Sunday, December 20, 2009

Out Spotlight CVXI

All over the world part of holiday traditions for many is to go to ballet, and for most it will be The Nutcracker, So for today's Out Spotlight we focus on was regarded by most critics as the greatest male dancer of the 20th century, possibly the greatest ever. Dancer, choreographer, and ballet director Rudolf Nureyev.

Rudolf Hametovich Nureyev was born in a train near Irkutsk, while his mother was travelling across Siberia to Vladivostok, where his father, a Red Army political commissar of Tatar descent, was stationed on March 17, 1938. The son of Muslim peasants, he was a small, malnourished, and highly sensitive child, bullied and tormented by other children.

His proficiency at folk-dancing brought him to the attention of two exiled ballerinas living in Ufa. They gave him classes and introduced him to the opera ballet company there. After his father returned from serving in World War II, he regularly beat his son for studying dance. The child dreamed "of a savior who would come, take me by the hand and rescue me from that mediocre life." However, he was rescued not by some prince, but by his own protean talent supported by unyielding will power.

The impossible dream of studying ballet at the fabled Kirov school in Leningrad came true. At 17, he enrolled in the Leningrad Ballet School, where he was an outstanding dancer but a rebellious student. He refused to join the Communist youth league, and he studied English privately. After graduation in 1958 he became a soloist with the Kirov Ballet. Within two years Nureyev was one of Russia's best-known dancers, in a country which revered the ballet and made national heroes of its stars.

Three years later, while on tour with the Kirov Ballet in Paris, he learned that he was to be sent back to the USSR for flouting Soviet security regulations. As a consequence, he sought political asylum in France, making what came to be known as the great "leap to freedom."

He was subsequently convicted of treason in absentia by a secret Soviet trial. He lived most of the rest of his life at risk of being kidnapped or assassinated.

Nureyev's defection made headlines throughout the world. Overnight, he became a superstar. His physical beauty and sexual magnetism, coupled with his athletic ability, excited men and women alike. His seductive personality made him the darling of international society.

Moreover, his dancing, especially his stupendous jumps with multiple turns in the air, and his great risk-taking, changed the way male ballet dancers danced. His fame and charisma attracted new audiences to the ballet.

Nureyev made his American debut in 1962, appearing to great acclaim on television and with Ruth Page's Chicago Opera Ballet. Later in 1962 he joined London's Royal Ballet as permanent guest artist. In so doing, he revitalized the company. Partnered with Margot Fonteyn, he gave new life to such classics as Giselle and Swan Lake and introduced such contemporary ballets as Sir Frederick Ashton's Marguerite and Armand.

As artistic director, he formed his own touring companies and transformed the national ballet companies of Australia and Canada from provincial to world class.

In 1983,he became artistic director of the Paris Opera Ballet. He remained in this position until 1989, when he resigned. However, he served as premier choreographer of the Paris Opera Ballet until his death. Among his most successful works of choreography are his stagings of Romeo and Juliet, Manfred, and The Nutcracker.

An indefatigable performer, Nureyev for many years danced almost every day, sometimes with performances back-to-back. He appeared in cities throughout the world and attracted a large and diverse audience. As a result, he amassed a fortune, which he invested shrewdly, but also spent lavishly on houses and works of art.

One of Nureyev's great contributions to ballet had to do with his sexual openness. Completely comfortable with his own sexuality, Nureyev expended no effort in presenting a heterosexual image on stage or off. Hence, he was able to concentrate on expressing music and choreography as it seemed appropriate to him. His openness helped liberate other male dancers from the obsession with maintaining a heterosexual image.

His sex life was as legendary--and frenetic--as his dancing. His sexual partners ranged from hustlers to the rich and famous. Nureyev was both aloof and charming. The Gay and straight preoccupation of gossip was: "Is he Gay and\or how big is his 'accouterment'?" Nureyev hid nothing about either and the later was also confirmed by photographs taken by Richard Avedon.

