Alexander Grant (dancer)

Alexander Grant (22 February 1925 30 September 2011) was a New Zealand ballet dancer, teacher, and company director.[1] After moving to London as a young man, he became known as "the Royal Ballet's most remarkable actor-dancer in its golden period from the 1940s to the 1960s."[2]

Early life and training

Alexander Marshall Grant was born in Wellington, New Zealand, the son of hoteliers,[3] during the prosperous 1920s. He resolved to become a professional dancer at the age of six, when he was taught to perform a simple folk dance, a Ukrainian trepak, and discovered the joy of performing. He began taking dancing lessons when he was seven and, under the tutelage of Kathleen O'Brien and Jean Horne, was an experienced amateur by age fifteen. Inspired by performances of Russian ballet troupes that he saw in Australia, he had already begun to develop the exuberant, energetic, and highly theatrical style that would become his trademark in later life. As a result, he won a scholarship from the Royal Academy of Dance to study in England. But, because of the outbreak of war in Europe, he was forced to remain in New Zealand. He studied at Wellington College from 1939 to 1941 and thereafter performed as a song-and-dance man entertaining troops in the Pacific[4] while continuing his dance training during the wartime years. In 1946, after peace had come to England, Grant was able to go to London and enroll in the Sadler's Wells Ballet School. He arrived in February, when he was twenty-one years old. His time as a student there was brief, however, for he was soon invited to become a founding member of the Sadler's Wells Theatre Ballet, a sister company to the Sadler's Wells Ballet, which had relocated to the Royal Opera House at Covent Garden.

Performing career

In September 1946, during his first tour with the young company, Grant was transferred to the main company in Covent Garden, today's Royal Ballet.[5] Because of the shortage of male dancers during the war years, he was swiftly promoted to soloist and assigned featured roles in the Sadler's Wells repertory. Frederick Ashton, chief choreographer of the company, noticed him right away and cast him as a music hall hoofer in the Popular Song duet in Façade. Then, in 1947, guest choreographer Léonide Massine chose him for the leading role of the Barber in a revival of his comic ballet Mam'zelle Angot, a lighthearted romp of amorous pursuits. It proved to be the role that made him a star. As a "whimsical, endearing little person in a tow-colored wig," Grant happily "bounced about the stage like a rubber ball," then collapsed in abject despair before winning the heart of the ballerina in the title role, danced by Margot Fonteyn.[6] The next year, 1948, Ashton devised a spectacular hoop dance for him in Les Sirènes, the first of Grant's many created roles in Ashton ballets.

Promoted to principal dancer in 1950, Grant became one of Ashton's muses, inspiring him and even collaborating with him in the creation of memorable demi-caractère roles.[7] During his thirty years as a dancer with the Royal Ballet, 1946-1976, he appeared in some thirty Ashton ballets, originating roles at more than twenty premieres.[8] It was "Grant's distinction as a classical dancer, combined with his mastery of character, that enabled Ashton to develop what were usually subsidiary supporting roles—the bravura trick soloists—into key players in the main drama, often introducing a provocative sexual charge."[9] Notable roles with an erotic element were Bryaxis the pirate chief in Daphnis and Chloe (1951), Eros in Sylvia (1952), and Tirrenio the sea god in Ondine (1958). Of all his roles, the two most famous are undoubtedly the sweet simpleton Alain in La Fille Mal Gardée (1960) and Bottom the Weaver in The Dream (1964).[10] In the former, he leapt and twirled in a delirium of joy with his red umbrella; in the latter, transformed into an ass, he capered about in pointe shoes, simulating hooves, in an interlude with the lovestruck Titania, played by Antoinette Sibley. His performance was described as "a cameo of great pathos as well as comedy.".[11]

Besides being temperamentally unsuited, Grant was too short to dance princes and aristocrats in fairy-tale ballets in the classic repertory. He did, however, possess a decent classical technique, and he was sometimes thrust into the challenge of clean-lined classicism in such Ashton ballets as Symphonic Variations, Les Patineurs, and Scènes de Ballet. But character roles were his forte. He gave more than fifty performances in the title role of Michel Fokine's Petrushka, and he was acclaimed as the eccentric Doctor Coppélius and the mysterious Herr Drosselmeyer in Coppėlia and Casse Noisette, respectively. He also scored success as the Rake in The Rake's Progress and as Satan in Job, both created by Ninette de Valois, and as the Spanish Miller in The Three-Cornered Hat by Massine. Cast in the role originated by Massine, he always won applause for his performance of the smolderingly intense farruca, a solo form of flamenco. In A Month in the Country (1976), based on Ivan Turgenev's comedy of manners, he offered a moving image of a lovelorn Russian husband, opposite Lynn Seymour as the heroine. It was his final Ashton role.

Roles created

In Ashton ballets

During the years they worked together, Ashton made numerous roles for Grant. Among them are the following.[12]

In other works

Grant also created roles in other original productions mounted by the Sadler's Wells Ballet. Among them are the following.[13]

Videography

Grant can be seen in roles that he created in four works choreographed for the Royal Ballet by Frederick Ashton.

