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  1. Lydia Lopokova was born in St. Petersburg in 1892 and trained at the Imperial Ballet School. She left Russia in 1910, joining the Diaghilev ballet for the first time. She stayed with the ballet only briefly, however, leaving for the United States after the summer tour, where she remained for six years. She rejoined Diaghilev in 1916, dancing ...

  2. Encuentre lydia lopokova la fotografía, imagen, vector, ilustración o imagen a 360 grados perfectos. Disponible tanto para licencias RF como para las licencias RM.

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  4. This portrait depicts the economist John Maynard Keynes, Baron Keynes, with his wife, the Russian-born ballerina Lydia Lopokova. Keynes’s works, notably The Economic Consequences of the Peace (1919) and General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money (1936), established what is known as ‘Keynsian economics’, a theory that became widely influential following the Second World War.

  5. Lopokova es representada como Terpsícore, la musa de la danza, en El despertar de las musas, un mosaico en la Galería Nacional de Londres, realizado por Boris Anrep en 1933. Además de estar involucrada en los días iniciales del ballet inglés, Lidia Lopokova apareció en escena en Londres y Cambridge desde 1928, y en transmisiones de la BBC.

  6. 12 de mar. de 2019 · Lydia Lopokova. Publication date 1983 Topics Lopokova, Lydia, 1892-1981, Ballet dancers -- Russia (Federation) -- Biography Publisher New York : St. Martin's Press Collection trent_university; internetarchivebooks; inlibrary; printdisabled Contributor Internet Archive Language

  7. Lydia Lopokova (1891—1981) ballet dancer Quick Reference (b St Petersburg, 21 Oct. 1891; d Seaford, 8 Jun. 1981) Russian-British dancer, sister of Andrei and Fyodor Lopukhov. She studied at the Imperial Theatre School with Fokine, making her debut when still a child and graduating in 1909 into the Mariinsky Theatre.