International Ballet
International Ballet was a British ballet company that operated, with great success, between 1941 and 1953. Its director throughout its existence was Mona Inglesby, who was also its principal ballerina. Although it was Britain's largest ballet company during the war years,[1] and performed to an audience of between one and two million in wartime Britain and between ten and twenty million in its twelve-year life,[n 1] its contribution to the growth of British ballet has been largely overshadowed[4][5] by that of the other four ballet companies that were operating in 1953. All are state subsidised, and are still operating: Sadler's Wells Ballet (now the Royal Ballet), Ballet Rambert (now the Rambert Dance Company), Sadler's Wells Theatre Ballet now (Birmingham Royal Ballet), and the newly formed Festival Ballet (now English National Ballet). International Ballet is probably unique amongst large ballet companies in that it paid its way without any private or state grant aid.[1] Staging ballet has always been expensive, and Arts Council funding for the year 2013-2014 for those other three companies was Rambert £2M, English National Ballet £6M and the Royal Ballet well over £10M.[6] FormationInternational Ballet was formed by the 22-year-old dancer and choreographer Mona Inglesby.[3]: 24 On the outbreak of war she had volunteered to drive an ambulance, but she soon decided her talents would be better used taking ballet to audiences in the bomb damaged cities of Britain.[2]: 42 With a £5,000 loan from her father she formed the company Choreographic Productions Ltd, to perform under the name of International Ballet. It had a Council of Management chaired by Baroness Ravensdale,[2]: 43 and as a "cultural organisation not operated for profit" it was exempt from entertainment tax. Inglesby engaged dancers, a small orchestra and the experienced retired dancer Stanislas Idzikowski[7] as ballet master, and she commissioned sets and costumes. By May 1941 the new company was ready to launch. The war yearsThe first tour started at the Alhambra Theatre Glasgow[8] on 19 May 1941 with 22 artistes and a full orchestra, consisting of a permanent nucleus of 15 augmented by local musicians.[2]: 44 The soloists were Inglesby herself, the experienced ballerina Nina Tarakanova[9] and the virtuoso star Harold Turner, and the corps included the 15-year-old Moira Shearer.[1] The repertoire contained 8 one-act ballets, listed below. The tour was followed by an 8-week season at the Lyric Theatre, Shaftesbury Avenue, London. After this successful beginning the company embarked on a punishing schedule of two national tours per year, with 1 week or 2 week bookings at each venue and 3 matinees and 5 evening performances per week. Each tour was followed by a West End season of 6 or 8 weeks. Performances always had a full orchestra. It grew to be a very large company, bringing ballet to the masses in city theatres, cinemas, seaside holiday camps and military camps across Britain. The company continued to make extensive UK tours followed by 6 or 8-week London seasons on Shaftesbury Avenue. Because of their large audiences they generated substantial income which supported their innovations and overseas tours.[10] As time went on more even ambitious ballets were added to the repertoire and the company was enlarged, reaching 80 in number.[3]: 31 The company`s main scenic artist and costume designer was Doris Zinkeisen. This programme from the King's Theatre, Hammersmith for November 1943 is typical of a fortnight on tour. 16 performances, each of 2 or 3 ballets selected from a repertoire of 8, with only the three heavily over-worked principal dancers. This rate of working went on throughout the war, and February 1945 saw the company's 1000th performance.[3]: 44 Soon after forming the company Inglesby invited the 65-year-old Nicholas Sergeyev, then ballet master at Sadler's Wells Ballet, to stage some of the classical ballets for International Ballet. Sergeyev had been regisseur of the Imperial Russian Ballet for the last 15 years of its existence, where he had supervised a project under the leading choreographer Marius Petipa to notate all the ballets in the imperial repertoire. After the 1917 Russian Revolution he left Russia, taking the notations with him (main article: the Sergeyev Collection). He worked with Sergei Diaghilev and the Ballets Russes and then came to England at the invitation of Ninette de Valois to join the young Sadler's Wells Ballet in London and stage the first English productions of the Russian classical ballets. However, during the war International Ballet was the only company with the resources to stage full productions of these ballets, and Inglesby determined to put on productions exactly as Sergeyev dictated, reproducing the choreography and style of the Imperial Russian Ballet. Sergeyev respected her efforts so much that he left Sadler's Wells to join her full-time as ballet master, staying with her until he died in 1951. International Ballet became known as the vessel for classical productions in the grand Imperial Russian style.