Anton Dolin (ballet dancer) explained

Honorific Prefix:Sir
Anton Dolin
Birth Date:27 July 1904
Birth Place:Slinfold, West Sussex, England
Death Place:Paris, France
Occupation:ballet dancer and choreographer
Birth Name:Sydney Francis Patrick Chippendall Healey-Kay

Sir Anton Dolin (27 July 190425 November 1983)[1] was an English ballet dancer and choreographer.

Biography

Dolin was born in Slinfold in Sussex as Sydney Francis Patrick Chippendall Healey-Kay (generally known as Patrick or Pat Kay to his friends). He was the second of three sons of Henry George Kay (1852-1922) and his wife, Helen Maude Chippendall Healey (1869-1960), from Dublin.[2] He trained at Serafina Astafieva's school at The Pheasantry in London's King's Road.[3] He joined Sergei Diaghilev's Ballets Russes in 1921, was a principal there from 1924. It was Diaghilev who gave Patrick his stage name: at that time the most powerful impresario in world ballet, Diaghilev 'russified' names of his star dancers to keep up the tradition of his company.

In the 1930s, Dolin was a principal with the Vic-Wells Ballet. There he danced with Alicia Markova, with whom he went on to found the Markova-Dolin Ballet and the London Festival Ballet. In 1933, he spotted Vera Zorina and introduced her to Ballets Russes de Monte Carlo in 1934.[4]

He joined Ballet Theatre when it was formed in 1940 and remained there as a dancer and choreographer until 1946.[5]

Dolin wrote several books, including his "reminiscences" in Divertissement (1931), the autobiography Ballet Go Round (1938) and Alicia Markova: Her Life and Art (1953).[6] He was knighted in 1981. He is featured in the documentary film A Portrait of Giselle.

He was the subject of This Is Your Life in April 1978 when he was surprised by Eamonn Andrews at London's Royal Academy of Dance.

Upon Dolin's death, dancers Jelko Yuresha and Belinda Wright inherited the rights to his choreography of Giselle, Pas de Quatre, and his acclaimed original ballet, Variations for Four. Yuresha and Wright danced—and later staged—productions of these ballets with dance companies around the world, designing original costumes and sets for those performances.[7] In 2017, Yuresha (rights holder) and Philip Ronald Kay (Dolin's nephew and heir) founded the Sir Anton Dolin Foundation in Berlin, Germany with the aim of protecting Dolin's legacy. Since then, all rights to Dolin's works are the property of the Sir Anton Dolin Foundation.

Filmography

Film
YearTitleRoleNotes
1929Dark Red Roses Dancer Uncredited
1930Alf's Button
1934Forbidden Territory Jack Straw
1935Invitation to the Waltz Chief Dancer
1945A Song for Miss Julie Himself – Ballet Dancer
1953Never Let Me Go Marya's Partner Uncredited
1974The Girl from Petrovka Ignatievitch
1980Nijinsky Maestro Cecchetti

Sources

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: The Blackwell Companion to Modern Irish Culture . W. J. McCormack . Blackwell Publishing . 1999 . 172 . 20 February 2008 . 9780631228172 .
  2. News: Dolin, Sir Anton [real name Sydney Francis Patrick Chippindall Healey Kay] . 2004 . Oxford University Press. 10.1093/ref:odnb/31040 .
  3. Decharne, Max. (2005) King's Road: The Rise and Fall of the Hippest Street in the World. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, p. 23;
  4. Web site: en . Vera Zorina . The Guardian . 5 May 2003 . 27 December 2022.
  5. Web site: Choreographers: Anton Dolin. American Ballet Theatre. 16 February 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20120528022810/http://www.abt.org/education/archive/choreographers/dolin_a.html. 28 May 2012. dead.
  6. Book: Alicia Markova: her life and art. Dolin, Anton. Hermitage House. New York. 1953. 300631658.
  7. Book: Schopf, Davor . Yuresha – Visions and Dreams . 2011 . Zagreb: Hilarion . 8 . 978-953-56634-0-9 .