RIP Moira Shearer

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bobster
Posts: 2160
Joined: Sat Jun 28, 2003 12:29 am
Location: North Hollywood, CA

RIP Moira Shearer

Post by bobster »

First Fayard Nicholas and now this. If I were an aging top-level dancer who'd appeared on film, I'd be worried.

Anyhow, stunning woman and absolutely amazing performer. I'm not a big ballet afficionado, but I bow to no one in my admiration for Pressberger-Powell, and she's pretty breathtaking everytime she turns up -- I was re-impressed most recently seeing Powell's brilliant, career-ending "Peeping Tom" again. Time to see "The Red Shoes" again and maybe, finally, see "Tales of Hoffman." (I might have earlier but, you know, I've always thought Hoffmann did his best work in "The Gradduate.")

http://www.wtopnews.com/index.php?nid=114&sid=687029

Ballerina Moira Shearer dead at 80
Feb 1st - 5:20pm

OXFORD, England, Feb 1, 2006 (UPI via COMTEX) -- British ballerina and actress Moira Shearer, who became an international star in the 1948 Hollywood classic "The Red Shoes," has died at age 80.

Shearer died Tuesday at John Radcliffe Hospital in Oxford, England, her husband, writer/broadcaster Ludovic Kennedy, told the BBC.

The native of Dunfermline, Scotland, had grown progressively weaker since her birthday Jan. 17, he said. No cause of death was given.

Dancing since the age of 6, Shearer was just starting to gain acclaim when Hollywood came calling, the BBC said. She initially declined "Red Shoes" director Michael Powell's overtures, but he persisted and after about a year she agreed to take the part.

The film -- which won Oscars for music score and art direction -- became the most popular ballet film in history and catapulted Shearer to international stardom.

She married Kennedy in 1950 and they went on to have four children.

Shearer retired from dancing at the age of 27 in 1953 but continued to act, both on the stage and in films such as "The Man Who Loved Redheads" and "The Tales of Hoffmann."

She served as host of the 1972 Eurovision Song Contest in Edinburgh, Scotland, and lectured on ballet throughout the world. She also put in a brief stint as a radio announcer in the early 1980s and wrote a column for the Daily Telegraph.
http://www.forwardtoyesterday.com -- Where "hopelessly dated" is a compliment!
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