City Libraries, City of Gold Coast

Margot Fonteyn, Meredith Daneman

Label
Margot Fonteyn, Meredith Daneman
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references and index
resource.biographical
individual biography
Illustrations
platesillustrations
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Margot Fonteyn
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
56652410
Responsibility statement
Meredith Daneman
Review
"The legend of Margot Fonteyn has touched every ballerina who has come after her and her genius endures in the memory of anyone who saw her dance. Yet until now, the complete story of her life has remained untold. Meredith Daneman, a novelist and herself a former dancer, reveals the fascinating story of Peggy Hookham, a little girl from suburban England who grew up to become a Dame of the British Empire and the most famous ballerina in the world. More than ten years of interviews and research, including exclusive access to Fonteyn's and her mother's never-before-seen diaries and letters, come together to create this definitive biography that sheds light on aspects of Fonteyn's life and career that have hitherto remained secret." "Fonteyn claimed to have had her first experience of flying when she was three years old, little knowing that she would be doing just that in front of audiences for most of her life.^From the age of four, she devoted herself to the technique of ballet with a single-minded focus extraordinary in a young girl. Having a forceful, ambitious Irish/Latina mother helped, as did the fierce devotion and support of Ninette de Valois, the founder of the Sadler's Wells Ballet and Fonteyn's early champion. Through years of grueling training, Fonteyn would perfect her craft and fulfill her destiny, becoming England's beloved prima ballerina and enchanting audiences the world over with her legendary performances as Odette in Swan Lake, Stravinsky's Firebird and Princess Aurora in The Sleeping Beauty, the role that brought her celebrity in America." "As the author states in her introduction, Fonteyn's heart deeply colored her dancing and was as important a part of her success as her technique.^Daneman explores Fonteyn's emotional life with a nuanced and perceptive understanding, including her intense connection to her mother, the "Black Queen"; her loves in bohemian thirties and forties London; her relationship with her balletic Svengali, Frederick Ashton; her affair with composer Constant Lambert and rumored affair with Rudolf Nureyev; and her final years in Panama with her beloved husband, Roberto Arias."--Jacket
Target audience
adult
Classification
Content
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