[4] This photograph of the lakeside scene of Swan Lake, variously called Act 2 or Act 1 Scene 2, is from a theatre programme of the second tour of 1943. The corps de ballet has only 12 members because of the small size of some of the stages used on tours. Large theatre stages will accommodate 24 or even 32. In 1943 the company opened the International School of Ballet in Queensberry Mews, South Kensington. It was under the direction of Sergeyev himself, because he no longer went on the tours (he was then 67).[2]: 7 A small number of scholarships were made available to male dancers too young for military call-up who would otherwise need to earn a living. Many graduates of the school went on to join the company, which continually needed fresh talent as it increased its numbers. Post-war expansionThe company was further expanded after the war, to enable the mounting of the very large productions The Masque of Comus, Sleeping Princess and Swan Lake. The end of the war meant that male dancers were back from armed service and artistes could more easily be recruited from abroad. By the 1948 the London West End season which included Sleeping Princess the company had 135 members, including artistes, musicians and staff,[2]: 10 and artistes alone numbered 100 for the 1949 seasons.[2]: 117 When Edwin Derrington, Inglesby's husband, joined the company as Administrator in 1946 he instituted an educational programme. Special schools matinees were given, preceded by talks about the ballet and behind-the-scenes tours. Derrington also lectured to Rotary and W.I. and other local groups.[2]: 79 In 1950 the company received a boost with the arrival of Léonide Massine, the brilliant and very experienced choreographer and former dancer, though probably better known now for his role in the film The Red Shoes. He rehearsed and produced the ballets Capriccio Espagnole and Gaiete Parisienne that he had created 15 years earlier for the Ballet Russe de Monte-Carlo. Both appeared in the repertoire in 1951.[2]: 108 To pay for the post-war expansion of the company and the large and expensive new productions International Ballet had to find larger audiences. The summer tour of 1947 took in three Butlin's holiday camps and from December 1946 onwards several of the Rank Organisation cinemas were included in the tours. These had huge seating capacities and when they were built they had been equipped with large stages. The largest, the Gaumont State Cinema in Kilburn, seated 4,004, and when the company played there for a week they played to full houses. The conventional theatres were still used however (e.g.[11]), and Kay Hunter's book[2] lists 48 provincial and 11 West End theatres where the company appeared during its 12 years of operation. Just one of those theatres was the recently rebuilt Theatre Royal in Hanley.,[12] where in November 1952 the company preceded a performance of Coppelia by a 'schools day'. 1600 youngsters sat in on a practice session, parts of a rehearsal, and part of the third act in full costume.[n 2] International Ballet's memories of Hanley will have been happier than those of their competitor. During the Sadler's Wells visit in June 1949 the theatre burnt down and destroyed their scenery, costumes and entire collection of musical instruments.[13]
[14] The Festival of Britain 19511951 was the year of the Festival of Britain and the opening of the newly built Royal Festival Hall on the South Bank, London, and International Ballet was the only company invited to present a programme of ballet for its inaugural season.[5]
