Rudolf Nureyev

Category: Entertainment
Status: Available
Ref: 15998
Price: £60.00
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Rudolf Nureyev
Rudolf Nureyev

Matchless Russian ballet dancer, director, choreographer and actor.

Nureyev had a passing relationship with films as early as 1958, when as a member of the Kirov Ballet (later the Saint Petersburg Ballet), he was prominently featured in the Soviet short subject Le Corsaire After his defection to the West in 1961, Nureyev confined his activities to the ballet stage, most often in collaboration with long-time partner Margot Fonteyn. Fortunately, there are several filmed records of Nureyev at work, even though they make no great cinematic breakthroughs: An Evening With the Royal Ballet (1963), Romeo and Juliet (1966), Swan Lake (1967), Sleeping Beauty (1970), and Don Quixote (1973). Nureyev's best film work, both in terms of ballet and in showing his non-performing "human" side, was the 1973 documentary . He also contributed a brace of dramatic performances, first in Ken Russell’s Valentino (1973) (his Rudolph Valentino was far more blatantly erotic, and a lot nuder, than the genuine article), then in 1983's Exposed, in which Nureyev, in the role of a musician, has a mind-boggling scene in which he "plays" Nastassja Kinski's body like a violin. Even more curious was Rudolph Nureyev's onscreen credit as choreographer for the low-budget adventure film The Invincible Six (1968); it's not exactly clear whether he choreographed the flying bullets or the spurting bloodpacks.

This is a very fine early black and white photograph (5.5" x 3.25") of the young Nureyev, boldly signed in green ink across the lower white panel.  In excellent condition.