Tamara Karsavina - Frognal, Hampstead, London, UK
Posted by: Groundspeak Regular Member Master Mariner
N 51° 33.441 W 000° 10.919
30U E 695342 N 5715571
This English Heritage blue plaque shows that the ballerina, Tamara Karsavina, "lived here". The plaque is attached to a building on the south east side of Frognal in Hampstead, London.
Waymark Code: WMWCWQ
Location: London, United Kingdom
Date Posted: 08/15/2017
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member Norfolk12
Views: 0

The wording on the English Heritage blue plaque reads:

English Heritage

Tamara
Karsavina
1885 - 1978
Ballerina
lived here

The Encyclopaedia Britannica website has an article about Tamara Karsavina that tells us:

Tamara Platonovna Karsavina, (born March 9/10, 1885, St. Petersburg, Russia—died May 26, 1978, Beaconsfield, Buckinghamshire, Eng.), Anglo-Russian ballerina whose partnership with Vaslav Nijinsky in Michel Fokine’s avant-garde ballets helped to revive interest in ballet in western Europe.

The daughter of a famous dancer, Platon Karsavin, she was educated at the Imperial Ballet School, St. Petersburg, under such teachers as Cecchetti, Christian Johansson, and Paul Gerdt, graduating in 1902. As ballerina at the Mariinsky Theatre she included in her repertoire Giselle and Odette-Odile in Swan Lake. Karsavina is best known as the leading ballerina of Serge Diaghilev’s Ballets Russes from its beginning in 1909 until 1922. Between 1909 and 1914 (paired with Nijinsky until 1913) she created the majority of famous roles in Fokine’s Neoromantic repertoire, including Les Sylphides, Le Spectre de la Rose, Carnaval, Firebird, Petrushka, and Thamar. She also created leading roles in Léonide Massine’s The Three-Cornered Hat and Pulcinella. She came out of semiretirement in the early 1930s to revive some of her more famous roles for the Ballet Rambert and to create new ones for Frederick Ashton.

After marrying the English diplomat Henry James Bruce, Karsavina went to London (1918), where she helped found the Royal Academy of Dancing (1920), for which she organized the Teachers’ Training Course and the Camargo Society (1930). She also coached Margot Fonteyn. Her writings include articles on technique for the journal Dancing Times, her autobiography Theatre Street (1930), and the text Classical Ballet: The Flow of Movement (1962).

Blue Plaque managing agency: English Heritage

Individual Recognized: Tamara Karsavina

Physical Address:
108 Frognal
Hampstead
London, United Kingdom
NW3 6XU


Web Address: [Web Link]

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