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- <text id=93TT2303>
- <title>
- Jan. 18, 1993: Rudolf Nureyev:1938-1993
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Jan. 18, 1993 Fighting Back: Spouse Abuse
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- CULTURE, Page 56
- Two Who Transformed Their Worlds
- Rudolf Nureyev 1938-1993
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By MARTHA DUFFY
- </p>
- <p> He went down defiantly, all guns firing. Until the very
- end of his long struggle with AIDS, Rudolf Nureyev continued to
- live ravenously, leading an amazingly active life, conducting
- when he could no longer dance, continuing to travel the world,
- transforming his beloved private island off Italy's Amalfi
- coast as if he would be able to live there for decades. Above
- all, working. When he died last week at 54, the world of the
- performing arts mourned him as not only a great dancer but also
- a rare source of energy in artistic life.
- </p>
- <p> He was the first of the postwar ballet superstars, vastly
- increasing the dance audience. It is no exaggeration to say he
- burst upon the West, defecting in Paris at age 23 after being
- ordered back to the U.S.S.R. in the middle of a Kirov Ballet
- tour. His partnership with Margot Fonteyn, prima ballerina of
- London's Royal Ballet, was the most famous of the century: her
- ineffable femininity, his feral grace. She called him "a young
- lion leaping," and wild he was. His tempers were fearsome, his
- demands insatiable. Unwilling to settle with one company, he put
- no limits on his own worth, and in demanding outsize fees and
- extras, he pointed the way to wealth for other dancers.
- </p>
- <p> He was born hungry. His parents were Tartar peasants from
- Ufa, in Bashkir near the Ural Mountains. "Our Tartar blood runs
- faster," he wrote later, "always ready to boil." Especially
- during World War II his parents and three sisters and he faced
- extreme privation, living in one room with two other families.
- From age six, when he saw his first dance performance, he was
- obsessed by movement. His father hoped his bright son would
- become a doctor or an engineer.
- </p>
- <p> Against the odds, he clawed his way to Leningrad and the
- Kirov school at age 17--very late to start serious classical
- training. His sheer will and magnetism won the day. Perhaps
- because he began by playing catch-up, Nureyev was not considered
- a natural dancer. He was blessed with a high leap and, in
- addition to athletic vigor, the noble, generous moves that are
- nearly impossible to teach. But he lacked, say, the sublime
- coordination of Mikhail Baryshnikov, and he had to work hard for
- his technique; a former colleague recalls that he was always
- looking for someone to teach him how to turn.
- </p>
- <p> Fonteyn spotted him quickly after his 1961 defection. His
- entry into the Royal Ballet is legendary. No one had ever seen
- anyone of his primitive, utterly uncompromising power, and they
- were awestruck. For Fonteyn it was an extension of a great
- career. For the well-mannered, well-schooled dancers it was a
- shock. "He was more than temperamental," recalls American Ballet
- Theater ballet mistress Georgina Parkinson, then a soloist with
- the Royal. "But when he staged La Bayadere, he came to us as a
- dancer. He understood our shortcomings and was tireless in
- helping us and broadening our horizons." That was with the
- women. To Royal's men, Nureyev was nearly a catastrophe. He took
- over everything, and other promising careers never fully
- developed. Later, when Baryshnikov came West, Nureyev was to
- know similar emotions. The world was, in fact, big enough for
- two Soviet superstars, but the blazing of a younger version of
- his own career was not easy for him.
- </p>
- <p> Nureyev danced everywhere in a huge variety of roles, from
- the full-length classics to modern works by Martha Graham, Paul
- Taylor and Maurice Bejart, among many others. During the '70s
- his plasticity began to decline, robbing his performances of
- their wonderful flow. By the '80s the problem had become
- severe, but despite the advice of friends and critics he would
- not quit. He was not, however, just a nomad. In 1983 he became
- artistic director of the Paris Opera Ballet for six colorful
- years. Again his temperament made headlines, but Nureyev gave
- the company a professionalism it had virtually forgotten and
- nurtured the careers of young dancers who are now stars, among
- them Sylvie Guillem, Patrick Dupond, Charles Jude and Elisabeth
- Platel. As Royal's dancers had learned years before, when it
- came to teaching, he was direct, intelligent and tireless.
- </p>
- <p> He enjoyed his immense success. Since his teens, he had
- haunted museums, and his taste in art and furnishings was regal
- and excellent. In New York City his base was an opulent
- apartment in the Dakota; in Paris, an even grander flat on the
- Quai Voltaire. Both places became salons whenever he was in
- town; he loved flamboyant people. The Italian island of Li Galli
- appealed to him because it not only had been owned by the
- Russian choreographer Leonid Massine but also had been
- previously visited by Ulysses: it is the legendary home of the
- Sirens.
- </p>
- <p> On Oct. 8 he made his final appearance on the stage of the
- Palais Garnier, home of the Paris Opera Ballet, after a
- performance of his staging of La Bayadere. He needed dancers'
- support to stay upright. He was gaunt and emaciated, but the
- style was defiantly intact--he was swathed in a huge
- gold-and-scarlet cape--and so was the fiery heroism.
- </p>
-
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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