| Violetta Elvin - Patron |
|
Long before the Bolshoi or the Kirov had toured in the West, British ballet had its own Soviet ballerina. Violetta Prokhorova was a soloist at the Bolshoi when in 1945 she met British architect Harold Elvin, married him, and was allowed to leave Moscow with him for a new life in London. Ninette de Valois invited her to join the Sadler's Wells Ballet, and she made her début on the second night of the company's first Covent Garden season, in the Bluebird pas de deux in Sleeping Beauty. By the next season she had started to use her married name, and over the next ten years she became one of the company's most popular ballerinas and in many people's opinion, second only to Fonteyn. Elvin was still only 20 when she came to England, but she was already regarded as one of the Bolshoi's most promising talents, so much so that she was taken straight into the company as a soloist, never having to dance in the corps de ballet. Her Russian training and her beauty gave a glamour and exoticism to all her appearances. Although she adapted her style over the years she never lost the unique authority her background gave her. As might be expected, some of her major successes were in the classics - as Aurora (Sleeping Beauty), Odette/Odile (Swan Lake). (Widely regarded as Fonteyn's closest rival.) She was also notable in Balanchine's Ballet Imperial and Massine's Three-Cornered Hat, and Roland Petit gave her the lead in Ballabile, the first ballet he ever made for Sadler's Wells.
|
THE COVENT GARDEN DANCE COMPANY


