Anna Pavlova The illegitimate daughter of a laundry-woman, her father was probably a young Jewish soldier and businessman. When she saw The Sleeping Beauty performed, she decided to become a dancer, and entered the Imperial Ballet School at ten. She worked very hard there, and on graduation began to perform at the Maryinsky Theatre, debuting on September 19, 1899. In 1907, she began her first tour, to Moscow, and by 1910 was appearing at the Metropolitan Opera House in America. When, in 1914, she was traveling through Germany on her way to England when Germany declared war on Russia, her connection to Russia was for all intents broken. For the rest of her life, she toured the world with her own company and kept a home in London, where her exotic pets were constant company when she was there. Victor Dandr? her manager, was also her companion, and may have been her husband (she deliberately clouded this issue). While her contemporary, Isadora Duncan, introduced revolutionary innovations to dance, Pavlova remained largely committed to the classic style. She was known for her daintiness, frailness, lightness and both wittiness and pathos. Her last world tour was in 1928-29 and her last performance in England in 1930. She appeared in a few silent films: one, The Immortal Swan, she shot in 1924 but was not released until 1956. She died of pleurisy in the Netherlands in 1931.

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