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Marie Rambert

Dame Marie Rambert, Mrs Dukes DBE (20 February 1888 – 12 June 1982) was a Polish-born English dancer and pedagogue who exerted great influence on British ballet, both as a dancer and teacher.


Marie Rambert

Marie Rambert in 1948
Born
Cyvia Rambam

(1888-02-20)20 February 1888
Warsaw, Congress Poland, Russian Empire
Died12 June 1982(1982-06-12) (aged 94)
NationalityPolish
British
Occupation(s)Ballerina and dance pedagogue
Years active1912–1979
Known forFounder of Ballet Rambert, now Rambert Dance Company
Spouse(s)Ashley Dukes (1918–1959; his death); 2 daughters

Early years and background Edit

Born to a liberal Lithuanian Jewish family in Warsaw, Congress Poland, she was originally named Cyvia (Cesia) Rambam. Her father and two of his brothers later changed their last names to make them seem only children in order to escape military service in the Imperial Russian Army;[1][2] and so, while one brother retained the name Rambam, her father changed his to Ramberg, another of his brothers went to Rambert, and the last changed his name to Warszawski. She changed her name to Myriam Ramberg, and finally left it in the French form Marie Rambert. In later years she was known to friends and dancers as Mim.

Her father, Yakov Ramberg (1855–1928), born in Vištytis, a small town in Suwałki Governorate (nowadays in Lithuania), was a learned merchant and Hebrew publisher and lexicographer, and a Zionist. Her mother, Eiga Ramberg (née Lap), born in the town of Suchowola (nowadays in north-east Poland), daughter of Rabbi Elhanan Tzvi Lap, was a community worker.[3]

Rambert was the fourth of seven children. The eldest child, Rakhel, was the wife of Hebrew writer Micha Josef Berdyczewski. The second, Ewa Ramberg-Figulla, was a Slavist, the wife of German Hittitologist Hugo Heinrich Figulla and mother of physicist Johannes Figulla[4] (father-in-law of German writer Christoph Hein and grandfather of German writer Jakob Hein).

Rambert met her husband Ashley Dukes, a soldier on leave, at a dinner party in 1917. In Rambert's autobiography she says "after four days of personal meetings, and seven months of correspondence we were married on 3 March 1918."[5] This was done partly as a joke so that Dukes could get four weeks of extended leave instead of two days. Their marriage lasted 41 years, until he died in 1959; the couple had two daughters, Angela (1920–2006) and Helena.[citation needed] The poet, Aidan Andrew Dun, is her grandson.

Training Edit

Rambert began her dance training in her schooling early on. Subjects like foreign languages and history seemed to come easy; however she was a restless child and ended up getting bad marks because of her endless movements during class. At one point in her early training her dance instructor stated that 'In her, was the true spirit of dance.'[6] She was unimpressed with the structure and performance of ballet, and was not drawn into dance as a passion until she became enthralled by Isadora Duncan when she attended one of Duncan's performances, and was 'profoundly moved by the beauty of Duncan's dance.'[7]

In 1905, after becoming active in political riots, and the tragic day of May Day, Rambert's parents urged her at one point to move to Paris and take up medicine while safely living with her aunt and uncle who were also doctors. She attended a party where she danced a mazurka and danced it with such liveliness that there was applause afterwards; this was her first performance, whether she thought it or not. She met Raymond Duncan, brother of Isadora, at this same party, who congratulated her on a wonderful performance, and again she was back into her passion for dance. She studied with Madame Rat from the Paris Opera, and later studied with Émile Jaques-Dalcroze, at Dalcroze College who introduced her to eurhythmics.[8]

