Rosita Mauri

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Léon Comerre's portrait of the ballerina
Fin d'arabesque (1877) by Edgar Degas

María Isabel Amada Antonia Rosa Mauri Segura or Roseta Mauri y Segura (born 15 September 1850 at Palma de Mallorca and died in Paris on 3 December 1923) was a dancer and ballet teacher of Catalan origin.

Career

The daughter of a ballet master and choreographer, she began her dancing career in 1865 and went on to become one of Europe’s principal ballerinas. In 1877 the French composer Charles Gounod saw her dancing at La Scala, Milan, and persuaded the Paris Opera to engage her the following year, when she premiered in Gounod's Polyeucte. After she retired from full-time dancing, she taught future generations of dancers at the Ballet d’Opera's ‘Class of perfection’ between 1898-1920.[1] On her death in 1923, she was buried in the Montparnasse cemetery. The Rosita Mauri Academy of Dance in Barcelona was named after her in 1978[2] and her home town of Reus has hosted an international dance competition in her name since 2002.[3]

Because of her warm nature, Rosita Mauri was a favourite in artistic circles. The poet François Coppée created for her the very popular ballet La Korrigane (The Goblin Maiden), first performed in 1880 with music by Charles-Marie Widor and choreography by Louis Mérante.[4] He was followed in 1885 by Jules Massenet, who created the ballet in his opera El Cid (1885) especially for her.[5] After seeing her performing with her long black hair loose in the lead role of André Messager's Les Deux Pigeons the following year, the poet Stéphane Mallarmé wrote how impressed he was by her ritualistic animality (sa divination mêlée d’animalité).[6]

She was frequently portrayed by artists. Edgar Degas painted her several times onstage: Fin d'arabesque (1877);[7] Danseuse sur la scène (1878);[8] Ballet vu d'une loge de l'Òpera (1885).[9] Others included Édouard Manet (Portrait of Rosita Mauri (1877/9), also known as Jeune femme en rose, in the Pushkin Museum),[10] Auguste Renoir, Léon Bonnat, Léon Comerre, Anders Zorn (a portrait in 1888 and an etching in 1889),[11] and Ludovic-Napoléon Lepic. She was also sculpted by Denys Puech, Laurent Marqueste, and Eusebi Arnau. The photographer Nadar made portraits of her throughout her career.[12]

Another side of her artistic temperament was her quick temper. There is an anecdote that she refused to eat caviar because the tsar had turned to talk to a companion during one of her performances.[13] Another rumoured to have suffered on her account was the French politician Antonin Proust, who had formerly studied art with his childhood friend Édouard Manet and was for a short period Minister for the Arts (1881-2). In March 1905 he shot himself two days after dining with Rosita Mauri, according to some papers as a result of quarreling with her.[14]

Notes

  1. Lynn Garafola, Legacies of twentieth-century dance, Wesleyan University Press, CT 06459, 2005, p.160
  2. Cmagnet.com
  3. Rosetamauri.org
  4. Rollin Smith, Louis Vierne: organist of Notre-Dame Cathedral, Pendragon Press, 1999, p.57; there is a contemporary photograph of her in this role
  5. The Standard Opera and Concert Guide Part Two, George P. Upton and Felix Borowski (Kessinger Reprint, 2005) p.332
  6. Mary Lewis Shaw, Performance in the Texts of Mallarmé, Pennsylvania State University, PA 16802, 1993, p.61
  7. Histoire-image.org
  8. Artsunlight.com
  9. Wikipaintings
  10. Reproduction in Google Books
  11. Zorngallery.se
  12. There are examples at Rosita Mauri 1881 and Gettyimages.co.uk
  13. Originally recorded by Carl van Vechten in 1922: Caruso’s Mustache Off, New York, 2010, p.105
  14. New York Times, 23 March 1905 query.nytimes.com

Sources