Violet Morene by Bassano

Violet Morene (*) by Bassano Ltd., 5 August 1910. Whole-plate glass negative | src NPG
(*) Violet Lillian Warren (née Harrison-Brown) (1886-1955), Actress and singer
Violet Morene by Bassano Ltd., 5 August 1910. Whole-plate glass negative | src NPG
Violet Morene by Bassano Ltd., 5 August 1910. Whole-plate glass negative | src NPG

Lillebil Ibsen by Bassano

Bassano Ltd. ~ Lillebil Ibsen (née Sofie Parelius Krohn), 22 Sept 1920. Glass negative. | src NPG London
Bassano Ltd. ~ Lillebil Ibsen (née Sofie Parelius Krohn), 22 Sept 1920. Glass negative. | src NPG London

The Norwegian actress Sofie Parelius Krohn began her career as a dancer in 1911 at the Norwegian National Theatre. She trained with her mother, who was a choreographer and ballet teacher, and for a time with Michel Fokine. She took leading roles in Max Reinhardt’s productions in Berlin, including Prima Ballerina and Sumurun. Married to Tancred Ibsen, film director and screenwriter and grandson of Henrik Ibsen, she later became one of Norway’s most distinguished stage actresses, appearing in many works by Shaw, Wilde, Shakespeare and Ibsen.

Bassano Ltd. ~ Lillebil Ibsen (née Sofie Parelius Krohn), 22 Sept 1920. Glass negative. | src NPG London
Bassano Ltd. ~ Lillebil Ibsen (née Sofie Parelius Krohn), 22 Sept 1920. Glass negative. | src NPG London
Bassano Ltd. ~ Lillebil Ibsen (née Sofie Parelius Krohn), 22 Sept 1920. Bromide print. | src NPG London

Roshanara (1913) by Bassano

Bassano Ltd. ~ Roshanara (Olive Craddock), 1913. Whole-plate glass negative | src NPG

Olive Craddock, an Anglo-Indian born in 1892 in Kolkata, was known for taking the ‘central-Indian’ and ‘oriental’ style of dancing across the world. Born to a British mother and Anglo-Indian father, she was only 17-years-old when she left for Britain to dance professionally. Along with Ruth St. Denis, Craddock is credited for incorporating the ‘Indian dance’ in the world of Western theater.

In 1926, the reviewer Alma Talley wrote in The Dance magazine: ‘Roshanara has brought to the Western World the spirit of Central India as no one else has ever been able to bring… India’s dances were a part of her soul. She devoted her life to perfecting them, as an artist in water colours gives years of study to making his art as nearly perfect as perfection is humanly possible.’ Craddock adopted the name ‘Roshanara’ in 1909, as she left India, after the Mughal princess and Shahjahan’s daughter, which meant ‘Light-Adorning’. This would go on to be her stage name. In 1911, Craddock (now Roshanara) studied under Carmen Tórtola Valencia, the Spanish dancer and choreographer. She also danced with American actress and dancer Loïe Fuller’s company and shortly after, performed in the play Kismet directed by Australian actor and writer Oscar Asche at the Garrick Theater in London. She also starred five times as Zobeide in Schéhérazade for the Ballets Russes at Covent Garden, London.

Bassano Ltd. ~ Roshanara (Olive Craddock), 1913. Whole-plate glass negative | src NPG

Roshanara (1915) by Bassano

Bassano Ltd. ~ Roshanara (Olive Craddock), 12 July 1915. Whole-plate glass negative | src NPG
Bassano Ltd. ~ Roshanara (Olive Craddock), 12 July 1915. Whole-plate glass negative | src NPG
Bassano Ltd. ~ Roshanara (Olive Craddock), 12 July 1915. Whole-plate glass negative | src NPG
Bassano Ltd. ~ Roshanara (Olive Craddock), 12 July 1915. Whole-plate glass negative | src NPG

Roshanara in her Snake dance

Bassano Ltd ~ Roshanara (Olive Craddock) in her Snake dance, 1913. Whole-plate glass negative | src NPG
Bassano Ltd ~ Roshanara (Olive Craddock) in her Snake Dance, 1913. Whole-plate glass negative | src NPG
Bassano Ltd ~ Roshanara (Olive Craddock) in her Snake dance, 1913. Whole-plate glass negative | src NPG
Bassano Ltd ~ Roshanara (Olive Craddock) in her Snake Dance, 1913. Whole-plate glass negative | src NPG

Maud Holt, 1890s

Bassano Ltd. :: Maud (née Holt), Lady Beerbohm Tree, published by The Philco Publishing Co. Bromide postcard print, 1890s. | src NPG Terence Pepper Collection