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George Balanchine (January 22, 1904
April 30, 1983), born Giorgi Melitonis dze Balanchivadze in
Saint Petersburg, Russia, to Georgian parents,was one of the
20th century's foremost choreographers, a pioneer of ballet
in the United States, co-founder and balletmaster of New
York City Ballet: his work created modern ballet, based on
his deep knowledge of classical forms and techniques. He was
a choreographer known for his musicality; he did not
illustrate music but expressed it in dance and worked
extensively with Igor Stravinsky
Georgia
and Russia
Balanchine's father, noted Georgian
composer Meliton Balanchivadze (18621937), was one of the
founders of the Georgian Opera. George's brother, Andria
Balanchivadze (19061992), became a well-known Georgian
composer. As a child, Balanchine was not particularly
interested in ballet. However, his mother possessed a deep
love for the art and had the young Giorgi audition with his
sister, who shared her mother's passion for ballet. Since
his family was mostly comprised of composers and soldiers,
it was said that Balanchine could always follow family
tradition and enroll in the military if it turned out he
wasn't talented at dancing.
In 1913 (at age nine) Balanchine moved
from rural Finland to Saint Petersburg and was enrolled in
the Imperial Ballet School, principal school of the Imperial
Ballet, where he studied under Pavel Gerdt and Samuil
Andrianov (Pavel's son-in-law).With the victory of the
Bolsheviks in the revolution, the school was disbanded as an
offensive symbol of the Tsarist regime. To survive the
privation and martial law of this period, Balanchine played
the piano for food, not for money at cabarets and silent
movie theatres. Eventually the Imperial Ballet School
reopened with greatly reduced funding. After graduating with
honours in 1921, Balanchine enrolled in the Petrograd
Conservatory in tandem with his corps de ballet duties at
The State Academic Theatre for Opera and Ballet.In 1922 when
Balanchine was eighteen, he married Tamara Geva, a fifteen
year old dancer. His studies at the conservatory included
advanced piano, music theory, counterpoint, harmony, and
composition. Balanchine graduated from the conservatory in
1923, and he was a member of the corps until 1924.
While still in his teens, Balanchine
choreographed his first work, a pas de deux called La Nuit
(1920, music by Anton Rubinstein). This was followed by
another duet, Enigma, danced in bare feet. In 1923, with
fellow dancers, he formed a small ensemble, the Young
Ballet. The choreography proved too experimental for the new
authorities, who strongly encouraged the group to disband.
On a trip to Weimar Republic with the Soviet State Dancers,
Balanchine, Tamara Geva, Alexandra Danilova, and Nicholas
Efimov defected to the west and fled to Paris in 1924. Serge
Diaghilev, another Russian exile, asked Balanchine to join
his Ballets Russes as a choreographer.
Diaghilev soon promoted Balanchine to
balletmaster of the company and allowed him to develop his
own choreography. Between 1924 and Diaghilev's death in
1929, Balanchine created nine ballets, as well as smaller
choreographies. Unfortunately, he also suffered a serious
knee injury at this time, which limited his dancing and
effectively ended his performance career. In 1926 Balanchine
and Tamara Geva divorced. Shortly after, Balanchine
commenced a relationship with dancer Alexandra Danilova
which lasted a few years. After Diaghilev's death the
Ballets Russes fell into disarray. Balanchine began to stage
dances for the Cochran Revues in London, and was retained by
the Royal Danish Ballet in Copenhagen as guest ballet
master. He returned to the Ballets Russes when it settled in
Monte Carlo, resuming his post as ballet master for the new
Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo, and choreographed three
ballets: Cotillon, La Concurrence, and Le Bourgeois
Gentilhomme. His muse in Monte Carlo was the young Tamara
Toumanova, one of the original "Baby Ballerinas".
When René Blum passed control of the
company to Colonel W. de Basil, Balanchine again left the
Ballets Russes. This time he formed his own company, Les
Ballets 1933, with the financial backing of Edward James and
Diaghilev's former secretary and companion Boris Kochno as
an advisor. The company lasted only a couple of months in
1933, but in that time several new choreographies were
conceived by Balanchine, including artistic collaborations
with Bertolt Brecht, Kurt Weill, Pavel Tchelitchew, Darius
Milhaud, and Henri Sauget.
