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Massine

NOUN
  1. French choreographer and ballet dancer (born in Russia) (1895-1979)

How To Use Massine In A Sentence

  • All of its greatness, wideness , massiness and depth are alike with you very much.
  • Bursting with color and energy, the almost-beyond-lavish pages of 'Ballets Russes' Assouline, 236 pages, $750 make a feast of these leftovers, re-creating mighty collaborations among artists such as Picasso, Braque, Matisse and Miró and choreographers like Nijinsky, Léonid Massine and Michel Fokine. Photo-Op: Modernism à la Russe
  • Even John Adams, the transatlantic dean of minimalism, is at heart a maximalist, if the hectic massiness of his own essay in metaphysical erotics, Harmonium, is a guide.
  • The public flocked to see the very Massine ballets that Tudor so intensely disliked.
  • He gave similar rings to Nijinsky and Massine, and in their case the message was clear: they were to remain faithful to him and to ballet. Sergei Diaghilev: first lord of the dance
  • Most seem to have approached the arrangement pragmatically, with Massine commenting that sex with Diaghilev "was like going to bed with a nice fat old lady". Sergei Diaghilev: first lord of the dance
  • The line of the bang of massiness, elaborate clip, long hair and bingle union are together, build a feminine polyhedral model.
  • Bursting with color and energy, the almost-beyond-lavish pages of 'Ballets Russes' Assouline, 236 pages, $750 make a feast of these leftovers, re-creating mighty collaborations among artists such as Picasso, Braque, Matisse and Miró and choreographers like Nijinsky, Léonid Massine and Michel Fokine. Photo-Op: Modernism à la Russe
  • Many of his leading male dancers became his lovers — though Nijinsky was the most celebrated, there were also L é onide Massine and Serge Lifar. Beauty of the Ballets Russes
  • Massine took this theme from Tchaikovsky's own letters to his patron in which he described a composer's search for ideas.
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