Tiziana Lauri Explained

Tiziana Lauri
Birth Date:1959 12, df=y
Birth Place:Rome, Italy
Occupation:Prima Ballerina on stage and screen
Alma Mater:Teatro dell'Opera di Roma
Years Active:1975–2011
Spouse:Fabio Grossi

Tiziana Lauri (born 25 December 1959) is a retired Italian ballet dancer.

Early life and education

Daughter of noted dancers[1] Guido Lauri[2] [3] and Anna Maria Paganini,[4] she followed in her parents's footsteps[5] (although against their will) by training with Attilia Radice at the Rome Opera House. She entered the Rome Opera Ballet school at age 13, without having taken any previous dance classes.[6] [7]

Dancing career

After less than three years at the Rome Opera Ballet school she joined the Rome Opera Ballet company, becoming a soloist at the age of 18.[6]

A very versatile, gifted and impetuously talented artist,[8] [9] [10] [11] she danced a wide range of Ballerina roles[12] [13] [14] [15] [16] from Kitri in Don Quixote to Juliet in Romeo and Juliet.[17] [18]

She worked with a variety of personalities[19] [20] such as Rudolf Nureyev, André Prokovsky, Ekaterina Maximova, Vladimir Vasiliev, Patrick Dupond and many others.

TV career

Lauri often appeared on Italian television[21] as a performer but also as a brilliant anchorwoman and interviewer.

Awards

Lauri was a recipient of the Gold medal at Carlo Blasis 1981 competition in Turin and of various prizes (Apollon Musagète 1986, Golden Perseus 1987, Michelangelo's David 1988, Talenti dello Spettacolo Internazionale 1989, and Berlin's Golden Bear and Cup 1990).

Family

In 1987 American review Dance Magazine wrote about her unusual kinship with several artists: four cousins were her colleagues and two paternal aunts, a paternal uncle and a maternal aunt and uncle were all Rome Opera Ballet dancers of the older generation. Her genealogical tree also includes grandfather Eliseo Paganini, a world-champion athlete, and famed opera singer Giulio Neri, her uncle.

Sources

Notes and References

  1. A. Colotta, Tiziana Lauri, rivelazione d'una protagonista - L'AVVENIRE (January 7, 1987).
  2. Guido Lauri: "La danza per me è una preghiera, una missione... dobbiamo essere sacerdoti di questa passione!", V. Clemente's interview IL GIORNALE DELLA DANZA (February 2, 2011).
  3. Guido Lauri, Ballet Archive
  4. Anna Maria Paganini, Ballet Archive
  5. H. Koegler & A. Testa, Dizionario Gremese della danza e del balletto 2011 ('Lauri, Guido' pag. 306).
  6. V. Ottolenghi, Triste esame per dieci fatine con coroncina - PAESE SERA (July 31, 1977).
  7. G. Tani, Il passo d'addio al Teatro dell'Opera - IL MESSAGGERO (July 31, 1977).
  8. Parigi 'o cara, V. Ottolenghi interviews T. Lauri - BALLETTO OGGI n°11 (December 1982 - January 1983).
  9. S. Allder, L'appetito vien danzando - L'UMANITA' (July 24, 1984).
  10. V. Ottolenghi, Il nostro "fantastico" Raffaele Paganini - BALLETTO OGGI n°38 (November 1986).
  11. A. Testa, Fracci, girotondo romano - DANZA&DANZA (January/February 2002).
  12. G. Tani, Danza. Le ultime repliche del "Don Chisciotte" a Caracalla. Nuovi cast, nuovi successi - IL MESSAGGERO (July 17, 1985).
  13. A. Testa, Raymonda - BALLETTO OGGI n°21 (September-October 1984).
  14. A. Testa, Povera Raymonda, senza sentimenti - LA REPUBBLICA (July 22, 1984).
  15. G. Tani, "Coppelia" in scena a Villa Celimontana - IL MESSAGGERO (August 19, 1984).
  16. V. Ottolenghi, Coppelia - BALLETTO OGGI n°37 (October 1986).
  17. Carla Fracci rievoca amori e tragedie della leggendaria Isadora Duncan - IL CORRIERE DELLA SERA (January 22, 2003).
  18. "Pronto, chi balla?" Tiziana Lauri: che bello chiacchierare col mio corpo, interview by A. Martiniello - IL MESSAGGERO (August 21, 1986).
  19. V. Ottolenghi, Se Roma piange... - BALLETTO OGGI n°12 (February–March 1983).
  20. Rudolf Nureyev's Marco Spada - DANCE MAGAZINE (September 1981).
  21. https://www.imdb.com/name/nm5645640/ Quell'antico amore