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Issue Details: First known date: 2018... 2018 Robert Helpmann : The Many Faces of a Theatrical Dynamo
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AbstractHistoryArchive Description

'Dancer, actor in theatre, film and television, choreographer for stage and film, revue artist, director of ballet, opera, drama, pantomime, musicals, comedy: Robert Helpmann (1909-1986) exuberantly realised a career that encompassed a phenomenal range. In ballet and dance he grew beyond his early years as Ninette de Valois' protege within the Vic-Wells Ballet in the 1930s, to become premier danseur with the Company in the 1940s, guest artist with The Royal Ballet in the 1950s and 1960s, and finally director of Australian Ballet. In drama he acted with the Old Vic and the Shakespeare Memorial Theatre, collaborated frequently with his partner, Michael Benthall, with Sir Laurence Olivier and Vivien Leigh, and with Katharine Hepburn. In film his many performances brought him international celebrity, particularly in The Red Shoes, The Tales of Hoffmann and as the demonic Child-Catcher in Chitty, Chitty Bang Bang. Helpmann's creative stamina was legendary. His personality embraced enigmas, complexities, a delight in continuous shape-changing and role-play (he was a master of stage-makeup); but these qualities accompanied a profound, whole-hearted and life-long commitment to all that we understand by the `theatre'. Clearly no one writer could do full justice to all the manifestations of Helpmann's genius. This was the reason for drawing on the many specialists and one-time colleagues whose essays and reminiscences make up this publication. But, as it is over thirty years since Helpmann's death and few are alive who experienced his early triumphs, the writers' verbal evocations of his theatrical persona are supported by over seventy photographs. To supplement these, a DVD offers filmed material of archival value and engages with the challenges facing attempts to revive Helpmann's choreographies today.'  (Publication summary)

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

    • c
      United Kingdom (UK),
      c
      Western Europe, Europe,
      :
      Dance Books Ltd ,
      2018 .
      image of person or book cover 7987076788705291407.jpg
      This image has been sourced from online.
      Extent: 312p.
      Note/s:
      • Published: 18th October 2018
      ISBN: 9781852731793

Works about this Work

[Review] Robert Helpmann : The Many Faces of a Theatrical Dynamo Gretel Taylor , 2019 single work review
— Appears in: Australasian Drama Studies , May no. 74 2019; (p. 319-324)
'Robert Helpmann: The Many Faces of a Theatrical Dynamo supplements the three existing biographies of Helpmann with its variety of authors’ perspectives, which afford reflection upon a rich period of twentieth-century theatre and dance, with Helpmann as protagonist. This collection of essays and interviews, deriving from a symposium held by the Royal Ballet School in 2013, celebrate a remarkable performer with amazing range and a prodigious international career of accomplishments across ballet, theatre and film, as dancer, actor, director and choreographer. The volume is dedicated to the late David Drew, who ‘ardently wished to see Helpmann’s ballets re-staged and his theatrical genius re-discovered by a younger generation’ (xvii). If this were the aim of this book – to share the legacy of this Australian-born star of stage and screen with a younger generation of performance viewers/ consumers/ practitioners – I am doubtful whether it would achieve the stated goal. The book offers some very interesting chapters and a lot of beautiful photographs, but with this appeal to new readers and  viewers in mind, I did hope that the editors would focus their reflections through contemporary performance discourse and go further to draw out Helpmann’s legacy through the lens of now.' 

 (Introduction)

[Review] Robert Helpmann : The Many Faces of a Theatrical Dynamo Gretel Taylor , 2019 single work review
— Appears in: Australasian Drama Studies , May no. 74 2019; (p. 319-324)
'Robert Helpmann: The Many Faces of a Theatrical Dynamo supplements the three existing biographies of Helpmann with its variety of authors’ perspectives, which afford reflection upon a rich period of twentieth-century theatre and dance, with Helpmann as protagonist. This collection of essays and interviews, deriving from a symposium held by the Royal Ballet School in 2013, celebrate a remarkable performer with amazing range and a prodigious international career of accomplishments across ballet, theatre and film, as dancer, actor, director and choreographer. The volume is dedicated to the late David Drew, who ‘ardently wished to see Helpmann’s ballets re-staged and his theatrical genius re-discovered by a younger generation’ (xvii). If this were the aim of this book – to share the legacy of this Australian-born star of stage and screen with a younger generation of performance viewers/ consumers/ practitioners – I am doubtful whether it would achieve the stated goal. The book offers some very interesting chapters and a lot of beautiful photographs, but with this appeal to new readers and  viewers in mind, I did hope that the editors would focus their reflections through contemporary performance discourse and go further to draw out Helpmann’s legacy through the lens of now.' 

 (Introduction)

Last amended 20 Jun 2019 08:34:37
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