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Review: Like A Bomb Going Off

Ballet bravura and bravery

February 19, 2015 13:36
Etruscan Dance from Leonid Yakobson's 1956 ballet, Spartacus

ByAnne Sebba , Anne Sebba

2 min read

By Janice Ross
Yale University Press, £30

Leonid Yakobson is probably one of the most famous Russian choreographers you've never heard of. He was also Jewish, a not unrelated fact. Scouring the internet for more information on this talented, courageous dancer, choreographer and cultural polemicist who died in 1975, I found what little there is about him is there largely thanks to the work of Janice Ross, Professor of Theatre and Performance Studies at Stanford University.

Ross has devoted years to interviewing his widow, Irina, a former dancer 20 years younger than Yakobson, now living in Israel, and her testimony forms a valuable part of the resulting biography, Like a Bomb Going off: Leonid Yakobson and Ballet as Resistance in Soviet Russia. This is not just a long-overdue tribute to a talented artist but also a fascinating insight into how succeeding totalitarian regimes tried and failed to stifle a unique voice who above all was determined never to relinquish his Jewish identity even as Jews were being arrested and charged with being "rootless cosmopolitans".

Yakobson, grandson of a violinist, had a difficult start in life. In 1918, due to the famine in Petrograd, he and his brothers were shipped off to Siberia along with hundreds of orphaned children - an experience that lasted nearly three years and where he acquired his combative spirit as well as - rather later than normal - some rudimentary dancing skills.