Liubov Pavlovna Chernysheva, Luba Tchernicheva, Lubov Tchernichowa
Occupation
dancer
Lubov Tchernicheva (Любовь Павловна Чернышёва; 1890–1976) was a Russian ballet dancer. She danced with the
Ballets Russes from 1911 to 1929, and continued dancing professionally into her sixties.
Early life
Lubov Pavlovna Tchernicheva was born in
St. Petersburg in 1890, and trained there at the Imperial Ballet Academy.[1]
Career
Tchernicheva danced with the
Mariinsky Ballet from 1908 to 1911, and with the Ballets Russes from 1911 to 1929.[2] She was ballet mistress of the Ballets Russes from 1926 to 1929. She created roles in The Good Humoured Ladies (1917), La Boutique Fantasque (1919),
Pulcinella (1920), Les Noces (1924), Les Fâcheux (1924), Zéphire et Flore (1925), Jack-in-the-Box (1926), The Triumph of Neptune (1926), Le Pas d'acier (1927),
Apollon musagète (1928),[3]The Gods Go a-Begging (1928), and Francesca da Rimini (1937). In 1932 she became ballet mistress of the
Ballet Russe of Monte Carlo,[4] and was active in that organization until it dissolved in 1952. She danced in a revival of
Fokine's Thamar at the
Metropolitan Opera House in 1935.[5] Her last dancing role was in 1957, at age 66, as Lady Capulet in Romeo and Juliet at
La Scala.
In the 1950s, Tchernicheva and her husband produced Russian ballets in London and New York,[6][7] including a 1954 revival of The Firebird starring
Margot Fonteyn and
Michael Somes.[8] The couple were jointly honored with the
Queen Elizabeth II Coronation Award in 1966, for the services to dance. She continued teaching in England, into the 1970s.[1]
Personal life
Tchernicheva married ballet director Serge Grigoriev in 1909. They had a son, Vsevolod, whose wife Tamara Grigorieva was also a dancer.[9] Tchernicheva was widowed when he died in 1968. She died in 1976 in
Richmond, Surrey, England, aged 85 years.[1] Her papers are in the
Houghton Library at Harvard University.[10]