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Monica Mason

Monica Mason
Royal Ballet editathon, October 2014 03.JPG
Monica Mason, 2014
Born Monica Margaret Mason
(1941-09-06) 6 September 1941 (age 75)
Johannesburg, South Africa
Nationality British
Occupation Ballet dancer and administrator
Title Artistic director of the Royal Ballet
Term 2002-2012
Predecessor Ross Stretton
Successor Kevin O'Hare

Dame Monica Mason, DBE, (born 6 September 1941) is a former ballet dancer, teacher, and artistic director of the Royal Ballet, England's foremost theatrical dance troupe. In more than fifty years with this company, she established a formidable reputation as a versatile performer, a skilled rehearsal director, and a capable administrator.

Monica Margaret Mason was born in Johannesburg, South Africa, into a family of British heritage. She studied ballet from a young age with Ruth Inglestone, Reina Berman, and Frank Staff in her home city and, later, with Nesta Brooking in London. As an advanced student, she entered the Royal Ballet School in 1956, where she continued her education in both dance and academics.

Taken into the corps of the Royal Ballet in 1958, Mason was, at 16, the company's youngest member. She soon caught the eye of choreographer Kenneth MacMillan, who had been commissioned to create yet another dance version of The Rite of Spring, set to Igor Stravinsky's famous score that had caused such a ruckus at its premiere with Diaghilev's Ballets Russes in 1913. Impressed by her talent and energy, and conscious, no doubt, of her youth and innocence, he cast her as the Chosen Maiden, around whom the rite evolves. She scored a marked success and thereafter became a particular favorite of MacMillan. Over the years, she danced in almost all his works in the Royal Ballet repertory, creating roles in six of them. Besides the Chosen Maiden, they are as follows.

Appointed a soloist in 1963, Mason was promoted to principal dancer in 1968. The range of roles in her personal repertory was broad, encompassing the classicism of Odette/Odile in Swan Lake' and Nikiya in La Bayadère as well as the austerity of purely abstract works such as Song of the Earth, set by MacMillan to Gustav Mahler's meditative "Das Lied von der Erde. She was dramatically effective in such disparate roles as the ruthless Black Queen in Checkmate, by Ninette de Valois, and the gentle Lady Elgar in Enigma Variations (My Friends Pictured Within), by Frederick Ashton. Coldly implacable as Myrtha in Giselle and furiously malevolent as Carabosse in The Sleeping Beauty, she displayed warmth, charm, and grace in such evocative works as Liebeslieder Waltzer, by George Balanchine, and Dances at a Gathering, by Jerome Robbins.


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