Yahoo Suche Web Suche

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. Victor E. Dandré or D'André (1870–5 February 1944) was a Russian-born, Duma official who left Russia and became the husband of the world renowned ballerina, Anna Pavlova and a ballet impresario.

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Anna_PavlovaAnna Pavlova - Wikipedia

    Victor Dandré, her manager and companion, asserted he was her husband in his biography of the dancer in 1932: Anna Pavlova: In Art & Life (Dandré 1932, author's foreword). They had secretly married in 1914 after first meeting in 1904 (some sources say 1900).

    • 1899–1931
    • Ballerina
    • 23 January 1931 (aged 49), The Hague, Netherlands
  3. Immer dabei war ihr Manager, Companion und Ehemann Victor Dandré. Ihr größter Wunsch, noch einmal im heimischen Marien-Theater aufzutreten, erfüllt sich nicht. Anna Pawlowa verstarb 1931 während ihrer Abschiedstournee in Den Haag an einer Lungenentzündung.

    • Anna Pawlowa – Ein Leben für den Tanz
    • Russisch
    • Анна Павлова
  4. Auslöser war ihr ehemaliger Förderer Victor Dandré, der um 1910 in Russland beschuldigt wurde, Geld unterschlagen zu haben. Zunächst Haft, dann Freilassung unter strikten Auflagen und schließlich Flucht zur inzwischen in London lebenden Anna Pawlowa.

  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. 28. Apr. 2021 · 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 fans — she devoted all her ...

  7. 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.