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- Duncan was born
- in San Francisco
- in 1878, the
- youngest child
- of penniless
- Irish parents.
- Their father
- walked out, but
- Isadora and her
- brother and sister
- were close to
- their mother.
- From the early
- days Isadora
- expressed herself
- through movement
- #
- Isadora was no
- great beauty, but
- was a woman of
- extraordinary
- talent and enter-
- prise. The style
- she adopted
- owed nothing to
- the formal
- conventions of
- classical ballet -
- in fact, she
- intended her
- dance to be the
- opposite of ballet.
- She wore flowing
- costumes, went
- barefoot, and
- let the music
- lead her
- #
- Isadora lived by
- her own romantic
- whim; she was
- temperamental,
- passionate,
- frequently
- disgraceful - yet
- she danced with
- harmony and
- grace. Barefoot,
- and draped in
- flowing robes, she
- interpreted both
- great music and
- powerful emotion
- #
- Audiences
- introduced to
- Duncan's
- idiosyncratic
- style were at
- first amused,
- then they were
- awed. In St
- Petersburg the
- choreographer
- Fokine fell so
- under her spell
- that he almost
- broke away from
- the exigencies of
- classical form
- #
- Duncan had two
- children born of
- separate love
- affairs. In 1913,
- Deidre, aged six,
- and Daniel, three,
- died when the car
- in which they
- were passengers
- plunged into the
- Seine. The
- grieving Isadora,
- who said that
- "children under-
- stand that dancing
- is walking
- towards the
- light", redoubled
- her efforts to
- found dance
- schools
- #
- In 1921 Duncan
- was invited to
- Moscow where
- she met Sergei
- Yesenin, "the last
- poet of wooded
- and valleyed
- Russia". They
- spoke not a word
- of each other's
- language, but
- were married the
- next year. When
- the couple arrived
- in New York they
- were held and
- questioned by
- Customs on
- suspicion of
- Bolshevist
- sympathies
- #
- Duncan said of
- Yesenin that her
- soul "soared out
- and met his" as
- she slept. They
- were indeed soul-
- mates, united by
- an impetuous
- artistic temper-
- ament. But the
- fiery nature
- which joined
- them also made
- it impossible for
- them to live
- together. They
- divorced in 1925,
- and Yesenin
- killed himself
- soon after
- #
- It is Isadora's
- fate to be
- remembered as
- much for her
- gruesome death
- as for the
- achievements of
- her life. But by
- this time her
- life's work was
- done. All her life
- she had preached
- the artistic gospel
- of free expression,
- and by the end
- she was tired.
- She left the
- memory of a
- spectacular life,
- lived for art
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