black and white photograph of Nijinksy with his arms raised in a dance pose.
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Nijinsky

Ballet boy

Vaslav Nijinsky was the greatest male ballet dancer of the early 20th century

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Beth Daley (otvorí sa v novom okne) (Europeana Foundation)

Vaslav Nijinsky - or Wacław Niżyński - was the greatest male dancer of the early 20th century.

Born in Kiev in the then Russian Empire (now Ukraine) on 12 March 1889, his parents introduced him to dance. Aged just 9, he enrolled in the Imperial Ballet School in St Petersburg, the best ballet school around.

What made Nijinsky the star of the Ballet Russes?

In 1909, he joined Ballet Russes, which aimed to take Russian ballet to Paris where its like had never been seen. Its artistic director Sergei Diaghilev had been born in Saint Petersburg and moved to Paris in the early 1900s.

Nijinsky became the group's star male dancer, captivating audiences with every performance. His virtuosity, strength and characterisation were astounding, his gravity-defying leaps legendary. He was one of very few male dancers to be able to dance en pointe (on tip-toe with wooden blocks in his ballet shoes).

a collage image on the cover of a dance programme, with a full length photograph of Nijinsky dancing entwined with a blue and green organic shape.
black and white photograph, Nijinsky jumping in a dance pose.

Although Nijinsky had found some success choreographing ballets while with Diaghilev, he was unsuccessful in starting his own ballet company without him.

During World War II, Nijinsky found himself under house arrest in Hungary as an enemy Russian citizen. He was only released when Diaghilev intervened, offering him a tour of America.

black and white photograph of Nijinsky, who is looking upwards.

What happened to Nijinsky in later life?

Sadly, the stress and strain of these years during which he had to manage his own tours and had few opportunities to dance, took its toll.

Nijinsky's mental health suffered as he obsessed over his love of ballet. Finally settling in Switzerland after the war, things didn't get any better. Nijinsky's mental state deteriorated to such an extent that he was unable to dance in public again. He was diagnosed with schizophrenia and treatment proved unsuccessful.

From 1947, Nijinsky lived in Surrey, England, with his wife, where he died from kidney failure in 1950.