Later life

In 1971, when age and physical disability began to limit the frequency of his performances, Grant became director of Ballet for All, the educational group within the Royal Ballet. He retired from the company in 1976 and accepted the post of artistic director of the National Ballet of Canada, based in Toronto. During his seven years there, he significantly enlarged the company repertory by acquiring works by Ashton, Cranko, MacMillan, Béjart, and other internationally known artists as well as by encouraging such young Canadian choreographers as James Kudelka, He also occasionally appeared on stage as Alain, Carabosse, and various characters in mime roles.[14]

Upon his return to England in 1983, Grant became an extremely popular guest performer and producer. He joined London Festival Ballet (now English National Ballet) as coach and performer, appearing in mostly mime roles such as Doctor Coppélius, Herr Drosselmeyer, and Madge the Witch in La Sylphide. At the "Gala Tribute to Sir Frederick Ashton in Celebration of His 80th Birthday", held on 18 October 1984 at the Royal Opera House, Grant honored his mentor and friend by dancing a role originated by Ashton in 1931, that of the oily Dago in the Tango-Pasodoble of Ashton's perennially popular Façade.[15] He was fifty-nine years old at the time. When Ashton died in 1988, he left the rights to Façade and La Fille Mal Gardée to Grant, who subsequently traveled widely, staging and coaching these ballets for various companies.

Awards and honors

Grant was appointed Commander of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire (CBE) in 1965. He also received an Icon Award from the New Zealand Arts Foundation, in recognition of outstanding achievements in the arts, and the Queen Elizabeth II Coronation Award, the highest honor given by the Royal Academy of Dance, awarded annually in recognition of outstanding service to the art of ballet.

Personal life

Offstage, Grant was one of the most beloved members of the Royal Ballet. With his twinkling eyes, gregarious nature, and direct, often humorous turn of phrase, he won many friends and admirers.[16] As a young man, his magnetic personality, thick mane of hair, and craggy good looks caused him to be an object of lust by both sexes. He was romantically attached to ballerina Nadia Nerina in his early years in London but abandoned her in 1953 in favor of an intense affair with Ashton, who had fallen deeply in love with him. When their romance cooled, Ashton and Grant became fast and lifelong friends as well as professional colleagues.[17] In the autumn of 1984, Grant was the only personal friend of Ashton's to be invited to a dinner party hosted by Princess Margaret in honor of Ashton's recent birthday. When Ashton died in 1988, he left "all royalties and profits from my copyrights" to a small group of friends. Those to Façade and La Fille Mal Gardée were bequeathed to Grant.[18]

In old age, Grant underwent a hip replacement and prostate surgery. His second hip replacement should have been a routine procedure and recovery, but it turned into a pain-racked, seven-month stay in hospital. He died in 2011, at age eighty-six. He was survived by his partner, Jean-Pierre Gasquet, his companion of fifty-four years, and his brother Garry, fifteen years his junior. Also a dancer with the Royal Ballet, Garry Grant inherited many of his older brother's most famous roles.

References

  1. Barbara Newmam, "Grant, Alexander," in International Encyclopedia of Dance, edited by Selma Jeanne Cohen and others (New York: Oxford University Press, 1009), vol. 3, pp. 236-237.
  2. Anonymous, "Alexander Grant," obituary, The Telegraph (London), 4 October 2011.
  3. Anna Kisselgoff, "Alexander Grant, Dancer with Royal Ballet, Dies at 86," obituary, International New York Times, 3 October 2011.
  4. Debra Craine and Judith Mackkrill, "Grant, Alexander," in The Oxford Dictionary of Dance (Oxford University Press, 2000).
  5. Judith Cruikshank, "Alexander Grant," obituary, The Guardian (London), 4 October 2011.
  6. Mary Clarke, The Sadler's We;;s Ballet: A History and an Appreciation (London: A.&C. Black, 1955), p. 222.
  7. Geraldine Morris, "Dance Partnerships: Ashton and His Dancers," Dance Research (London), 19.1 (Summer 2001), pp. 11-59.
  8. Nadine Meisner, "Alexander Grant: Ballet Dancer Who Reveled in His Long Association with Frederick Ashton," obituary, The Independent (London), 10 February 2011.
  9. Anonymous, "Alexander Grant," obituary, The Telegraph, 4 October 2011.
  10. Kisselgoff, "Alexander Grant," obituary, 3 October 2011).
  11. Anonymous, "Alexander Grant," obituary, The Telegraph, 4 October 2011.
  12. David Vaughan, Frederick Ashton and His Ballets (New York: Knopf, 1977), pp/474-494.
  13. Clarke, The Sadler's Wells Ballet (1955), and various obituaries and online biographies.
  14. Newman, "Grant, Alexander", in International Encyclopedia of Dance (1998), vol. 3, p. 237.
  15. Anonymous, "Alexander Grant", obituary, The Telegraph, 4 October 2011.
  16. Meisner, "Alexander Grant," obituary, The Independent, 10 February 2011.
  17. Julie Kavanagh, Secret Muses: The Life of Frederick Ashton (New York: Pantheon, 1996), p. 377-375.
  18. Brendan McCarthy, "Frederick Ashton Foundation and Christopher Nourse," Dance Tabs website, 4 February 2012, http://dancetabs.com/2012/02. Retrieved 18 February 2015.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, December 07, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.