Antoine Bournonville

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Antoine Bournonville
Antoine Bournonville

Antoine Bournonville (May 19, 1760 – January 11, 1843), was a French ballet dancer, actor, singer and a choreographer, active in the Royal Swedish Ballet and the Royal Danish Ballet and eventually ballet master in the latter. He is considered to have played a great role in the development of the ballet in Scandinavia. He was the father of August Bournonville.

[edit] Biography

Bournonville was the son of the actors Louis-Amable Bournonville and Jeanne Evrard, born as the twin of his brother Guillame. He became the student of Noverre in 1769, at the age of nine, and toured in Wienna, Paris and London before he was employed in the Royal Swedish Ballet at the Royal Swedish Opera in Stockholm with his sister Julie Alix de la Fay in 1782.

He was premier dancer and ballet instructor at the Opera until 1792. During his time in Sweden, he was described as beautiful as Apollo; "His appearance was of a true Apollo. On top of that he had a form of virtuosity in all kinds of dance, which he used with the finest taste", and his favourite student and dancing partner in Sweden was Charlotte Slottsberg, with whom he made a successful pair in the ballets. He was also active as an actor, a singer and a choreographer; during his stay in Sweden he wrote the ballets Les Meuniers provençaux (1785) and Les Pêcheurs (1789).

Antoine Bournonville
Antoine Bournonville

He left Sweden in 1792 after the assassination of king Gustav III of Sweden and was employed at the Royal Danish Ballet in Copenhagen in Denmark after a guest performance there. His favourite dance partner in Denmark was Marie Christine Björn, and in 1816-1823 he was ballet master of the Royal Danish Ballet.

Bournonville was married first to the Danish dancer Mariane Jenssen, second to his Swedish house keeper Lovisa Sundberg (the mother of Auguste Bournonville), and he also had a child with the Danish dancer Karen Olsen.

[edit] References

  • Svensk Uppslagsbok, 1947 års utgåva.
  • Lars Löfgren, "Svensk teater".
  • Nordisk familjebok
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