have a telephone. When she was treated for cancer, Nureyev paid many of her medical bills and visited her often, despite his busy schedule as a performer and choreographer, as well as his own health problems (he was HIV positive and succumbed to [[AIDS]] in 1993). In a documentary about Fonteyn, Nureyev said that they danced with "one body, one soul" and that Margot was "all he had, only her." An observer said that "If most people are at level A, they were at level Z."
  
In the extremely competitive world of ballet, Fonteyn was renowned for her consummate professionalism and loyalty to her friends. Her dancing stood out for its lyricism, grace, and passion. Although Fonteyn was the Royal Ballet's biggest star, its director, Dame [[Ninette de Valois]], cultivated other talents, so that the Royal Ballet of Fonteyn's day also included [[Nadia Nerina]], [[Svetlana Beriosova]], [[Lynn Seymour]], and [[Antoinette Sibley]].
+
In the extremely competitive world of ballet, Fonteyn was renowned for her consummate professionalism and loyalty to her friends. Her dancing stood out for its lyricism, grace, and passion. Although Fonteyn was the Royal Ballet's biggest star, its director, Dame Ninette de Valois, cultivated other talents.  The Royal Ballet of Fonteyn's day also included Nadia Nerina, Svetlana Beriosova, Lynn Seymour, and Antoinette Sibley.
 +
 
 +
Fonteyn also worked with the choreographer Roland Petit and later in life, [[Martha Graham]]. In 1949, the Royal Ballet toured the United States and Fonteyn became an instant celebrity.
  
 
== Relationships ==
 
== Relationships ==
During the 1940s, Fonteyn had a long relationship with composer [[Constant Lambert]] which did not lead to marriage. In 1955, Fonteyn married [[Dr. Roberto de Arias]], a Panamanian diplomat to [[London]] and [[playboy]]. Their marriage was initially a rocky one due to his infidelities. She was arrested when he attempted a coup against the Panamanian government. In 1965, a rival Panamanian politician shot Arias, leaving him a [[quadriplegic]] for the rest of his life.  
+
During the 1940s, Fonteyn had a long relationship with composer Constant Lambert which did not lead to marriage. In 1955, Fonteyn married Dr. Roberto de Arias, a Panamanian diplomat to London. For the first several years of the marriage, Fonteyn had to balance her career as a ballerina with her duties as the wife of a diplomat.  The marriage began on unstable ground due to de Arias' reputation as a play boy and his reputed infidelities. Ultimately, Fonteyn came to be extremely loyal to her husband.  She stayed committed to her marriage through life's trials. Fonteyn was arrested when her husband attempted a coup against the Panamanian government. In 1965, a rival Panamanian politician shot Arias, leaving him a [[quadriplegic]] for the rest of his life.  
  
 
The cost of his medical care is a reason why Fonteyn's career lasted until 1979, her sixtieth year, despite her suffering from an [[arthritis|arthritic]] foot. Upon her retirement, the Royal Ballet honoured her with the title ''prima ballerina assoluta''. She ended her days in Panama, remaining loyal to Arias in part because she was very devoted to his children from an earlier marriage. Because Arias's medical bills drained her finances, the Royal Ballet held a special "gala" in 1990 for her benefit. Shortly after his death, she was diagnosed with a cancer that proved fatal.
 
The cost of his medical care is a reason why Fonteyn's career lasted until 1979, her sixtieth year, despite her suffering from an [[arthritis|arthritic]] foot. Upon her retirement, the Royal Ballet honoured her with the title ''prima ballerina assoluta''. She ended her days in Panama, remaining loyal to Arias in part because she was very devoted to his children from an earlier marriage. Because Arias's medical bills drained her finances, the Royal Ballet held a special "gala" in 1990 for her benefit. Shortly after his death, she was diagnosed with a cancer that proved fatal.
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Fonteyn was knighted (made a dame) in 1954 at the age of 35.
 
Fonteyn was knighted (made a dame) in 1954 at the age of 35.
  
She was chancellor of the [[University of Durham]] from [[1981]] to [[1990]]. The main hall in the Student Union building, the Fonteyn Ballroom, is named after her.
+
She was chancellor of the University of Durham from 1981 to 1990. The main hall in the Student Union building, the Fonteyn Ballroom, is named after her.
 
