Quick Facts
British Celebrities Born In May
Also Known As: Dame Margaret Evelyn de Arias
Died At Age: 71
Family:
Spouse/Ex-: Roberto Arias
father: Felix John Hookham
mother: Hilda Fontes Hookham
siblings: Felix Edward F Hookham
children: Querube Brillembourg, Rosita Vallarino
Born Country: England
Ballet Dancers Choreographers
Died on: February 21, 1991
place of death: Panama City, Panama
Cause of Death: Ovarian Cancer
More Facts
awards: Shakespeare Prize
Childhood & Early Life
She was born as Margaret Evelyn Hookham on 18 May 1919 in Reigate, Surrey. Her father was British while her mother was half-Irish half-Brazilian. She had one brother.
Her mother enrolled her for ballet classes when she was four. A few years later, she moved to China with her parents after her father accepted a job with a tobacco company there. In China, she studied ballet with Russian émigré teacher George Goncharov.
Having displayed considerable potential as a future ballerina, she returned to London when she was 14 to pursue a ballet career. She trained with Serafina Astafieva and went to the Sadler’s Wells Ballet School with Vera Volkova.
In 1933, she joined the Vic-Wells Ballet School, the predecessor of today’s Royal Ballet School. There she received training under the direction of some great ballet teachers like Ninette de Valois, Olga Preobrajenska and Mathilde Kschessinska which led to her development as a skillful ballerina.
She adopted the stage name Margot Fonteyn while embarking on a professional ballet career.
Career
A graceful dancer devoted to the art form, Margot Fonteyn quickly rose through the ranks in the Royal Ballet. During the 1930s she performed leading roles in ballets like ‘Giselle’, ‘Swan Lake’ and ‘The Sleeping Beauty’. She was also appointed Prima Ballerina.
She formed a great professional collaboration with choreographer Sir Frederick Ashton. She became his muse and he created leading roles for her that were as challenging as they were fulfilling. She performed in many of his ballets including ‘Apparitions’, ‘Nocturne’, ‘Les Patineurs’, ‘A Wedding Bouquet’ and ‘The Wise Virgins’.
She gave her best when performing with a partner. During the 1940s, she formed a very successful professional pairing with Robert Helpmann and the duo travelled and performed frequently for several years. She also danced regularly with Michael Somes.
Her successful ballet career continued throughout the 1950s. She became president of the Royal Academy of Dancing in 1954.
In her early 40s, she first partnered with Rudolf Nureyev, a man several years her junior. This artistic collaboration would prove to be the most glorious one of her career and would also lead to their lifelong friendship. They first performed together in ‘Giselle’ in 1962 when she was 42 and he was 24. The performance was a resounding success.
Margot Fonteyn and Nureyev performed together in several popular ballets including ‘Marguerite and Armand’ choreographed for them by Ashton, and debuted Kenneth MacMillan’s ‘Romeo and Juliet’. They also appeared together in ‘Lucifer’ which modern dance choreographer Martha Graham created for them.
In addition to her stage career she also appeared with Michael Somes in a live US television color production of Tchaikovsky’s ‘The Sleeping Beauty’ in 1955 and in a color film of ‘Swan Lake’ in 1967 with Nureyev. After an exceptionally long ballet career Margot Fonteyn retired in 1979.
Major Works
Her role of Aurora in a 1939 revival of ‘The Sleeping Beauty’ earned her much acclaim. It was the first time the ballet had been successfully performed outside Russia and it led to the ballet becoming extremely popular in several countries.
Her performance of the title character, a water nymph, in the ballet ‘Ondine’ is one of her most celebrated roles. Created by the choreographer Sir Frederick Ashton and composer Hans Werner Henze, it was originally produced for the Royal Ballet in 1958. Fonteyn, with her delicate features and graceful movements played the role of the gentle and loving Ondine to perfection.
Awards & Achievements
Margot Fonteyn was made a Dame of the Order of the British Empire in 1956.
She was appointed Prima Ballerina Assoluta of the Royal Ballet in 1979, as a gift for her 60th Birthday. The prestigious title was given to only three ballerinas in the 20th century.
Personal Life & Legacy
She was once in a long-term relationship with composer Constant Lambert during the late 1930s and early 1940s.
In 1955 she married Dr Roberto Arias, a Panamanian diplomat to London. The initial years of their marriage were difficult because of her husband’s infidelities, however, they grew closer in their later years. Her husband was shot by a rival politician in 1964 and left a quadriplegic for the rest of his life.
In 1989, Fonteyn was diagnosed with cancer and died on 21 February 1991, aged 71.
Facts About Margot Fonteyn
Margot Fonteyn was known for her love of animals, particularly her pet Siamese cats. She often brought them with her on tour and cared for them with great affection.
Fonteyn was fluent in multiple languages, including French and Spanish, which she utilized during her international performances to connect with audiences around the world.
Despite her graceful and poised demeanor on stage, Fonteyn was known for her playful sense of humor and love of practical jokes among her close friends and colleagues.
Fonteyn was a talented artist in addition to being a renowned ballerina, often sketching and painting in her free time as a way to unwind and express her creativity.
In her later years, Fonteyn became a passionate advocate for various charitable causes, using her platform and influence to raise awareness and support for important social issues.