Nureyev: His Life

Amazon.com Price: $19.85 (as of 10/11/2019 11:18 PST- Details)

Description

Complete with hundreds of photographs, this intimate biography of the legendary dancer presents the life of the famous artist in great detail, through a lot of interviews with his family, friends, colleagues, and lovers. 50,000 first printing.
From the moment of his birth aboard a train speeding through Stalinist Russia, until his death of AIDS in 1993, Rudolf Nureyev looked as if it would commute through life at the velocity of a triple pirouette. His professional accomplishments are stunning. Despite starting his ballet training much later most dancers, Nureyev won a coveted spot at the famous Maryinsky (later the Kirov) ballet school in St. Petersburg and went on to transform one of the crucial company’s favorite dancers. By the end of his first year in the West–in 1961 he became the first Soviet dancer to defect when he stayed in Paris after the rest of the Kirov returned to the united statesS.R–he had performed with the major ballet companies in both Europe and the United States, and formed his legendary partnership with British dancer Dame Margot Fonteyn. He reinvigorated contemporary ballet, particularly the importance of male dancers, by energizing his favorite traditional roles with unrestrained sexuality and unparalleled technical virtuosity. His personal life was equally full. He carried on affairs with women and men alike–most notable among these was his intense, decades-long involvement with his professional idol Erik Bruhn and his penchant for sexy young call-boys. He hung out at Studio 54 and crisscrossed the Atlantic with his socialite friends, but he also made time to mentor talented young dancers, including Paris Opera Ballet star Sylvie Guillem.

Biographer Diane Solway, who wrote Dance Against Time, a biography of Joffrey Ballet dancer Edward Sterle, has produced an exhaustively comprehensive report on Nureyev’s life. The book’s most important accomplishment is that it succeeds in correcting the various myths that still cloak the story of Nureyev’s life–she credibly suggests, for instance, that his defection was not premeditated. The flamboyant dancer, known to wear jeweled jock straps, was responsible for propagating many of the stories that grew up around him. He published a ghostwritten autobiography rife with inaccuracies in the early ’60s, and much of the information about his first 20 or so years in the Soviet Union has remained inaccessible until very recently. Solway traveled to Russia to piece together her subject’s early life with recently declassified documents and interviews with his friends, family, and even a couple of detractors. She also drew from another rare book, Rudolf Nureyev: Three Years in the Kirov Theater. The result is a biography that objectively addresses the facts and fictions of an ordinary life to create a vivid and balanced portrait.


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