Nureyev's most intense affair was with the Danish dancer Erik Bruhn. Bruhn possessed an elegant, refined, classical style, quite different from Nureyev's feral qualities. In 1961 Nureyev felt that Bruhn was the only living dancer who had anything to teach him. He sought out the older dancer and fell in love with him. Although the dour Bruhn responded physically to him, the intense and turbulent relationship that ensued was not a happy one, perhaps because Bruhn suffered from professional jealousy and anxiety. As Nureyev's star rose, Bruhn became reclusive and alcoholic. The dancers' physical relationship ended in the mid-1960s, but Nureyev never ceased loving Bruhn.

Nureyev also had a long-term relationship with director and archivist Wallace Potts in the 1970s. In 1978, Nureyev was briefly infatuated with a young dancer, Robert Tracy. Tracy moved into Nureyev's New York apartment, where he stayed until evicted thirteen years later, after Nureyev death, and treated, as he said, "like a lackey."

When AIDS appeared in France around 1982, Nureyev took little notice. Nureyev and Tracy were both diagnosed with the AIDS virus in 1983. For several years he simply denied that anything was wrong with his health. When, about 1990, he became undeniably ill, he is said to have attributed the symptoms to other ailments. He tried several experimental treatments but they did not stop his deteriorating health. His true diagosis was kept secret until the morning after his death.

In March 1992 secretly living with advanced AIDS, he returned to where he grew up in Kazan and appeared as a conductor in front of the audience at Musa Cälil Tatar Academic Opera and Ballet Theater in Kazan. This was his only appearance on the stage of the Musa Cälil Tatar Academic Opera and Ballet Theater, which now annually organizes the Rudolf Nureyev Festival in Tatarstan.

At his last stage appearance was a 1992 production of La Bayadère at the Palais Garnier, Nureyev received a standing ovation. The French Culture Minister, presented him with France's highest cultural award, the Commandeur de l'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres. He died in Paris a few months later, aged 54.

His grave, at a Russian cemetery in Sainte-Geneviève-des-Bois near Paris, features a tomb draped in a mosaic of an oriental carpet, celebrating his love of collecting them.





Now for some snow. Taken this morning.

19 comments:

  1. Hooray! What a beauty he was. Love the 4th pic. *swoon* One of my favorite Christmas musical works ever.

    Great pics of the snowstorm. :)

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  2. Nureyev was the best. A legend.

    Well I am am partially dug out. The sun is out and I am hoping the rest will melt.

    Destiny have a great time in Colorado.

    E A G L E S !!!!!!!!

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  3. Nureyev had a beauty and charisma that drew everyone to him, gay straight men women, uncontained senuality that you could see on and off the stage.

    Looking back at the time in which he died, not many people would admit or disclosed they had AIDS because of the horrorific stigma attached to it, even it when was clear that to those around that they had the disease. Look at Rock Hudson, Liberace, it was after the fact, and Freddie Mercury it wasn't until the day before he passed. Back then the diagnosis was certain death. So much progress has been made both in treatment and public awareness and attitudes.

    It is heartbreaking to realize that someone who was the epitome of physical perfection was ravaged by such a devasting disease.

    OT: It is still snowing! Hunkered in the house, toasty under piles of throws and quilts watching the Patriots. Getting ready to make something warm and toasty for lunch.

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  4. Brittany Murphy died last night after she went into full cardiac arrest and could not be revived, multiple sources tell TMZ.

    She was 32.

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  5. Good afternoon everybody,

    The most magical spotlight today!
    Yes Nureyev is a true "star" among the stars.
    He had a such allure, powerful and grace. Without a doubt the best dancer ever. His life is incredible and his love life as well. He seemed a such passionated man, professionnaly and in love, so enchanting.
    Nureyev and Maia Plissetskaia ( an other russian dancer and lovely woman) are the gods of the dance.
    Thanks you special K for this gift, I learned a lot of things on his life.

    Happy happy birthday sweet Jake. Hope you passed a wonderful day with your family and that you received all the love you deserve ( candies and presents as well lol)

    I am sad to hear about this young actress. I didn't know her although I have already seen her name and pics. What a tragedy to die so young. Rest in peace.

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  6. Wow, I can't believe that about Brittany Murphy. That's terrible. Wasn't she in Clueless, playing Tai? And she was also in a movie with Ashton Kutchner.

    Back from work. yuck!!! Comment will be brief & short for now. I need to put up my chapter and go get a walk in. The sun is out and I don't know what the temp is right now but I'll bet 40 degrees+.

    Cool pictures, Special. I do not like snow, though. It's pretty but it is not fun to drive in and it also prevents me from walking outside. So I don't like it. But I'd rather have snow than freezing rain & ice. That's even worse!

    So sad about Rudolph N. You know, not only did he contract AIDS when it was something that shame was stamped on it, but it treatment back then was not near what it is now. Now, it is treatable. Back then, it was practically a death sentence. If only.....

    Wow, his body was beautiful.

    Okay, well, I'm off. Will be back later.

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  7. I am pleased to report that I had the privilege of seeing Nureyev dance live. My first mother in law was into ballet and got 3 tickets to see him dance in San Francisco. I had only ever been to one other ballet in my life, as a child, and was knocked out flat when Nureyev appeared on stage. The entire audience gasped, literally, when he first appeared, such was his charisma. Plus, he was wearing only the sheerest of tights on his lower body and was bare chested. They had a greyish/purple sheen to them, but were so sheer he was essentially naked. I can remember that moment as if it were just seconds ago. He was incredible and breathtakingly beautiful.

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  8. m, I envy you. You are so lucky to have such memories. Whatching a ballet is an incredible experience, but whatching Nureyev was surely beyond that!!Unforgettable moments for sure.

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  9. Ted said...
    No wonder so many gay men are gossip columnists: All these supposedly "straight" stars are constantly cruising us (and our friends) for sex!

    And the latest celeb to daringly do so is one of the biggest, hunkiest vampire sensations out there right now. So much so, even I was shocked when a bud of mine, who gets off hunting around Griffith Park—a notorious area of L.A. where homosexual sex in the woods is rampant and a constant annoyance to the police—enjoyed what you're about to read.

    Nelly Fang is as hot as he is adored by his millions of fans. His smoldering looks are talked about just as much as (if not more so than) his red-hot acting talents.

    Nelly simply smolders onscreen, what with his trance-like gaze and lithe, mildly muscled bod, which he keeps in shape by jogging through Griffith Park, wearing shorts but no...

    ...underwear, oh my!

    I wonder if that's because Nelly likes to be extra-free to whip it out, just in case he needs to take a whiz? Nah.

    More likely, that lack of clothing constraint is due entirely to Nelly's penchant for stopping a guy who catches his fancy on the trail so he can lure his conquest to a hidden path and then have hot, hot, hot sex under the sun! Something Fang's now done with my friend not once, but twice!

    Love it! And people say Tiger's a slut! So glad Woods isn't the only celeb who's being supernaughty these days, what a relief.

    "He's a real talker, too," adds Nelly's lucky path partner. "He kept saying, 'Yeah, do it, yeah, you like that, don't you, yeah, you like my ass?' "

    Oh my. If only Nelly's gazillions of girlie worshippers could hear him talk. They'd either try to convert him or tell him to start talking dirty to them—or they'd stop being his fan—or both.

    By the way, I'm sure if you've made it this far, you'll want to know the rest of the dirty deets, which are: Yes, Nelly's endowed (longer than wider, to be precise), and yes, he's a very neat boy down there.

    "Very groomed," was how Mr. Fang's private parts were further described to me. Or to be even more precise (and gay): "Manscaped."

    Hmmm. How very interesting, as this body-maintenance routine doesn't match the sometimes slightly grungy image Nelly likes to show off to the very unknowing public.

