Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Kyra Vaslavovna Nijinsky (19 June 1914 – 1 September 1998), was a ballet dancer of Polish and Hungarian ancestry, with a Russian dance and cultural heritage. She was the daughter of Vaslav Nijinsky and the niece of Bronislava Nijinska.

  2. Há 1 dia · Kyra Nijinsky, filha de uma dançarina e ela mesma . Kyra Vaslavovna Nijinsky (nasceu em 19 de junho de 1914, em em Viena – 1° de setembro de 1998, em San Rafael, Califórnia), foi uma dançarina filha de Vaslav Nijinsky, um dos maiores bailarinos e coreógrafos do século 20.

  3. 14 de nov. de 1998 · Kyra Nijinsky, a dancer who was the daughter of Vaslav Nijinsky, one of this century's greatest ballet dancers and choreographers, died on Sept. 1 at the Pine Ridge Care Center in San Rafael,...

  4. 18.7K subscribers. 51K views 10 years ago. ...more. These are two fascinating interviews with the daughters of legendary Ballets Russes super star, Vaslav Nijinsky.This first is an interview to...

    • 4 min
    • 51,8K
    • John Hall
    • Nijinsky’s Early Years in St Petersburg
    • The God of Dance in Paris
    • Nijinsky’s Fortune Turns: The Prodrome
    • Second Period with The Ballets Russes and First Psychotic Symptoms
    • Psychosis in His Own Words
    • Bleuler Dixit
    • Entering The Chronicity
    • Sakel and The Final Curtain
    • What Can We Learn?
    • Acknowledgements

    Born in Ukraine in 1889 (or 1890), Vaslav was a child prodigy. His parents, of Polish origin, were talented ballet dancers touring in Russia, and they introduced Vaslav to the stage at an early age. The family was not without misfortune; his older brother Stanislaw (1887–1917) suffered a severe brain injury at young age after falling from a window ...

    Les Ballets Russes was the iconic dance company of the age. With Nijinsky, prima ballerina Tamara Karsavina (1885–1978), Michael Fokine’s choreography and Stravinsky’s music, the company exhilarated Europe. Between 1909 and 1913, Petrushka, Les Sylphides, Scheherazade and Le Spectre de la Rose became instant ballet classics (Fig. 1). In his book Me...

    There is some evidence to suggest that Nijinsky’s partnership with Prince Lvov and Sergei Diaghilev were less driven by love than by a tacit agreement for mutual interest. In Paris, Nijinsky frequently escaped Diaghilev’s supervision and spent time with female prostitutes. The Copernican turn occurred in late 1913. At the end of a 3-week voyage to ...

    Nijinsky was given control of the company during a long tour of the USA and Canada, while Diaghilev retreated to Europe. The total managerial chaos of this tour resulted in a financial loss of $250 000; however, artistically it was a greatly acclaimed success. President Wilson congratulated him personally and he met Charlie Chaplin, who was greatly...

    Clearly there are limitations to the retrospective diagnosis of mental disorders, and historical cases are subject to heated debate (Jaspers, 1922). However, Nijinsky is different. From January to March 1919, he captured his thoughts and experiences in four diaries, which became a classic self-portrait of the symptoms of schizophrenia. A heavily ed...

    The excellent biography Nijinsky a leap into madnessby professor of psychiatry Peter Ostwald (1991) contains a detailed psychopathological analysis. Dr Fränkel was the St Moritz doctor and also Prof. Eugen Bleuler’s former student, who he approached asking for his assistance. Nijinsky was seen by Bleuler on the 6 March 1919 at the Burghölzli, a lar...

    Upon his re-admission 4 months later, Nijinsky’s state had deteriorated. He suffered with hallucinations and persecutory delusions, but mostly with motor symptoms, either stuporous or excited catatonia with sudden episodes of rage and violence, infantilism and poor self-care, as well as mannerisms and stereotypic behaviour. In March 1920, Nijinsky ...

    By this time, Romola had returned and had started looking for alternatives to the psychodynamic therapies with which Nijinsky was being treated. Among the novel ‘biological therapies’ was that of psychiatrist Manfred Sakel (1900–57), the pioneer of the insulin coma technique, a shock therapy that gained extraordinary acceptance before the antipsych...

    Nijinsky’s diagnosis seems firm, as all the clinicians who visited him agreed with the schizophrenia diagnosis. Through the course of his illness, he presented all current cardinal symptoms for schizophrenia. Nijinsky suffered with delusions (persecutory and grandiose), auditory hallucinations and thought disorder, but also with motor symptoms (stu...

    Special gratitude to Dr Yulia Worbe for discussing the paper and for directing me to Nijinsky at the British Library. Thanks to Dr Mike Zandi, Andres Fernandez-Egea and Angela and Graham Armstrong for useful suggestions and comments, and to the CPFT librarians for always finding my unusual requests. Finally, thanks to Mr Christian Dumais-Lvowski, r...

    • Emilio Fernandez-Egea
    • 2019
  5. 30 de ago. de 2009 · 563. 84K views 14 years ago. Here are some clips from a rare film about the dancer, musician, poet, painter and mystic, Kyra Nijinsky, the daughter of the great Vaslav Nijinsky. Included are...

    • 10 min
    • 84,7K
    • Gilda Tabarez
  6. 29 de abr. de 2023 · Kyra Nijinsky was a Russian ballet dancer and the daughter of Vaslav Nijinsky, a famous ballet dancer and choreographer. He was considered one of the best in his profession in the 20th century, making choreographies for such ballet masterpieces as Le Sacre du Printemps (1913) with music by Igor Stravinsky.