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Theatre review: Ida Rubinstein, 
The Final Act

There's too little drama in this play about a diva

October 1, 2021 11:24
Kathryn Worth, Marco Gambino & Naomi Sorkin in Ida Rubinstein - The Final Act - The Playground Theatre - Photos by Gareth McLeod (29)
2 min read

 

To dramatise the formidable life of dancer and impresario Ida Rubinstein Naomi Sorkin has conscripted a team of ardent Rubinstein admirers. And there is a lot to admire.

Although her reputation faded even before her death in 1960, at the height of Rubinstein’s career the Russian-born Jewish performer was as celebrated as Isadora Duncan, performed with Diaghilev and was declared by the renowned actor Sarah Bernhardt, a worthy successor. Rubinstein also formed her own dance company for which she commissioned Ravel to write Bolero.

Her off-stage life was no less colourful. Lovers included American painter Romaine Brooks, the British politician Walter Guinness (who was killed by the Stern Gang in Egypt in 1944) and the Italian writer Gabriele D’Annunzio who according to this show was part of a love triangle with Brooks.

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Theatre