Lucette aldous biography

One of Australia’s best known and most admired ballerinas, Lucette Aldous, has died in Perth at the age of 82.

New Zealand-born, Lucette Aldous trained in Brisbane with Phyllis Danaher and then in Sydney at the Scully-Borovansky School where her main teacher was Kathleen Danetree. She was awarded the Frances Scully Scholarship to continue her training overseas and entered the Royal Ballet School in London in 1955.

In 1957 she began her professional career with Ballet Rambert where she danced not only the classics like Giselle and Coppélia and but also early works by Antony Tudor, Frederick Ashton, Walter Gore, John Cranko and Kenneth MacMillan. Her time with Rambert also included a 1957 tour to China.

Following her time with Rambert she danced with London Festival Ballet and then with the Royal Ballet (second company). It was while working with the Royal Ballet that she first performed with Rudolf Nureyev, partnering him in Nutcracker during a European tour.

Her partnership with Nureyev blossomed after she returned to Australia in 1970. She joined the

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Aldous was born in New Zealand, and moved to Sydney as a child, where she began her ballet training. She won a scholarship to London’s Royal Ballet School, and was mentored by star dancer and choreographer Robert Helpmann, who introduced her to Margot Fonteyn at The Royal Ballet. However, Aldous began her career in Ballet Rambert (then Rambert Dance Company), which she joined in 1957. She remained as a member of Rambert Dance Company until 1963, appearing in ballets including Giselle, La Sylphide (in the title role), The Lilac Garden, Night Shadow, Façade and Don Quixote, in which she performed Kitri. She also danced with London Festival Ballet. Aldous danced periodically with The Royal Ballet in the 1950s and 60s, including acclaimed performances as the Lilac Fairy in The Sleeping Beauty (1959), the title role in Massine’s Mam’zelle Angot and on tour in Ashton’s Monotones I (1968), the Tempter in Geoffrey Cauley’s In the Beginning (1969, on tour to Stratford-upon-Avon) and as the Sugar Plum Fairy alongside Rudolf Nureyev on a European tour of The Nutcra

Aldous, Lucette (1938–)

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