The Festival Hall is principally a concert hall and has no proscenium arch or stage curtains. Temporary ones could have been erected, but International Ballet decided to present their ballets without them. Special lighting had to be devised, and new sets designed to complement the unusual lighting.[2]: 112 The varied programme included the two Massine ballets and the Russian classical ballets, but they had to be adapted somewhat to suit the new stage arrangement. This novel presentation of ballet attracted criticism from some quarters, but all performances of the long summer season were sold out. European tours 1951 to 1953The last three chapters of Inglesby and Hunter's book[2] are devoted to the European tours and contain a wealth of anecdotal detail as well as the information given here. The company launched itself onto mainland Europe in 1951 with a short season at the Hallenstadion, an indoor stadium in Zurich. A total audience of 42,000 attended the nine performances which more than paid for the considerable expense involved. The following summer saw the company at the Arena di Verona, a 2,000-year-old Roman amphitheatre in northern Italy. Open to the sky, the audience of up to 30,000 sat on cushions on the stone tiers and on rows of seats on the arena floor where originally the gladiators battled and the lions ate the Christians. Some dressing rooms were in the lions' dens and some in the Christians' prison cells underneath the tiered stone seating. Performances started very late, after it got dark, but ballet nights alternated with opera nights so the artistes had a day to recover. The end of the companyThe expanded company had become very expensive to run, and whilst the European tours had played to full houses, audiences on the UK tours were now dwindling. This was general in the theatre and film world in the mid 50s, and was due at least in part to the rapid spread of television.[2]: 134 Britain now had three other ballet companies: Sadler's Wells Ballet and Ballet Rambert established 20 years earlier, and the new touring company Festival Ballet founded in 1950 by Alicia Markova and Anton Dolin. Festival Ballet had more star power, and International Ballet missed its guiding ballet master Sergeyev who had died in 1951.[2]: 134 The company did one more UK tour after Barcelona, but gave its last performance on 5 December 1953. The artists dispersed to find other posts where they could and Mona Inglesby went into retirement.[2] Ballet Annual published an "obituary" to the company in its 1955 edition.[15] Many of the set and costume designs are now preserved in the Theatre Collection of Harvard University Library,[16] as is the Sergeyev Collection. In 2012 a plaque was put up inside the artists’ entrance of the Royal Festival Hall commemorating the achievements of International Ballet and its founder and Director, Mona Inglesby.[1][5] ReceptionAudiences loved International Ballet. Until the 50s the company played to full houses, sometimes in very large venues.[2]: 89 [3]: 37 [n 3] Facts and FiguresThe lists of productions and personnel have been compiled from these sources:
ProductionsThe first date given for each ballet is the date International Ballet first staged it. The ballet would have been in preparation for some time before that. The second is the date of the last performance that has been discovered in old theatre programmes.
$ The title Sleeping Beauty was coined for the first time by Ninette de Valois for the Sadler's Wells revival of 1946. Prior to that the ballet was universally called Sleeping Princess, including by Sadler's Wells for its 1939 Sergeyev-directed production. StaffCompany Director and Artistic Director - Mona Inglesby Ballet MastersStanislas Idzikowski (1941–44). Musical DirectorsGeorge Weldon (1941–43) ArtistesKay Hunter's book[2] lists 213 artistes who appeared with International Ballet at some time in its 12-year life. Those who were not dancers were actors for the productions of Everyman and The Masque of Comus.
Further readingAs of 2014 there is no official history of International Ballet, but these two books contain much information. Details of both are in the list of references above.
A BBC Radio 4 documentary Black-Out Ballet, including interviews with Henry Danton and other surviving International Ballet dancers, was broadcast in November 2012.
Ballet Annual printed a review of each of the company's London seasons in the next issue. A short description of the company together with a list of its productions to 1947 appeared in Ballet Annual 1948.[29] A fuller description of the company under the heading "The Inglesby Legend" is in Ballet Annual 1950.[19] WorldCat lists some 30 articles about International Ballet and its productions which appeared in the magazines Dance News, Dance Magazine, The Dancing Times, Ballet Today, Dance and Dancers and The Ballet Annual in the 40s and early 50s.
but does not include these two
Mona Inglesby died in 2006 and her obituaries contain some information about International Ballet.
These two pages of Ballet.co Postings contain snippets about International Ballet.
Notes and references
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