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  1. Victor Emilyevich Dandré or D'André ( Russian: Виктор Эмильевич Дандре; 1870 – 5 February 1944) was a Russian aristocrat and official who was a member of the Saint Petersburg City Duma. He left Russia and became the husband of the world renowned ballerina, Anna Pavlova, and a ballet impresario.

  2. 20 de may. de 2024 · Victor E. Dandré. (1870—1944) Quick Reference. ( b 1870; d London, 1944) Russian ballet impresario, and probable husband of Pavlova. A wealthy landowner with a passion for ballet, he became involved with Pavlova in 1914, acting as her manager throughout her career.

    • First Timid Dreams
    • Birth of A Star
    • Anna Meets Her One and only Love
    • A New Role For The Russian Swan
    • The Amazing Ivy House
    • A Beautiful Legacy

    The future ballet star was born on February 12, 1881 in a military hospital in St. Petersburg. Her mother was Lyubov Fedorovna, a washerwoman, and her father was a soldier of the Preobrazhensky regiment, Matvey Pavlov. According to the official version, Pavlova’s father died when the girl was 2 years old, but rumours persisted that Anna, in fact, w...

    At the age of ten Pavlova entered the Imperial Ballet School, which is now known as the legendary Vaganova Academy of Russian Ballet in the very centre of St. Petersburg. Anna later compared the atmosphere at the school to a monastery — the strict discipline and daily exercise hardened the young ballerina, erased her childish stoop and made her bod...

    Anna met him in the beginning of her career. The handsome and wealthy state councillor, Baron Victor Dandré, came from an old noble family and was a passionate ballet lover. At the time, it was prestigious at the Imperial court to patronise ballerinas, and among the aspiring artists Victor noticed Pavlova. Anna was not spoiled by the attention of f...

    Thanks to Victor, Anna got acquainted with Sergei Diaghilev — a major figure in the theatre world and a propagandist of Russian ballet in Europe at the beginning of the 20th century. In 1909, Pavlova was dazzling in his famous Ballets Russes in Paris, after which the entire world was open to her. Abroad she was called the “Russian Swan”. Anna parte...

    London welcomed the ballerina, and she, so it seems, finally was in control of her own life. In 1912, Anna purchased the luxurious Ivy House in the scenic Golders Green at ​​94-96 North End Road and spent nearly 20 years there. The ballerina did not choose Ivy House by chance: in the 19th century the two-storey mansion with an old garden and a pond...

    Anna Pavlova’s life ended in The Hague on January 23, 1931, where she was on tour and caught a bad cold. The art world lost a great artist, but Dandré grieved most of all. The two lovers are still together — urns with their ashes are in the Golders Green mausoleum. The British capital cherishes Anna’s legacy. While walking around London and passing...

  3. 13 de dic. de 2022 · 408 p. 26 cm

  4. Anna Pávlovna Pávlova ( ruso: Анна Павловна Павлова, calendario gregoriano: San Petersburgo, 12 de febrero de 1881- La Haya, 23 de enero de 1931) fue una primera bailarina rusa de finales del siglo XIX y principios del XX, una de las principales artistas del Ballet Imperial Ruso y de los Ballets Rusos de Serguéi Diáguilev.

  5. In 1900, Pavlova met Victor Dandré, a well-to-do man 11 years her senior who loved ballet and was active in the St. Petersburg City Council. In time, Dandré became her "protector." He helped finance her private lessons, her trips abroad, and her acquisition of a large apartment with its own dance studio in an artistic neighborhood of St ...

  6. 12 de feb. de 2022 · Al principio de su carrera, Anna Pavlova conoció a Victor Dandré, un funcionario de la Duma (el Parlamento ruso) y gran amante del ballet que, en una biografía del año 1932, dijo que era su marido y manager.