It was after a performance by Les Ballets
1933 that Lincoln Kirstein, an American arts patron with a
dream of establishing a ballet company in the U.S., met and
quickly persuaded Balanchine to move to the United States.
By October of that year, Balanchine had landed overseas for
the first time and launched his influence on the character
of American ballet and dance.
United
States
Architect Philip Johnson designed the New
York State Theater to the specifications of Balanchine
Upon arriving in the United States,
Balanchine insisted that his first project would be to
establish a ballet school. With the support of Lincoln
Kirstein and Edward M.M. Warburg, the School of American
Ballet opened its doors to students on January 2, 1934, less
than 3 months after Balanchine arrived in the U.S. The
students premiered Serenade at the Warburg's summer estate
later that year. During the 1930s and 1940s, in between his
ballet activities, Balanchine worked as a choreographer for
musical theater (with such notables as Richard Rodgers,
Lorenz Hart and Vernon Duke). He greatly admired Fred
Astaire, describing him as "the most interesting, the most
inventive, the most elegant dancer of our times... you see a
little bit of Astaire in everybody's dancinga pause here, a
move there. It was all Astaire originally."
In 1935, Balanchine formed a professional
company called the American Ballet. After failing to mount a
tour, the company began performing at the Metropolitan Opera
House. In 1936 Balanchine was able to stage only Orfeo and
Eurydice and in 1937 an evening of dance choreographed to
the music of Igor Stravinsky.
He moved the company to Hollywood in
1938. He rented a white two-story house with Kopeikine on
North Fairfax Avenue not far from Hollywood Boulevard. The
company reconvened as the American Ballet Caravan and toured
North and South America. It folded after several years. From
1944 to 1946, Balanchine served as resident choreographer
for the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo.
Soon he formed a new dance company, the
Ballet Society, again with the generous help of Lincoln
Kirstein. After it had several successful performances, and
unsuccessful ones, the New York City Center for Music and
Drama offered the company the position of resident company
at the center. With that arrangement, in 1948 Ballet Society
became the New York City Ballet. Balanchine's 1954 staging
of The Nutcracker, performed every year in New York City
during the Christmas season, has made the ballet a Christmas
tradition in the United States, and a money-making tradition
for most of the companies that perform it.
In the 1960s, Balanchine fell deeply in
love with the young dancer Suzanne Farrell. He created many
ballets for her, including Don Quixote (in which he played
the Don and Farrell danced Dulcinea), and the Diamonds
section of the ballet Jewels. Some ballerinas, including his
former wife Maria Tallchief, quit, citing Farrell as the
reason. Balanchine obtained a Mexican divorce from then-wife
Tanaquil Le Clercq, only to discover Farrell had married
NYCB dancer Paul Meija. In 1970 both Farrell and her husband
quit the company. They moved to Brussels and joined Maurice
Bejart's dance company. In 1975, Farrell returned to dance
with the NYCB.
In 1978, the first year of the new
national award, George Balanchine received the Kennedy
Center Honors Award.
In 1983 after years of illness,
Balanchine died of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, diagnosed only
after his death. He first showed symptoms in 1978 when he
began losing his balance while dancing. As the disease
progressed, his equilibrium, eyesight and hearing
deteriorated. By 1982 he was incapacitated. He died the
following year at the age of 79 in New York City, NY, USA.
In his last years, Balanchine also suffered from angina and
underwent heart bypass surgery.
After his divorce from Tamara Geva,
Balanchine married and divorced three more times. All his
wives were dancers, women who were his muses: Vera Zorina
(December 19381946), Maria Tallchief (19461952), and
Tanaquil LeClerq (19521969), as was his girlfriend,
Alexandra Danilova (19261933). He had no children.
ჯორჯ
ბალანჩინი
ჯორჯ
ბალანჩინი (ინგლ.
George Balanchine,
ნამდვილი სახელი
გიორგი
მელიტონის
ძე
ბალანჩივაძე) (დ.
