Yahoo Suche Web Suche

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. Tamara Tchinarova (tr. Chinarova, Russian: Тамара Чинарова), also known as Tamara Finch, (18 July 1919 – 31 August 2017) was a Romanian-born émigré Russian and French ballerina who contributed significantly to the development of Australian dance companies and was a Russian/English interpreter for touring ballet ...

    • 1930-1946 as ballerina, 1958-2007 as author
  2. 1. Sept. 2017 · September 01, 2017. The dancer Tamara Tchinarova died yesterday at her daughter’s home in Spain at the age of 98. Of Armenian, Georgian and Ukrainian descent, she trained with Olga...

  3. 16. Sept. 2017 · Tchinarova and the famous trio of ‘‘baby ballerinas’’, Irina Baronova, Tatiana Riabouchin­ska and Tamara Toumanova, were some of the sprightly young ‘‘Russians who never danced in Russia’’. They brought to western Europe the tradition of Russian ballet exemplifie­d by choreograp­hers such as Balanchine and Mikhail Fokine.

  4. 12. Sept. 2017 · A casual conversation in Sydney between two actors, one famous, the other on the brink of fame, changed everything for the ballet dancer, Tamara Tchinarova. Her life in Australia came to an end ...

  5. Tchinarova in December 1937. Tamara Tchinarova Finch (also tr. Chinarova; born Tamara Rekemchuk, July 18, 1919 – August 31, 2017) was a Romanian ballet dancer and writer. She was born in Cetatea Albă, Kingdom of Romania . During the 1940s, Tchinarova worked significantly to the development of Australian dance companies, including ...

  6. Tamara Tchinarova and Martin Rubinstein in Scheherazade in the 1930s. Tuesday September 12 2017, 12.01am, The Times. “Your knees will have to be stretched,” was George Balanchine’s warning ...

  7. Tamara Tchinarova (1919–2017), one of the original 'baby ballerinas' of the Ballets Russes de Monte Carlo, began training with the Russian teacher Olga Preobrajenska, formerly of the Imperial Russian Ballet, at age ten after her family emigrated to Paris from Romania.