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L. Roosen. Photograph of Nijinsky in Giselle,
Paris, 1910. Roger Pryor Dodge Collection, Jerome Robbins
Dance Division, The New York Public Library for the Performing
Arts
Jean Cocteau. Poster for the 1911 Ballet
Russe season showing Nijinsky in costume for Le Spectre
de la Rose, Paris, 1911. Jerome Robbins Dance Division, The
New York Public Library for the Performing Arts
At the turn of the 20th century, most of the
ballet companies in Europe maintained a similar repertory of full-evening,
plotted works. Mikhail Fokine had attempted to revolutionize the
Imperial Ballet at the Maryinsky by creating short, un-related
ballets that could be grouped for an evening’s entertainment.
The management of the Imperial Ballet did not support him, but
Diaghilev did and adopted the practice of programming shorter,
separate works. Today, most ballet and even modern dance performance
follows this format. The impressario’s decision meant that
most of the works that Nijinsky performed were created specifically
for him – by Fokine or by Nijinsky himself. The only work
from the 19th century standard repertory was Giselle,
as staged and revised by Fokine for Nijinsky and his frequent
partner, Tamara Karsavina.
The Fokine works for Nijinsky, as documented
in photography, can be divided into two groups. One set refers
to the 19th century traditions of ballet and romance. His Pavillon
d’Armide, Les Sylphides, and Spectre de la Rose are
reflections of the mid-century Romantic ballet’s concern
with dreamers and the ideals that appear to them. Le Spectre
de la Rose reverses the usual theme by showing that a woman’s
dreams can elicit the spirit of the Rose.
Although those works were admired (and Les
Sylphides became standard repertory), the reputation of the
Ballets Russes was based on the other Fokine repertory –
the works inspired by Orientalism. Nijinsky’s power and
clarity of movement can be seen in the photographs of Les
Orientales, Le Dieu Bleu and, especially, Schéhérazade.
Ballet audiences were shocked and delighted by the poses based
on dance traditions from Asia, Persia and archaic Greece. The
colors and patterns used in Leon Bakst’s decors changed
the palette of art and fashion in Western Europe and the United
States. They make the gallery dance – we can only imagine
the impact on the audience.
Arthur Grunenberg. Etching of
Nijinsky in Schéhérazade, Berlin, undated.
Jerome Robbins Dance Division, The New York Public Library
for the Performing Arts
The abiding masterpiece of the Diaghilev/Fokine/Nijinsky
collaboration is Petrouchka, to a score by Igor Stravinsky
and scenario by designer Alexandre Benois (1911). It plays with
issues of life and death, stage fantasy and reality, while seeming
to present authentic Russian folk culture. Set at a Russian Fair,
crowds shop, socialize and gather to be entertained by the Charlatan’s
three puppets – a Moor, a Ballerina and Petrouchka, Nijinsky’s
role. The second and third scenes take place inside the booth
theater, where the puppets come to life. Their romantic triangle
results in the Moor chasing Petrouchka to the front of the booth,
but before the audience sees his slaughter, the activity of the
fair fills the stage. Finally, to the shock of both the on-stage
and real audience, the Moor kills Petrouchka. As the crowds disperse,
he briefly returns to life to terrify the Charlatan. Nijinsky
elicited acclaim and awe for his ability to portray a puppet with
enough spirit to defy death. Photographs of this role show him
inhabiting the role, not disguised by the makeup.
Dover Street Studio. Photograph
of Nijinsky in Petrouchka, London, 1911.Roger Pryor
Dodge Collection, Jerome Robbins Dance Division, The New York
Public Library for the Performing Arts
Mishkin. Photograph of Nijinsky
in Petrouchka, New York, 1916.
Roger Pryor Dodge Collection, Jerome Robbins Dance Division,
The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts