Sokolova, Lydia, 1896-1974

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Sokolova, Lydia, 1896-1974

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Sokolova, Lydia, 1896-1974

Sokolova, Lydia

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Sokolova, Lydia

Munnings, Hilda

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Munnings, Hilda

Sokolova, Lydia 1896-

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Sokolova, Lydia 1896-

Sokolova, Lidia 1896-1974

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Sokolova, Lidia 1896-1974

Munnings, Hilda 1896-1974

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Munnings, Hilda 1896-1974

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1896-03-04

1896-03-04

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1974-12-05

1974-12-05

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Biographical History

Lydia Sokolova (1896-1974) was born in Wanstead, as Hilda Tansley Munnings on 4 March 1896. She trained at the Stedman's Academy in London and with Anna Pavlova, Michael Mordkin and Pavlova’s great character dancer and pedagogue, Aleksander Shireyev. Later she studied with Enrico Cecchetti and Nicolas Legat. After touring in the USA with the All-Star Imperial Russian Ballet (1911-12) she danced in London and Europe with Theodore Kosloff’s Imperial Russian Ballet. In 1913 she joined the Diaghilev Ballets Russes, one of the first English girls to become a full member. She became one of the company's principal character dancer until it disbanded in 1929. Having initially danced with Diaghilev’s company as Munningsova but Diaghilev changed this, giving her the name Lydia Sokolova in 1915. In 1914-1915, before the Ballets Russes reformed, Sokolova danced with Nicholas Kremnev in British music halls, and for a season after the collapse of The Sleeping Princess in 1922 she performed with Léonide Massine and Lydia Lopokova’s groups before returning to Diaghilev.

Sokolova was primarily a character dancer and her roles included a Nymph in Nijinsky's L’Après-midi d’un Faune and creating the Apple woman in Till Eulenspiegel (1916). She worked very closely with Léonide Massine creating roles in Boutique Fantasque (1919), Le Chant du Rossignol (1920) and the Miller's Wife in Le Tricorne (1919) although it was performed by Karsavina at the premiere and the Chosen Maiden in Le Sacré du Printemps (1920). She also worked closely with Bronislava Nijinska dancing the Hostess in Les Biches and creating La Perlouse in Le Train bleu (both 1924), Romeo and Juliet (1926), and in George Balanchine's Le Bal (1929). Ill-heath prevented her continuing to dance regularly and she turned to teaching and coaching in England (including assisting Woizikowski with the staging of L’Apres-midi d’un faune for the Ballet Club in 1931). She danced with Woizikowski's company in London in 1935 and Lydia Kyasht's Ballet de la Jeunesse Anglaise in 1939. She returned to the stage to perform in Massine's revival of The Good-Humoured Ladies for the Royal Ballet in 1962.

Sokolova was married to Nicholas Kremnev (1917), had a long relationship with Léon Woizikovsky throughout the 1920s and into the 1930s, and married Ronald Erskine Mahon (mid-1930s) who survived her. Her daughter, Natasha, was born in 1917. Sokolova gave considerable support to Richard Buckle with his 1954 Diaghilev exhibition and in establishing his Friends of the Museum of the Performing Arts . She was invited by Buckle to ‘stage’ dances and groupings by dancers for the major Sotheby's Ballets Russes auctions in 1968 and 1969. She died at Sevenoaks on 5 February 1974.

From the guide to the Lydia Sokolova Archive, 1919-1968, (V&A Department of Theatre and Performance)

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External Related CPF

https://viaf.org/viaf/15039846

https://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q1791379

https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n88110369

https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n88110369

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Ballet

Ballet masters

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Britons

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13493121