 
The folk group [[Eddie From Ohio]] has a song dedicated to her.
 
 
 
Fonteyn and Nureyev are lampooned in Will Vinton's ''[[A Claymation Christmas Celebration]]'' ([[1987]]) as ice-skating balltic walruses.
 
  
 
==Main roles==
 
==Main roles==
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*Daneman, Meredith, 2004.  ''Margot Fonteyn: A Life''. New York: Viking. ISBN 0670843709
 
*Daneman, Meredith, 2004.  ''Margot Fonteyn: A Life''. New York: Viking. ISBN 0670843709
  
Fonteyn, Margot. 1976. ''Margot Fonteyn: autobiography.'' New York:Knopf. ISBN 039448570X
+
*Fonteyn, Margot. 1976. ''Margot Fonteyn: autobiography.'' New York:Knopf. ISBN 039448570X
  
Bland, Alexander. 1979. ''Fonteyn and Nureyev the Story of a partnership.'' New York: Times Books. ISBN 0812908600  
+
*Bland, Alexander. 1979. ''Fonteyn and Nureyev the Story of a partnership.'' New York: Times Books. ISBN 0812908600  
  
 
*Batty, Peter, Robert Powell, Margot Fonteyn, and Rudolph Nureyev. 2005. ''Fonteyn and Nureyev the perfect partnership.'' West Long Branch, New Jersey: Kulture International Films. ISBN 0769779182
 
*Batty, Peter, Robert Powell, Margot Fonteyn, and Rudolph Nureyev. 2005. ''Fonteyn and Nureyev the perfect partnership.'' West Long Branch, New Jersey: Kulture International Films. ISBN 0769779182
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* [http://www.ballerinagallery.com/fonteyn.htm The Ballerina Gallery - Margot Fonteyn]
 
* [http://www.ballerinagallery.com/fonteyn.htm The Ballerina Gallery - Margot Fonteyn]
 
* [http://www.peopleplayuk.org.uk/collections/default.php?ter_id=384 Margot Fonteyn] at PeoplePlay UK
 
* [http://www.peopleplayuk.org.uk/collections/default.php?ter_id=384 Margot Fonteyn] at PeoplePlay UK
* [http://www.nina.gemineans.co.uk/history/people/fonteyn.html Brief bio] at Surrey Choicenet
 
 
* [http://myhero.com/myhero/hero.asp?hero=Fonteyn_ventura Brief bio] at "My Hero" project
 
* [http://myhero.com/myhero/hero.asp?hero=Fonteyn_ventura Brief bio] at "My Hero" project
*Reviews of Daneman biography:
+
*Review of Daneman biography:''[http://observer.guardian.co.uk/review/story/0,6903,1339959,00.html The Guardian]'' (London).
** ''[http://observer.guardian.co.uk/review/story/0,6903,1339959,00.html The Guardian]'' (London).
 
** ''[http://entertainment.scotsman.com/books/reviews_specific.cfm?id=9557&g=nonfiction The Scotsman.]''
 
  
 
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[[de:Margot Fonteyn]]
 
[[es:Margot Fonteyn]]
 
[[fr:Margot Fonteyn]]
 
[[it:Margot Fonteyn]]
 
[[ja:マーゴット・フォンテーン]]
 
[[no:Margot Fonteyn]]
 
[[pt:Margot Fonteyn]]
 
[[sv:Margot Fonteyn]]
 
 
{{Credit|141955695}}
 
{{Credit|141955695}}
 
[[Category:Prima ballerina assolutas|Fonteyn]]
 
[[Category:Ballerinas|Fonteyn, Margot]]
 
[[Category:English ballet dancers|Fonteyn, Margot]]
 
[[Category:Divas|Fonteyn]]
 
[[Category:Dames Commander of the Order of the British Empire|Fonteyn, Margot]]
 
[[Category:People from Surrey|Fonteyn, Margot]]
 
[[Category:Chancellors of Durham University]]
 
[[Category:Cancer deaths|Fonteyn, Margot]]
 
[[Category:1919 births|Fonteyn, Margot]]
 
[[Category:1991 deaths|Fonteyn, Margot]]
 
 
[[Category:History]]
 
[[Category:History]]

Revision as of 20:46, 16 November 2007

"Dame Margot" redirects here. For the medieval trouvère, see Dames Margot and Maroie.

