
Maurice Seymour :: Alexandra Danilova
in “Le Beau Danube”, 1933 | source: Europeana
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images that haunt us

Alexandra Danilova in “Giselle” in London, 1930′s / unknown photographer / src:
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Tamara Karsavina in Schéhérazade, undated. Unknown photographer. / src: L of Congress: Ballets Russes De Serge Diaghilev
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Emil Otto Hoppé :: Tamara Karsavina as the Firebird in ‘L’Oiseau de Feu’, London, England, 1911 / src: E.O. Hoppé
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Nina Golovina in Auroras wedding, 1940. The Ballets Russes Australian season was from 30th December 1939 to 19 September 1940. / source: State Library Victoria Collections

Emil Otto Hoppé :: Dancer Tamara Karsavina in ‘Le Spectre de la Rose’, 1911 | src E.O. Hoppé
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Vera Nemtchinova in Les Biches, first danced in 1924. / src: Nalda Murilova

Dancer Ninette de Valois in a 1925 revival of Fokine’s Les Papillons [The Butterflies] (1913). The annotation reads: ‘Ninette de Valois with Diaghilev’ [ie the Ballets Russes]. Photographer unknown./ src: Royal Ballet

Signed photograph of Ninette de Valois in You’d be Surprised,
the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, January-February, 1923. The show
transferred to London’s Alhambra Theatre, and ran for nearly 200
performances, until May 1923. Photo: Hana / source: Royal Ballet

Dancer Lydia Sokolova
(1896–1974), born Hilda Munnings, was an English
ballerina who danced with the Diaghilev Ballets Russes for over 15 years
(from 1913), and became a Principal of the Company. Here, as the Miller’s Wife in Massine’s Le Tricorne [The Three-Cornered Hat], 1919. Photo: Lenare. / source: Royal Dance School