9 იანვარი/22
იანვარი, 1904,
პეტერბურგი
გ. 30
აპრილი, 1983,
ნიუ-იორკი),
წარმოშობით
ქართველი
ამერიკელი
ბალეტმაისტერი,
ამერიკის
კლასიკური
ბალეტის
ფუძემდებელი,
მელიტონ
ბალანჩივაძის
შვილი.
1921 წელს
დაამთავრა
პეტროგრადის
მარიინსკის
თეატრთან
არსებული
თეატრალური
სასწავლებელი (პედაგოგი
პ.
გერდტი,
ს.
ანდრიანოვი), 1923
პეტროგრადის
კონსერვატორია.
19211924 პეტროგრადის
ოპერისა
და
ბალეტის
აკადემიური
თეატრის
მსახიობი
იყო.
ამავე
წლებში
დადგა
ცეკვები
სპექტაკლებში ოქროს
მამალი (ნ.
რიმსკი-კორსაკოვი),
უიღბლო
ეუგენი (ტოლერის
ამავე
სახელწოდების
პიესა). 1923
ხელმძღვანელობდა
პეტროგრადის ახალგაზრდა
ბალეტს,
რომლის
შემადგენლობაში
შედიოდნენ
რუსული
ბალეტის
გამოჩენილი
მოღვაწეები (ლ.
ლავროვსკი,
პ.
გუსევი,
ი.
სლონიმსკი
და
სხვები). 1924-იდან
ცხოვრობდა
საზღვარგარეთ.
19251929 იყო
პარიზის ს.
დიაგილევის
რუსული
საბალეტო
დასის
მთავარი
ბალეტმაისტერი.
1932 ფრანფული
საბალეტო
დასების ბალე
რიუს
დე
მონტე
კარლოს
და ბალე
1933-ის
ბალეტმაისტერი.
1933 მიიწვიეს
აშშ-ში,
სადაც
შექმნა ამერიკული
საბალეტო
სკოლა,
რომლის
საფუძველზეც
ჩამოყალიბდა
დასი (1948-იდან
ნიუ-იორკ
სიტი
ბალე).
ბალანჩინს
დადგმული
აქვს 160-ზე
მეტი
საბალეტო
სპექტაკლი
ბუენოს-აირესის,
კოპენჰაგენის,
ლონდონის,
მილანის
და
სხვა
ქალაქების
თეატრებში.
მისი
საუკეთესო
დადგმებია:
ს.
პროკოფიევის უძღები
შვილი (1928),
ი.
სტრავინსკის აპოლონ
მუსაგეტი (1928),
ორფევსი (1948),
აგონი (1957), ბროლის
სასახლე (ჟ.
ბიზეს
მუსიკის
მიხედვით, 1941), ბალე
იმპერიალი (პ.
ჩაიკოვსკის
მუსიკის
მიხედვით, 1941)
და
სხვა.
ავტორია
წიგნისა ცნობილი
ბალეტების
დაწვრილებითი
აღწერა (ინგლისურ
ენაზე).
ბალანჩინი მთელ
მსოფლიოში
აღიარებულია
თანამედროვეობის
უდიდეს
ქორეოგრაფად.
თავდაპირველად
დგამდა
სიუჟეტიან,
ხოლო
შემდეგ
უსიუჟეტო,
ე.
წ.
აბსტრაქტულ
ბალეტებს.
მის
მიერ
დადგმული
ბალეტების
უმრავლესობა
ერთაქტიანია.
მისი
შემოქმედების
ძირითადი
პრინციპია
მახვილი
ქორეოგრაფიული
მონახაზის,
ხატოვანი,
რთული
მოძრაობების
მეოხებით
მუსიკა
გახადოს
ხილვადი.
ბალანჩინის
ხელოვნებამ
ხელი
შეუწყო
ქორეოგრაფიის
ახალ
მიმართულებების
ფორმირებას.
ბალანჩინის
ხელმძღვანელობით ნიუ-იორკ
სიტი
ბალე
საგასტროლოდ
ორჯერ
იყო
ყოფილ
სსრკ-ში
(1962, 1972). სპექტაკლები
გამართა
თბილისშიც.
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