Yahoo Suche Web Suche

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. Lydia Lopokova was born in St. Petersburg on 21st October 1892. Her father, worked as the chief usher at the Alexandrinsky Theatre. Her mother, Rosalia Constanza Karlovna Douglas, was the descendent of a Scottish engineer and had a strong interest in dancing. Lopokova trained at the Imperial Ballet School and soon came under the influence of ...

  2. 22. Feb. 2019 · Lydia Vasilievna Lopokova was born in St Petersburg and had an illustrious career as a ballerina with the Mariinsky Theatre. She left Russia in 1910 for Paris and then America. She received great acclaim for her dancing, but she had a desire to be an actress and pursued that goal, even though English was not her native tongue. She become very popular in New York and was known for her wit and ...

  3. 18. Apr. 2008 · 404pp, Weidenfeld & Nicolson, £25. Lydia Lopokova deserves a medal for putting up with Bloomsbury. Most of us, if subject to a stream of sly put-downs from Virginia, Vanessa, Lytton et al, would ...

  4. 17. Okt. 2013 · Born in 1891 in St Petersburg, Lydia Lopokova lived a long and remarkable life. Her vivacious personality and the sheer force of her charm propelled her to the top of Diaghilev's Ballet Russes. Through a combination of luck, determination and talent, Lydia became a star in Paris, a vaudeville favourite in America, the toast of Britain and then married the world-renowned economist, and formerly ...

  5. 25. Apr. 2008 · In her latter years - she died in 1981 at the age of 89 - Lydia Lopokova became uninhibitedly eccentric. The once dazzling star of the Ballets Russes ended up as an amiably dotty old lady who ...

  6. Lydia Vasilievna Lopokova (genannt Loppi), Lady Keynes. retrieved. 9 October 2017. stated in. A historical dictionary of British women. 1981. 3 references. stated in. The Peerage. The Peerage person ID . p23574.htm#i235737. subject named as. Lydia Loppkof ...

  7. This portrait depicts the economist John Maynard Keynes, Baron Keynes, with his wife, the Russian-born ballerina Lydia Lopokova. Keynes’s works, notably The Economic Consequences of the Peace (1919) and General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money (1936), established what is known as ‘Keynsian economics’, a theory that became widely influential following the Second World War.