Simone Michelle was a dancer and teacher and one of the most influential figures in pioneering the Central European tradition of modern dance in British Theatre education. She became one of the finest performers and teachers of the Leeder system of modern dance in Britain. Born Simone Moser in Paris on 10 May 1916, she studied at the Ecole Normale de Musique, before moving in 1934 to study as a professional dancer at the newly-founded Jooss-Leeder school at Dartington Hall, South Devon. She joined the Jooss Company, taking Simone Michelle as her stage name, and at Dartington was influenced not only by Jooss, Sigurd Leeder and Rudolf Laban, but other artists who found refuge there from Hitler - among them the Austrian sculptor Willi Soukop whom she later married (1945). With him, she went to Canada at the beginning of the war and in America she studied classical ballet under Vincenzo Celli, the foremost Cecchetti teacher in the United States, then with studies in Spanish dancing, she toured the US giving solo recitals and performances for five years. On returning to Britain, she discovered her true vocation and began teaching. She taught movement part-time to singers at the National Opera Centre, then full-time at the London Opera Centre, then movement for actors part-time again in drama schools. Finally for seven years from 1958, she directed the Leeder School in London before joining the Laban Art of Movement Studio in Addlestone, Surrey, in 1965. In 1974, when the Studio moved to New Cross, to become the Laban Centre for Movement and Dance, she joined the faculty, teaching the Leeder technique and choreography, until her retirement in 1991. She died in London on 27 June 1993, leaving behind a son and a daughter.
From the guide to the Simone Michelle Collection, 1927/1992, (Trinity Laban Conservatoire of Music and Dance: Laban Library and Archive)