Book review: Irina Baronova and the Ballets Russes de Monte Carlo

Country Life's dance critic reviews Irina Baronova and the Ballets Russes de Monte Carlo, a new book by Victoria Tennant.

y74UWRWXpQnHqY79sYs6Xo.jpg

Irina Baronova and the Ballets Russes de Monte Carlo Victoria Tennant (University of Chicago Press, £38.50 *£32.50)

It reads like a fairy tale. In 1931, a pretty Russian student named Irina Baronova was plucked out of a ballet studio in Paris and thrust into a brand-new company run by a former Cossack. She was 12 years old. Within months she was dancing leading roles alongside experienced performers and two other gifted teenagers. The three girls were called “the baby ballerinas.”

After Baronova’s death in 2008, her daughter, the actress Victoria Tennant, organized her mother’s letters and photographs into this splendid memoir of her extraordinary career. Tennant’s straightforward comments tie the chronological narrative together; Baronova’s incisive observations flood it with her personality and impudent style.

Though the great artists who inspired her and the ballets that brought her stardom have largely been forgotten, during the 1930s they sustained classical ballet’s finest standards and secured its future. Five-month tours of one-night stands crisscrossed America and Canada, which had no ballet companies of their own. Dazzling choreography by Balanchine, Fokine and Léonide Massine attracted the London audience Diaghilev had developed; the 1937 season of this new Ballets Russes broke Covent Garden box-office records.

A natural chameleon onstage, Baronova became ethereal, saucy or dramatic at will, a lyrical swan or a mischievous soubrette. Her interpretive range shines from these photographs, and her voice vividly illuminates her private and public history in the world she inhabited with such dedication. “The first time I had to join a union,” she wrote, “was with [American] Ballet Theatre [in 1941]…and none of us could understand, how can you be an artist and do creative work and look at the clock all the time?”

When she and her remarkable colleagues represented ballet to the public, artistry produced celebrity, not the other way around. This elegant, informative book documents the path of a memorable dancer from anonymity to international acclaim.

To order any of the books reviewed or any other book in print, at discount prices* and with free p&p to UK addresses, telephone the Country Life Bookshop on Bookshop 0843 060 0023. Or send a cheque/postal order to the Country Life Bookshop, PO Box 60, Helston TR13 0TP. Alternatively visit www.countrylife.co.uk/bookshop

Country Life

Ballet review: Juliet and Romeo

Sadlers Wells’ Northern Light season celebrates Nordic culture. Barbara Newman reviews Juliet and Romeo, the Royal Swedish Ballet's adaptation of

the best shows to see this Christmas

Credit: Johan Persson

The best shows to see this Christmas

From traditional ballet to contemporary dance, we round up the best shows to see this Christmas.

Barbara Newman has been Country Life’s dance critic since 1990. In her latest book, Never Far from Dancing (Routledge, 2014), she talks to renowned dancers about their professional progress. Her bestselling children’s book, The Illustrated Book of Ballet Stories (Dorling Kindersley, 1997), is a triple award winner that has been translated into eight languages. She covers musical theatre for the Dancing Times (www.dancing-times.co.uk) and is now the UK editor of www.dancemag.dk.