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  1. When Lydia Lopokova, the star of the Ballets Russes, pranced and swirled her way from the boards of the London stage to the bed of John Maynard Keynes, the economist, his Bloomsbury-group friends ...

  2. 22 de fev. de 2019 · Chapter 3: Lydia Vasilievna Lopokova. Lydia Vasilievna Lopokova was born in St Petersburg and had an illustrious career as a ballerina with the Mariinsky Theatre. She left Russia in 1910 for Paris and then America. She received great acclaim for her dancing, but she had a desire to be an actress and pursued that goal, even though English was ...

  3. 11 de jan. de 2020 · Subtitle on jacket: The letters of John Maynard Keynes and Lydia Lopokova 367 p., [24] p. of plates : 25 cm

  4. 17 de jul. de 2021 · Across the fields lies Tilton, the house that became Keynes’s and Lopokova’s own country home. There, after he died in 1946, she lived out the grief that is the last phase of love’s cycle.

  5. Lydia Lopokova. Self: The Selfish Giant. Lydia Lopokova was born on 21 October 1892 in St. Petersburg, Russia. She was an actress, known for The Selfish Giant (1939), Mutual Weekly, No. 58 (1916) and Little Red Shoes (1937). She was married to John Maynard Keynes and Randolpho Barrocki. She died on 8 June 1981 in Seaford, England, UK.

  6. 1892–1981. Lydia Lopokova trained as a ballerina at the Imperial School of Ballet in St Petersburg. Her appearance with Diaghilev’s Ballets Russes in 1918 took London by storm. Maynard Keynes became captivated by her childlike gaiety and idiosyncratic English, and after the failure of Diaghilev’s company, arranged accommodation for her in ...

  7. 25 de abr. de 2008 · Lopokova retired from ballet in 1933 and after Keynes's first heart attack in 1937 he became her full-time job until his death in 1946. After a lifetime of travel, Lopokova never went abroad again ...