One day at the Dalcroze College, Sergei Diaghilev, watched a class and then asked her to come back to Berlin and study with him in the Ballets Russes. There, Rambert aided them with figuring out Igor Stravinsky's The Rite of Spring with Vaslav Nijinsky. She hesitantly accepted and collaborated with the Ballets Russes led by Diaghilev from 1912 to 1913.[citation needed] In Ballets Russes she was in the corps de ballet for ballet performances such as Swan Lake, Giselle, and Scheherazade. After a tour with Nijinsky and Ballets Russes, Rambert's contract was not continued and she decided it was time for a new chapter. In 1914 she moved to the United Kingdom, and studied under Enrico Cecchetti.[9]

Ballet Rambert Edit

 
Blue plaque, 19 Campden Hill Gardens, London

After studying with Cecchetti, she went back to study with Madame Rat at the Paris Opera, and took her studies quite seriously. She began teaching more ballet classes in 1919 and later founded her own ballet school in Bedford Gardens. In 1926 she created her own company, originally named Ballet Club. It has been through many name changes, much like Rambert herself. The company began performing at night revues in London. The first informal show was performed in Riverside Nights at the Lyric Theatre, and continued with the nightly revues for a while. She began finding new and promising dancers and choreographers in numerous places, such as Frederick Ashton, to be a part of her company and gave them a chance to grow. From Marie Rambert Dancers, the company changed to Ballet Rambert , later Rambert Dance Company, and from 2014 just named Rambert, a contemporary dance company which tours internationally. It dates its birth to the first performance of Frederick Ashton's A Tragedy of Fashion (1926),[10] making it the first ballet company in Britain.

Ashley Dukes, Marie's husband, renovated a building and made it into Mercury Theatre, where the majority of Ballet Rambert's performance occurred. It was said that 'Notting Hill Gate, where the Mercury Theatre stood, was on the slopes of Olympus'.[11] Ballet Rambert has performed such ballets as Coppelia, as well as Balanchine's Night Shadow.[12]

Rambert was adamant about finding new and upcoming choreographers. Some of her students and later her colleagues included Ashton, Antony Tudor, and Agnes de Mille, to name a few. In 1965 Rambert, with the help of "Norman Morrice, her newest discovery, completely reorganized the company to stress modern dance".[13] The repertoire of the company eventually came back to more contemporary ballets, but still has a vast list of pieces that the company has performed throughout the years. She cooperated with Millicent Hodson,[14] to restore Nijinsky's choreography of The Rite of Spring in 1979. The restoration of choreography was completed in 1987. Rambert is known for helping to create and keep the ballet community strong in Britain. "The creation of Ballet in Britain is one of the grandest achievements in the artistic annals of our century. It is owed absolutely to the idealism which fired Rambert and Ninette de Valois",[15] the founder of The Royal Ballet. She was the subject of This Is Your Life in 1962 when she was surprised by Eamonn Andrews at the Mercury Theatre, Notting Hill Gate.[citation needed]

Death Edit

She died on 12 June 1982 and was cremated at Golders Green Crematorium on 17 June. Her ashes are within the Cloister Walk in section B.

