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Petrus Bosman


Petrus Bosman (1928 – 19 July 2008) was a South African ballet dancer, teacher, choreographer, and répétiteur, active in England, France, and the United States.

Jan Petrus Bosman was born in Kuilsrivier, a town in the Western Cape Province located on the Kuils River, in which there are many pools, or kuile. His parents were Afrikaners, but young Petrus was raised to be fluent in English as well as Afrikaans. His family was related to Herman Charles Bosman (1905-1951), widely admired as a journalist, poet, and author. Also of Afrikaner stock, he was celebrated as a short-story writer in English. Like his famous relative, Petrus Bosman easily entered the English-speaking cultural community of Cape Town, only a few kilometers west of his hometown. As a teenager, he enrolled in classes at the University of Cape Town Ballet School, where he was trained by Dulcie Howes and Cecily Robinson. In 1949, when he was 21, he went to London and continued his studies with Anna Northcote (also known as Anna Severskaya) at her studio on West Street. There she passed on to him the classical technique she had leared from her own teachers: Margaret Craske, Nikolai Legat, and Olga Preobrajenska.

In 1951, at age 23, Bosman joined Festival Ballet, founded the previous year by Alicia Markova and Anton Dolin to celebrate the nationwide Festival of Britain, held during the summer of 1951. With this young, ambitious company (later called London Festival Ballet, then English National Ballet), he danced in cities all over England during the next eight years, appearing in many featured roles in the repertory and scoring a particular success as the Golden Slave in an elaborate production of Michel Fokine's Scheherazade. Remarkably, he also danced all three principal male roles in Fokine's Petrushka: the title role, the Moor, and the Charlatan, the old magician who presents the puppet show that tells of Petrushka's unrequited love for the Ballerina.

In 1959, Bosman left London Festival Ballet to join the Royal Ballet as a soloist, the first dancer to do so without having attended the prestigious Royal Ballet School. At the beginning of his eighteen years with the company, he advanced rapidly through the ranks to attain the status of principal dancer. He was noted for his classical roles in Giselle, The Sleeping Beauty, and The Nutcracker as well as for such romantic roles as the Poet in Les Sylphides. In Frederick Ashton's lighthearted Les Rendezvous, he partnered Merle Park in choreography that was a challenge for them both; in Fokine's The Firebird, he played the sorcerer Koschei the Immortal who guards his soul in a magic egg; and in John Cranko's The Lady and the Fool, he played Moondog, the foolish clown with whom The Lady falls in love. He also excelled in travesty character roles, playing Carabosse in The Sleeping Beauty, Widow Simone in La Fille Mal Gardée, and an Ugly Sister in Cinderella.


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