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Theatre

The scandalous life of a Russian diva

A new play revisits the extraordinary life of dancer and actress Ida Rubinstein

January 15, 2020 17:59
Naomi Sorkin as Ida Rubinstein
4 min read

Ravel’s Bolero — that 15-minute, crescendo-building piece of music which instantly conjures up images of skaters Torvill and Dean in purple chiffon — owes its existence to Ida Rubinstein, a Russian dancer and actress whose contribution to the development of theatre and ballet has been largely forgotten.

Ravel’s best-known work was just one of the many commissioned by Rubinstein. In the early years of the last century, she collaborated with such famous names as Diaghilev, Nijinsky and Debussy, formed her own dance company and was no stranger to scandal along the way.

Now her incredible life story is being brought to the stage in a play that celebrates her work. Ida Rubinstein: The Final Act looks at some of the more outrageous episodes in her life, from the portrayal of Salome that lead her embarrassed family to commit her to an asylum, to her fame in Paris and the assassination of her lover Lord Moyne, by members of the Stern Gang.

Rubinstein is played by Naomi Sorkin, a former principal of the American Ballet Theatre who bears a striking resemblance to the Russian diva. The similarities are not just physical. Rubinstein was born in Kharkov, in the Ukraine and Sorkin’s grandparents on her father’s side also came from that region. Sorkin’s father was a celebrated violinist; her grandfather on her mother’s side was Dr Max Dolnick, an ardent Zionist who frequently entertained such eminent visitors as Golda Meir, Albert Einstein and Sergei Rachmaninov in his Chicago home.

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