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  1. Romola de Pulszky (or Romola Pulszky), (married name Nijinsky; 20 February 1891 – 8 June 1978), was a Hungarian aristocrat, the daughter of a politician and an actress. Her father had to go into exile when she was a child, and committed suicide in Australia.

  2. Pulzsky de Nijinsky, Rómola (1891-1978) Bailarina húngara nacida en Budapest en 1891 (algunos biógrafos aseguran que en realidad nació tres años más tarde) y fallecida en París en 1978. Criada en el seno de una acaudalada familia polaca que se había trasladado a Hungría, la joven Rómola creció en un ambiente marcado por la exquisitez ...

  3. Romola, condesa de Pulszky, comenzó a estudiar ballet en Hungría. Admiradora de los Ballets Rusos desde que los había visto bailar en Budapest, se unió a ellos y viajó en sus giras. Fascinada especialmente con Nijinsky, intentó por todos los medios trabar una relación con él, lo cual era impedido sistemáticamente por Diaghilev ...

  4. Romola de Pulszky (or Romola Pulszky ), (married name Nijinsky; 20 February 1891 – 8 June 1978), was a Hungarian aristocrat, the daughter of a politician and an actress. Her father had to go into exile when she was a child, and committed suicide in Australia.

  5. Name variations: Romola Nijinsky, Nijinskaia, or Nijinskaya. Pronunciation: Ni-ZHIN-ska. Born Romola de Pulszky in Budapest, Hungary, in 1891; died in Paris on June 8, 1978; daughter of Károly de Pulszky (director of the National Gallery of Hungary), and Emilia Markus (an actress); attended Lycée Fénelon (Paris); married Vaslav Nijinsky (a ...

  6. 12 de mar. de 2021 · Romola de Pulszky was a Hungarian countess who was known to have had a lasting affection for Nijinsky, and when she got the chance, she boarded a ship she knew him to be embarking as well. Their courtship was short and for a good bit of their time spent together, neither could speak the other’s language.

  7. Internet Archive. Language. English. xvii, 447 pages 24 cm. LC Copy 1 is the "Second printing." My first encounter with the Russian Ballet. -- The childhood of Vaslav Nijinsky. -- The Imperial School of Dancing. -- Nijinsky and the Mariinsky Theatre. -- The Russian Renaissance. -- The first Paris season.