Nini Arlette Theilade is a Danish ballet dancer, choreographer and teacher.
Background
Born in Purwokerto, Indonesia, her mother, Joanna Catarina, was of Polish, German and French extraction while her father, Hans Theilade, was an engineer After she was refused entry to the Royal Ballet"s school when she was 12, her mother took her to Paris, hoping the best teachers of the time would ensure her development. Although Nini soon appeared in Carina Ari"s performances in Montreux with the Opéra Comique ballet company, her mother was more ambitious.
Education
In 1926, on the family"s return to Denmark, she attended Asta Mollerup"s ballet school in Copenhagen.
Career
She decided to place her with the highly reputed Paris school run by Lubov Egorova who trained the stars of the Ballets Russes. Dancer
In 1929, when just 14, Theilade appeared in The Hague in a solo programme of various pieces choreographed by Asta Mollerup. She was such a success that she went on tour in the Netherlands, Germany, Denmark, Switzerland, France, Sweden and Finland.
In 1931, she was a guest performer at the Royal Theatre, Copenhagen before touring the United States.
From 1931, under Max Reinhardt, she appeared in Berlin, Vienna, Salzburg and Florence. She also starred both as a dancer and singer in Reinhard"s Hollywood film A Midsummer Night"s Dream in 1935.
From 1938-1940, she played many leading roles in the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo which were choreographed for her by Léonide Massine. They included Poverty in Nobilissima Visione and Venus in Bacchanale with costumes by Salvador Dalí.
She performed as a guest at New York"s Metropolitan Opera dancing to Debussy"s Clouds.
Choreographer and instructor
They travelled widely together before arriving in Rio de Janeiro where Theilade became an instructor. In the 1950s, she was invited back to Copenhagen as a choreographer. Among her productions were Metaphor with music by Niels Viggo Bentzon with Mona Vangsaa in the highly erotic leading role, and Concerto with music by Robert Schumann.
In 1965, she settled in Denmark, producing Græsstrået, one of the earliest ballets for television, with the composer Else Marie Pade and the author El Forman.
lieutenant was followed by Psyche and Kalkbillede. From 1969 to 1978, she founded a ballet academy in Thurø with a ballet company that toured Europe.
She also began her involvement as ballet instructor at Odense Theatre"s school which was to last 30 years. She left Lyon in 1990 at the age of 75 to return to Denmark where she continued to be active in drama and dance productions.
In particular, she was to work for a further 20 years as dance instructor at Oure Folk School on the island of Funen.