Dame Margot Fonteyn de Arias, DBE, (May 18, 1919, Reigate, Surrey, England - February 21, 1991, Panama City, Panama), the English assoluta, was considered the greatest ballerina of her time. Her career spanned over forty years, highly unusual for a professional ballerina. More significantly, the beauty of Fonteyn's dancing had the power to bring tears to the eyes of her audience members. At a moment when most ballerina's would be facing retirement, Fonteyn met and began dancing with Rudolph Nureyev. Their on stage partnership spanned nearly twenty years.

Early life

Fonteyn was born Margaret ("Peggy") Hookham to an English father and an Irish mother who was the illegitimate daughter of Brazilian businessman Antonio Fontes. Her Brazilian ancestry explains her exotic appearance and supplied a motivation for her eventual Latin American marriage and residence. Early in her career, Margaret transformed Fontes into Fonteyn (a surname her brother adopted as well) and Margaret into Margot; thus her stage name.

Margot lived in China during her childhood for a time. It was in China that she began to study ballet. Upon her return from China, she studied ballet under some of the greatest teachers of the day: Olga Preobrajenskaya and Mathilde Kschessinskaya, both of whom trained under the great Marius Petipa. She joined the Royal Ballet (then called the Sadler's Wells Theatre) while still a teenager. By 1939, only twenty years old, she was the company's star. Fonteyn was also the inspiration and muse for many of Sir Frederick Ashton's ballets, such as Ondine, Daphnis and Chloe, and Sylvia. She was especially renowned for her portrayal of Aurora in Tchaikovsky's Sleeping Beauty. Televised versions of Sleeping Beauty and Ashton's version of Cinderella are now available on DVD.

Dancing with Rudolf Nureyev and others

In the 1940s, she and Robert Helpmann formed a very successful dance partnership, and they toured together for several years. In the 1950s, she danced with Michael Somes. But her greatest partnership emerged at a time when many (including the head of the Royal Ballet, Ninette de Valois) thought she was about to retire. In 1961, Rudolf Nureyev defected to the West. On February 21, 1962, he and Fonteyn first appeared on stage together in a performance of Giselle. It was a great success. During the curtain calls, Nureyev dropped to his knees and kissed Fonteyn's hand, cementing an on-and-offstage partnership which lasted until her 1979 retirement. Fonteyn and Nureyev became known for inspiring repeated frenzied curtain calls and bouquet tosses.

Ashton choreographed Marguerite and Armand for them. No other couple danced this ballet until the 21st century. The pair debuted Kenneth MacMillan's Romeo and Juliet, although MacMillan had conceived the ballet for Lynn Seymour and Christopher Gable. Fonteyn and Nureyev appeared together in a film version of Swan Lake and Kenneth MacMillan's Romeo and Juliet, as well as Les Sylphides and the Le Corsaire Pas de Deux.

Despite their differences in background, temperament, and a nineteen-year difference in age, Nureyev and Fonteyn became close lifelong friends and were famously loyal to each other. Fonteyn would not approve an unflattering photograph of Nureyev. In 1967, they were arrested after a performance in San Francisco, when the police raided a Haight-Ashbury party to which they had been invited. They remained close even after she retired to a Panama cattle farm, talking on the phone several times a week even though her farmhouse did not have a telephone. When she was treated for cancer, Nureyev paid many of her medical bills and visited her often, despite his busy schedule as a performer and choreographer, as well as his own health problems (he was HIV positive and succumbed to AIDS in 1993). In a documentary about Fonteyn, Nureyev said that they danced with "one body, one soul" and that Margot was "all he had, only her." An observer said that "If most people are at level A, they were at level Z."

In the extremely competitive world of ballet, Fonteyn was renowned for her consummate professionalism and loyalty to her friends. Her dancing stood out for its lyricism, grace, and passion. Although Fonteyn was the Royal Ballet's biggest star, its director, Dame Ninette de Valois, cultivated other talents. The Royal Ballet of Fonteyn's day also included Nadia Nerina, Svetlana Beriosova, Lynn Seymour, and Antoinette Sibley.