Honours Edit

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c d Rebecca Katz Harwood, "Marie Rambert," Jewish Women's Archive's Jewish Women: A Comprehensive Historical Encyclopedia.
  2. ^ "Marie Rambert," in: Adrian Room, Dictionary of Pseudonyms, 5th ed., Jefferson, NC: McFarland, 2010, p. 396. This was not an uncommon practice among Jews in the Russian Empire.
  3. ^ "Ramberg, Eiga," in: Sefer Halshim: Lexicon Eretzyisra'eli, Tel Aviv: Masada, 5697 [1937], p. 2023. (Hebrew)
  4. ^ Avner Holtzman, An Image Before my Eyes, Tel Aviv: Am Oved (Ofakim), 2001, pp. 29–33, 240 (Hebrew). Rambert had a third older Sister, Wella Alapin; younger twin siblings, Hanan and Dvora; and another young brother, Eliezer (Julius) (ibid).
  5. ^ Marie Rambert, "Quicksilver: Autobiography" (London: St Martin's Press, 1972), p. 94. ISBN 978-0333347119
  6. ^ Mary Clark and Marie Rambert "Dancers of Mercury; the story of Ballet Rambert" (London, A & C Black, 1962), p. 15.
  7. ^ Marie Rambert, "Quicksilver", page 24.
  8. ^ Nijinska, Bronislava (1981). Nijinska, Irina (ed.). Bronislava Nijinska: Early Memoirs (1st ed.). New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston. pp. 454–455. ISBN 0-03-020951-X.
  9. ^ Jane Pritchard, "Rambert: A Celebration of the Company’s First Seventy Years" (London, Rambert Dance Company 1996), pp. 13–20.
  10. ^ "Infographic on Rambert early history". Rambert.org.uk. 2017. Retrieved 15 October 2018.
  11. ^ Jane Pritchard, "Celebration", p. 12.
  12. ^ "Rambert Performance Database". Rambert. 15 October 2018. Retrieved 15 October 2018.
  13. ^ Jack Anderson,"Ballet and Modern Dance: A Concise History", (Princeton, New Jersey Book Company, 1986), p. 185. ISBN 0916622428 and ISBN 0916622436
  14. ^ "Millicent Hodson, Choreographer and Lecturer | Dance Consortium". 22 August 2005.
  15. ^ Jane Pritchard, "Celebration", p. 16.
  16. ^ "No. 39863". The London Gazette (Supplement). 1 June 1953. p. 2955.
  17. ^ QEII Coronation Award 19 October 2016 at the Wayback Machine; accessed 16 October 2016.
  18. ^ United Kingdom list: "No. 42552". The London Gazette. 29 December 1961. p. 10.

Bibliography Edit

  • Marie Rambert (1972). Quicksilver: Autobiography. London: St. Martin's Press. ISBN 0-333-08942-1.
  • Clement Crisp (1981). Ballet Rambert: 50 Years and on. London, Ballet Rambert. p. 111. ISBN 0-9505478-1-6.

External links Edit

  • Marie Rambert Collection, 1890s–1980s
  • London Gazette notice of damehood for Marie Rambert, Mrs Dukes (1962); accessed 17 May 2014.
  • Rebecca Katz Harwood, "Marie Rambert," Jewish Women's Archive's Jewish Women: A Comprehensive Historical Encyclopedia