    And It Ain't: Kellan Lutz, Brad Pitt, Ryan Kwanten

    Blind Vice: Which Vampire's Batty for Boys?

    December 20, 2009 5:30 PM

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  10. It's not even 7 pm but I'm going to bed right now. Daddy told me to get a lot of rest because we're going to Griffith Park tomorrow and we're going to be walking around all day!

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  11. Those photos of the snow are cool Special, I especially like the first one.

    Do not think nelly fang is Pattinson or anyone on True Blood. I think it is that guy on Vampire Diaries that some are guessing.

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  12. Sad about Murphy. Liked her in that Kutcher movie and in 8 Mile, and she did a great job as the voice of Luanne on King of the Hill.

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  13. Wow, talk about a celebration of manhood. Rudolph Nureyev was fascinating to me as well, I never did see him perform tho. He had such a handsome face as well, I thought. Just a legend. Thanks for another fascinating Out Spotlight.

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  14. This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.

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  15. I'm so sick and tired of slipping and sliding to the store to get some da*ned thing I forgot...I ain't no spring chicken... and then having to look at those swamp-trash tabs US/Life and Style etc. at the checkout with their ridiculous headlines about how sad and devastated Jake is cause Ms Reeces Peeces dumped him. NOT!
    Check out her pic! Who got dumped? I ask whoooo? I don't mean to interrupt your wonderful discourse on Nureyev, but you closed all topics but this one and I have to get this out of my brain before I throw the magazines in the trash next time I go shopping. And I know me I will.
    I don't have money to pay for them either so I have to chill.
    Lord knows I love a love story but please...Jake looks more annoyed than devastated...Puleeeze.
    U know, I never believed all that PR stuff; why should I? I'm just a regular gal who couldn't imagine doing that...now I believe. Jake's side NO COMMENT, Reice's side, he didn't understand child rearing how much work it entails... blah blah blah...
    I didn't understand child rearing either until I had my baby. What a bunch of BS. If this is what was going on I say good riddance to Ms Pieces and mores the good to Jake for it.
    Thanks for being here...I don't need a stroke on top of all my other physical challenges. I've had great pleasure these past few moments posting this rant here now I can have some measure of peace.
    Rant over..TY again.
    oooo
    Jake lover forever

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  16. I think it’s been year of a lot of good movies, but not necessarily a lot of great movies. My top 10 is full of very good films, but I only think #1 is truly a great film. That’s okay. Remember this was the year the 2007 Writer’s Strike had the effect on. I know that sounds like a long time ago but movies take a while to put together from script to finished product.


    3. Brothers – A great drama in a year of very few dramas. The best acted film of the year, with particular emphasis on Jake Gyllenhaal who is becoming one of the finest actors we have. Three fascinating characters, great dialogue, tasteful restraint, and enormous power. Overlooked and underrated.

    source

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  17. Silver screen gold
    As the decade draws to a close, Damon Smith picks his highlights from a fascinating 10 years in film

    Brokeback Mountain (2006)

    Brokeback MountainBased on a 30-page novella by Annie Proulx, Brokeback Mountain was the victim of probably the greatest travesty in Academy Awards history when homophobic elements within the voting body launched a concerted campaign against Ang Lee’s bold, daring and heartbreaking love story, and ultimately gifted the Best Picture statuette to Crash. The subsequent death of Heath Ledger adds an even more tragic dimension to the doomed love affair between ranch hands Jack Twist (Jake Gyllenhaal) and Ennis Del Mar (Ledger). Struggling to disavow the homosexual desire which draws them together, Jack and Ennis are torn between forbidden desire and affection for their wives. Director Lee conjures a heartrending portrait of an enduring yet impossible love, set in ultra-macho 1960s Wyoming, where the mere insinuation of homosexuality could get a man killed. Ledger and Gyllenhaal lay themselves emotionally bare in front of the cameras. “That ol’ Brokeback got us good,” observes Jack. That it does.


    source

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