This was a period of great challenge and growth for the choreographer, from Balanchine’s seminal creation of “Serenade” in 1934 to the premiere of “The Four Temperaments” in 1946. These are the wilderness years before he became the “father of American ballet.”
Departing from biographical conventions, Kendall narrates in present tense, allowing a novelistic vitality to propel the action. Kendall interjects frequently to serve as the reader’s guide, admit to when she is making historical guess work, and ground her assessments in archival research and historical letters that are quoted throughout.
According to Kendall, Balanchine found himself caught between rivalling visions for the soul of American ballet. On the one hand, Sol Hurok, the iron-willed Russian patron behind Ballet Russes de Monte Carlo, sought to preserve ballet’s roots as a glamorous European artform. On the other hand, the brooding, Harvard-educated Lincoln Kerstein, who brought Balanchine to America, saw ballet as a potential engine for social commentary and change.
Apart from these two, Kendall notes, the cultural intelligentsia had overlooked ballet in favor of modern dance, which they considered better able to speak to the conditions of the Great Depression. Dance critics like John Martin heaped praise on modern dance choreographers such as Doris Humphreys, Martha Graham, and Hanya Holm. Yet increasing, the Ballets Russes de Monte Carlo, inspired by Segrei Diaghilev's original Ballet Russes, were filling up shows at New York City Center. Hurok's vision to bring the best of old-world ballet to America appeared to be winning.
Around the same time, Kirstein and Balanchine opened the School of American Ballet in 1933. The next year he choreographed “Serenade” for the newly formed American Ballet, which was made up of nascent dancers from the school, to Tchaikovsky’s sweepingly romantic Serenade for Strings in C. The ballet was an inauspicious beginning, getting rained on during its outdoor premiere at a donor’s Westchester estate.
In need of money, by 1936, Balanchine focused his efforts increasingly on Broadway, starting with On Your Toes, the first musical to make extensive use of classical ballet. Kendall shows how Balanchine continued developing his choreographic voice through this more populist avenue, most notably by choreographing his lasting ballet “Slaughter on Tenth Avenue.” Balanchine was the first choreographer in Broadway history to be credited as such rather than simply as “dance director.”
Yet Balanchine continued to suffer with bouts of ill-health, stemming from his struggle with tuberculosis in the late 1920s, for which he had been hospitalized. In all likelihood, Kendall speculates, his tuberculosis can be traced to growing up in war-torn St. Petersburg. While he had been recuperating in an isolated sanatorium perched up in the French Alps, Kendall writes that “he encountered the popular quasi-medical assumption that tubercular fevers were linked with an enhanced sex drive.” While hospitalized, Balanchine was encouraged to have affairs, and Kendall links his later sexual activities to a constant fear of the tuberculosis relapsing. Rather than rushing to judgment as is so popular amongst the loud fridges of balletomanes, Kendall seeks to understand this oft-taboo part of Balanchine’s personae.
This is an interesting review of what sounds like an interesting book; however, I am forced to comment on part of the description of “The Four Temperaments.” We all see ballet in our own way, of course. That ballet is one of my favorites and I would guess, without exaggeration, that I have probably seen it at least 50–and perhaps more–times.
I have never seen "squads of women making swastikas with their arms, figures as if in wartime being shot and collapsing, armies advancing, planes revving up, helicopter blades turning, an atomic bomb cloud billowing, a new world being born in the tantrums of Choleric.”