marie, rambert, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, 2014, learn. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Marie Rambert news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message Dame Marie Rambert Mrs Dukes DBE 20 February 1888 12 June 1982 was a Polish born English dancer and pedagogue who exerted great influence on British ballet both as a dancer and teacher DameMarie RambertDBEMarie Rambert in 1948BornCyvia Rambam 1888 02 20 20 February 1888Warsaw Congress Poland Russian EmpireDied12 June 1982 1982 06 12 aged 94 NationalityPolish BritishOccupation s Ballerina and dance pedagogueYears active1912 1979Known forFounder of Ballet Rambert now Rambert Dance CompanySpouse s Ashley Dukes 1918 1959 his death 2 daughters Contents 1 Early years and background 2 Training 3 Ballet Rambert 4 Death 5 Honours 6 See also 7 References 8 Bibliography 9 External linksEarly years and background EditBorn to a liberal Lithuanian Jewish family in Warsaw Congress Poland she was originally named Cyvia Cesia Rambam Her father and two of his brothers later changed their last names to make them seem only children in order to escape military service in the Imperial Russian Army 1 2 and so while one brother retained the name Rambam her father changed his to Ramberg another of his brothers went to Rambert and the last changed his name to Warszawski She changed her name to Myriam Ramberg and finally left it in the French form Marie Rambert In later years she was known to friends and dancers as Mim Her father Yakov Ramberg 1855 1928 born in Vistytis a small town in Suwalki Governorate nowadays in Lithuania was a learned merchant and Hebrew publisher and lexicographer and a Zionist Her mother Eiga Ramberg nee Lap born in the town of Suchowola nowadays in north east Poland daughter of Rabbi Elhanan Tzvi Lap was a community worker 3 Rambert was the fourth of seven children The eldest child Rakhel was the wife of Hebrew writer Micha Josef Berdyczewski The second Ewa Ramberg Figulla was a Slavist the wife of German Hittitologist Hugo Heinrich Figulla and mother of physicist Johannes Figulla 4 father in law of German writer Christoph Hein and grandfather of German writer Jakob Hein Rambert met her husband Ashley Dukes a soldier on leave at a dinner party in 1917 In Rambert s autobiography she says after four days of personal meetings and seven months of correspondence we were married on 3 March 1918 5 This was done partly as a joke so that Dukes could get four weeks of extended leave instead of two days Their marriage lasted 41 years until he died in 1959 the couple had two daughters Angela 1920 2006 and Helena citation needed The poet Aidan Andrew Dun is her grandson Training EditRambert began her dance training in her schooling early on Subjects like foreign languages and history seemed to come easy however she was a restless child and ended up getting bad marks because of her endless movements during class At one point in her early training her dance instructor stated that In her was the true spirit of dance 6 She was unimpressed with the structure and performance of ballet and was not drawn into dance as a passion until she became enthralled by Isadora Duncan when she attended one of Duncan s performances and was profoundly moved by the beauty of Duncan s dance 7 In 1905 after becoming active in political riots and the tragic day of May Day Rambert s parents urged her at one point to move to Paris and take up medicine while safely living with her aunt and uncle who were also doctors She attended a party where she danced a mazurka and danced it with such liveliness that there was applause afterwards this was her first performance whether she thought it or not She met Raymond Duncan brother of Isadora at this same party who congratulated her on a wonderful performance and again she was back into her passion for dance She studied with Madame Rat from the Paris Opera and later studied with Emile Jaques Dalcroze at Dalcroze College who introduced her to eurhythmics 8 One day at the Dalcroze College Sergei Diaghilev watched a class and then asked her to come back to Berlin and study with him in the Ballets Russes There Rambert aided them with figuring out Igor Stravinsky s The Rite of Spring with Vaslav Nijinsky She hesitantly accepted and collaborated with the Ballets Russes led by Diaghilev from 1912 to 1913 citation needed In Ballets Russes she was in the corps de ballet for ballet performances such as Swan Lake Giselle and Scheherazade After a tour with Nijinsky and Ballets Russes Rambert s contract was not continued and she decided it was time for a new chapter In 1914 she moved to the United Kingdom and studied under Enrico Cecchetti 9 Ballet Rambert Edit nbsp Blue plaque 19 Campden Hill Gardens LondonAfter studying with Cecchetti she went back to study with Madame Rat at the Paris Opera and took her studies quite seriously She began teaching more ballet classes in 1919 and later founded her own ballet school in Bedford Gardens In 1926 she created her own company originally named Ballet Club It has been through many name changes much like