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From Russia with Love

The most photographed male dancer in the world, Rudolf Nureyev electrified the world with his ballet for close to three decades in the second half of the 20th century.

In the world of ballet, dominated by the ballerina or the female artist, Nureyev brought male dancing to the limelight, and changed the nature of 20th century ballet. From peasantdom to stardom, he twirled his way to the very top in an eventful life.

Rudolf Hametovich Nureyev was born in a train near Irkutsk in Russia, when his mother was on her way to meet his father, in 1938. His father was a soldier in the Russian Army stationed at Vladivostok, in Siberia.

When Nureyev was five, his family moved to Ufa. From early childhood he was bent upon joining a dancing school even though his father tried his best to dissuade him.

But young Nureyev was adamant and joined a folk dance group. In 1955, at the age of 17, he landed at the Vaganova School at Kirov, in Leningrad. Seventeen was considered too old for training from scratch.

But, during the audition his genius was so apparent that the principal, Krotovitskaya, remarked, "Young man, you'll either become a brilliant dancer or a total failure. And most likely you'll be a failure." Nuruyev went on to prove her wrong.

From Vaganova he then shifted to the Kirov ballet school at St Petersburg, Russia. He found his teacher and mentor in Alexander Pushkin. Nureyev made his debut in classical ballet with ballerina Natalia Dudinskaya. He soon established himself as a favourite with Russian audiences.

Nureyev was the star attraction of the Kirov Ballet when it toured Paris in 1961, his first appearance outside Russia. After the opening performance, the audience gave the 23-year-old dancer a standing ovation that lasted longer than the dance itself!

On June 17, 1961, minutes before his plane was to take off for London, Nureyev defected. Not wanting to stay on in the Soviet Union as the communist state was then known, he asked the French officials to give him asylum or refuge. He was given asylum and later Austrian citizenship. The defection made headlines.

The same year he appeared at the Royal Ballet in London where he met Margot Fonteyn, the renowned ballet dancer. The duo enthralled the world with their performances in the "pas de deux" (dance for two) in 'Le Corsaire', 'Giselle' and 'Romeo and Juliet'.

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