Background
Fallesen was born in Copenhagen, the son of Lorentz Nikolai Fallesen, a Protestant clergyman and theologian.
politician army officer ballet dancer
Fallesen was born in Copenhagen, the son of Lorentz Nikolai Fallesen, a Protestant clergyman and theologian.
He studied at the University of Copenhagen and then at the Royal Military College.
From 1876 until his death at the age of 77, he was the General Director of the Royal Danish Theatre. After receiving his commission as a First Lieutenant in 1846, he was appointed to the artillery corps of the Danish Army. However, his health had suffered during the second Schleswig campaign, and he retired from active combat duty in 1865.
His final military appointment was as Colonel of the Bornholm Regiment in 1866.
He held the seat until 1866. From 1874 until 1882 he served as the member for Bornholm in the Landsting (upper house of the Danish Parliament).
Although considered an unlikely choice for the post, his stewardship was credited with reinvigorating the company, reform of its practices and repertoire, and improvement in working conditions for its actors and staff According to theatre historian Laurence Senelick, his management style had benefited from his experience and skills as a politician and his close personal ties to King Christian IX to whom he had been appointed Chamberlain in 1872.
Falleson was married twice.
She was a ballet dancer who had made her debut in the corps de ballet of the Royal Danish Theatre in 1840 and her debut as a soloist in 1848. Her mother, Wilhelmine Rosine Funck, was an opera singer at the theatre, and her father, Poul Funck, was a ballet dancer and noted choreographer. The daughter of Ove Thomsen, a Danish journalist and politician, she had made her debut at the Royal Danish Theatre in 1857 as Madame Renaud in Husholdningspolitik (Household Diplomacy) and for several seasons acted at the Casino theatre in Copenhagen.
Edvard Fallesen died at the age of 77 after having been taken ill in Ville d"Avray, France where he had been on holiday.
He is buried in the Solbjerg Parkkirkegård cemetery in Frederiksberg.
Fallesen had been active in politics from 1858 when he became the member for Assens in the Folketing (at the time the lower house of the Danish Parliament). Known for the eloquence of his debating style, he was essentially independent but on major issues voted with the conservative Højre Party.
He fought in the First and Second Schleswig War and served as a member of both the upper and lower houses of the Danish Parliament. Fallesen served in both the First and Second Schleswig War, eventually rising to the rank of Captain and serving as a member of the international commission that formulated the 1864 Treaty of Vienna.