Fonteyn also worked with the choreographer Roland Petit and later in life, Martha Graham. In 1949, the Royal Ballet toured the United States and Fonteyn became an instant celebrity.

Relationships

During the 1940s, Fonteyn had a long relationship with composer Constant Lambert which did not lead to marriage. In 1955, Fonteyn married Dr. Roberto de Arias, a Panamanian diplomat to London. For the first several years of the marriage, Fonteyn had to balance her career as a ballerina with her duties as the wife of a diplomat. The marriage began on unstable ground due to de Arias' reputation as a play boy and his reputed infidelities. Ultimately, Fonteyn came to be extremely loyal to her husband. She stayed committed to her marriage through life's trials. Fonteyn was arrested when her husband attempted a coup against the Panamanian government. In 1965, a rival Panamanian politician shot Arias, leaving him a quadriplegic for the rest of his life.

The cost of his medical care is a reason why Fonteyn's career lasted until 1979, her sixtieth year, despite her suffering from an arthritic foot. Upon her retirement, the Royal Ballet honoured her with the title prima ballerina assoluta. She ended her days in Panama, remaining loyal to Arias in part because she was very devoted to his children from an earlier marriage. Because Arias's medical bills drained her finances, the Royal Ballet held a special "gala" in 1990 for her benefit. Shortly after his death, she was diagnosed with a cancer that proved fatal.

A dramatic image of her performing Swan Lake at the Bath Festival, Bath, United Kingdom, was captured by British photographer Des Gershon, taken secretly from the high gallery of the Theatre Royal, Bath, as she danced with the corps de ballet on the day she heard that there had been an assassination attempt on the life of her husband. The stress, worry and pain is clearly shown in her face with the remarkable single frame of a moment in time. View the image at http://www.digitalrailroad.net/desegershon/Common/PhotoDetailPage.aspx?msa=0&pid=8431822&slid=d1c16cf9-d4e7-4ff2-b114-88e92a933020&slididx=0&lid=0&rstid=1e679b88-6b6d-485c-921c-c9ea90be23ea&aid=1 and also http://www.photographersdirect.com

Legacy

Fonteyn was knighted (made a dame) in 1954 at the age of 35.

She was chancellor of the University of Durham from 1981 to 1990. The main hall in the Student Union building, the Fonteyn Ballroom, is named after her.

Main roles

  • The Haunted Ballroom — Cinderella
  • Les Sylphides — Don Juan
  • Swan Lake — Sylvia
  • Apparitions — The Firebird
  • Aida — Birthday Offering
  • Nocturne — Ondine
  • Horoscope — Night Shadow
  • Pomona — Pelleas et Melisande
  • The judgement of Paris — Beauty and the Beast
  • The sleeping Beauty — Gayanch
  • Carnaval — The Dying Swan
  • Lysistrata — Romeo and Juliet
  • Giselle — Garden Party
  • A Wedding Bouquet — In Nightly Revels
  • The Wanderer — The Quest
  • Hamlet — Les Demoiselles de
  • The Fairy Queen — la nuit

Quotes

  • "The one important thing I have learned over the years is the difference between taking one's work seriously and taking one's self seriously. The first is imperative and the second is disastrous."
  • "Great artists are people who find the way to be themselves in their art. Any sort of pretension induces mediocrity in art and life alike."
  • "Life offstage has sometimes been a wilderness of unpredictables in an unchoreographed world."
  • "Genius is another word for magic, and the whole point of magic is that it is inexplicable."

Reference

  • Daneman, Meredith, 2004. Margot Fonteyn: A Life. New York: Viking. ISBN 0670843709
  • Fonteyn, Margot. 1976. Margot Fonteyn: autobiography. New York:Knopf. ISBN 039448570X
  • Bland, Alexander. 1979. Fonteyn and Nureyev the Story of a partnership. New York: Times Books. ISBN 0812908600
  • Batty, Peter, Robert Powell, Margot Fonteyn, and Rudolph Nureyev. 2005. Fonteyn and Nureyev the perfect partnership. West Long Branch, New Jersey: Kulture International Films. ISBN 0769779182

External links

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Preceded by:
Malcolm MacDonald
Chancellor of the University of Durham
1981–1990
Followed by:
Sir Peter Ustinov

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