Rambert herself The company began performing at night revues in London The first informal show was performed in Riverside Nights at the Lyric Theatre and continued with the nightly revues for a while She began finding new and promising dancers and choreographers in numerous places such as Frederick Ashton to be a part of her company and gave them a chance to grow From Marie Rambert Dancers the company changed to Ballet Rambert later Rambert Dance Company and from 2014 just named Rambert a contemporary dance company which tours internationally It dates its birth to the first performance of Frederick Ashton s A Tragedy of Fashion 1926 10 making it the first ballet company in Britain Ashley Dukes Marie s husband renovated a building and made it into Mercury Theatre where the majority of Ballet Rambert s performance occurred It was said that Notting Hill Gate where the Mercury Theatre stood was on the slopes of Olympus 11 Ballet Rambert has performed such ballets as Coppelia as well as Balanchine s Night Shadow 12 Rambert was adamant about finding new and upcoming choreographers Some of her students and later her colleagues included Ashton Antony Tudor and Agnes de Mille to name a few In 1965 Rambert with the help of Norman Morrice her newest discovery completely reorganized the company to stress modern dance 13 The repertoire of the company eventually came back to more contemporary ballets but still has a vast list of pieces that the company has performed throughout the years She cooperated with Millicent Hodson 14 to restore Nijinsky s choreography of The Rite of Spring in 1979 The restoration of choreography was completed in 1987 Rambert is known for helping to create and keep the ballet community strong in Britain The creation of Ballet in Britain is one of the grandest achievements in the artistic annals of our century It is owed absolutely to the idealism which fired Rambert and Ninette de Valois 15 the founder of The Royal Ballet She was the subject of This Is Your Life in 1962 when she was surprised by Eamonn Andrews at the Mercury Theatre Notting Hill Gate citation needed Death EditShe died on 12 June 1982 and was cremated at Golders Green Crematorium on 17 June Her ashes are within the Cloister Walk in section B Honours Edit1953 Commander of the Order of the British Empire CBE in the 1953 Coronation Honours 16 1957 Chevalier of the Legion d honneur 1 1957 Queen Elizabeth II Coronation Award presented by the Royal Academy of Dance 17 1962 Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire DBE in the 1962 New Year Honours for services to Ballet 1 18 1979 Gold Medal of the Order of Merit of the Republic of Poland 1 See also EditList of dancers Women in danceReferences Edit a b c d Rebecca Katz Harwood Marie Rambert Jewish Women s Archive s Jewish Women A Comprehensive Historical Encyclopedia Marie Rambert in Adrian Room Dictionary of Pseudonyms 5th ed Jefferson NC McFarland 2010 p 396 This was not an uncommon practice among Jews in the Russian Empire Ramberg Eiga in Sefer Halshim Lexicon Eretzyisra eli Tel Aviv Masada 5697 1937 p 2023 Hebrew Avner Holtzman An Image Before my Eyes Tel Aviv Am Oved Ofakim 2001 pp 29 33 240 Hebrew Rambert had a third older Sister Wella Alapin younger twin siblings Hanan and Dvora and another young brother Eliezer Julius ibid Marie Rambert Quicksilver Autobiography London St Martin s Press 1972 p 94 ISBN 978 0333347119 Mary Clark and Marie Rambert Dancers of Mercury the story of Ballet Rambert London A amp C Black 1962 p 15 Marie Rambert Quicksilver page 24 Nijinska Bronislava 1981 Nijinska Irina ed Bronislava Nijinska Early Memoirs 1st ed New York Holt Rinehart and Winston pp 454 455 ISBN 0 03 020951 X Jane Pritchard Rambert A Celebration of the Company s First Seventy Years London Rambert Dance Company 1996 pp 13 20 Infographic on Rambert early history Rambert org uk 2017 Retrieved 15 October 2018 Jane Pritchard Celebration p 12 Rambert Performance Database Rambert 15 October 2018 Retrieved 15 October 2018 Jack Anderson Ballet and Modern Dance A Concise History Princeton New Jersey Book Company 1986 p 185 ISBN 0916622428 and ISBN 0916622436 Millicent Hodson Choreographer and Lecturer Dance Consortium 22 August 2005 Jane Pritchard Celebration p 16 No 39863 The London Gazette Supplement 1 June 1953 p 2955 QEII Coronation Award Archived 19 October 2016 at the Wayback Machine accessed 16 October 2016 United Kingdom list No 42552 The London Gazette 29 December 1961 p 10 Bibliography EditMarie Rambert 1972 Quicksilver Autobiography London St Martin s Press ISBN 0 333 08942 1 Clement Crisp 1981 Ballet Rambert 50 Years and on London Ballet Rambert p 111 ISBN 0 9505478 1 6 External links EditMarie Rambert Collection 1890s 1980s London Gazette notice of damehood for Marie Rambert Mrs Dukes 1962 accessed 17 May 2014 Rebecca Katz Harwood Marie Rambert Jewish Women s Archive s Jewish Women A Comprehensive Historical Encyclopedia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Marie Rambert amp oldid 1170972571, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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