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TIME: Almanac 1995
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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>