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Ludmilla Tcherina

Short stories – for a quick break

Aenigma is all about images from the the worlds of fashion and the movies and the stories behind them.

Short stories is a good place to come if you don’t have time for one of the longer pieces. Below you’ll find a selection of shots that illustrate the range of subjects covered by aenigma. It’s a deliberately eclectic mix with, hopefully, something for everybody.

Use the filter buttons to home in on topics that might interest you, and then the Read more button to go to the whole story.

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Bull shoots Gardner

Bull shoots Gardner

1945. Clarence Sinclair Bull, head of MGM's stills department, with his thumb on the shutter-release button, looks intently at Ava Gardner. The year is 1945, Ava is 23 years old...

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Marilyn Monroe nude

Naked and glistening

May 1962. Marilyn Monroe sits on the edge of a swimming pool on the set of Something’s Got To Give. In the film she swims naked, and to generate advance...

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Age after beauty

Age after beauty

1956. Odile Rodin is well aware of her greatest assets and dresses to set them off to perfection. Born Odile Bérard, she has adopted the artistic name of Rodin to...

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Photography as a sex act

Photography as a sex act

1966. David Hemmings, as Thomas, straddles the writhing Veruschka in a scene from Michelangelo Antonioni's cult film, Blow-Up. It's about a hip fashion photographer who believes he has unwittingly caught...

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Ava Gardner, Virginia Hill and friends celebrate Hallowe'en

Hallowe’en in Hollywood

1941. Ava Gardner and friends at a Hallowe'en party. This is Ava's (front left) first year in Hollywood and it will be another six until she makes her breakthrough as...

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Picasso chats up Bardot

Picasso chats up Bardot

April 1956. Brigitte Bardot takes time out from the Cannes Film Festival to visit Pablo Picasso in Vallauris. In the sunny garden outside his studio, Picasso, one of the 20th...

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Marriage on the rocks

Marriage on the rocks

November 1945. Orson Welles and Rita Hayworth, at the zenith of their careers, are out on the town. But things aren't going well. He is giving her the most furious...

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Romantically linked

Romantically linked

1963. One of the 20th century's greatest, most glamorous and tempestuous romances, played out in the glare of the media spotlight. Lust, booze, ­diamonds, yachts, jealousy – it had them...

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Dressed to thrill

Dressed to thrill

1999. Sophie Marceau steals the show as Elektra King in The World Is Not Enough, the 19th James Bond film. Beautiful, elegant, sophisticated, complex – really just your average Bond...

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Sylvia (Anita Ekberg) cools off in the Trevi Fountain in Federico Fellini’s La Dolce Vita

Midnight fantasy

1959. Dawn has yet to break as Anita Ekberg (as Sylvia in Federico Fellini's iconic movie, La Dolce Vita) wanders into the Trevi fountain in Rome. This iconic scene in...

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Gene Tierney and Oleg Cassini at a fancy-dress party

Gene Tierney and Oleg Cassini at a fancy-dress party

26 January 1941. Gene Tierney, dancing with Oleg Cassini, exchanges smiles with actress Ruth Hussey (dressed as a rag doll) and producer Raphael Hakim (a sheik), reputed to be...

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Ludmilla Tchérina with Salvador Dali

Truly, madly…

11 December, 1969. Salvador Dali and Ludmilla Tchérina attend The Paris Lido's new show, The Grand Prix. Dali, the mad surrealist artist, attributed his "love of everything that is...

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Not what the studio ordered

Not what the studio ordered

8 April 1937. Two Tinseltown stars are caught off guard – no artful lighting, considered poses, careful composition. A true candid and not what the studio ordered. Here's the story,...

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Fashion and film

Fashion and film

May 1956. Richard Avedon looks over photographs with Arlene Dahl. Avedon, one of the 20th century's greatest photographers, is in Hollywood as technical advisor for Funny Face, starring Fred Astaire...

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Other topics you may be interested in…

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Unsafe sex – the starlet’s dilemma

Filed Under: Behind the scenes, Events, Fashion, Films, Photographers, Press, Stars Tagged With: Anita Ekberg, Ann Rutherford, Ava Gardner, Barbara Stanwyck, Bill Josephy, Blow-Up, Brigitte Bardot, Clarence Sinclair Bull, David Hemmings, Elizabeth Taylor, Gene Tierney, La Dolce Vita, Ludmilla Tcherina, Marilyn Monroe, Mickey Rooney, Odile Rodin, Oleg Cassini, Orson Welles, Pablo Picasso, Raphael Hakim, Richard Avedon, Richard Burton, Rita Hayworth, Robert Taylor, Ruth Hussey, Salvador Dali, Sophie Marceau, The World Is Not Enough, Veruschka, Virginia Field, Virginia Hill

Ludmilla Tchérina – a throbbing, pulsating dynamo

Ludmilla Tchérina makes an entrance
1965. Ludmilla Tchérina makes an entrance.

Ludmilla Tchérina was a ballerina, a movie star and an artist. She was also, in the words of The Guardian, “a woman of radiant and exotic beauty.”
Michael Powell, one of the greatest and most eccentric film directors of all time, waxed lyrical about her “creamy beauty and impeccable assurance.” And with her jet-black hair and porcelain skin, she was a favourite subject of French society magazines.

Ludmilla Tchérina – a year of triumph and tragedy

The year is 1951: colour television is introduced to the US; Kellogg’s launches Sugar Pops Cereal; The Catcher in the Rye is published; All About Eve wins the Oscar for Best Picture; The African Queen and A Streetcar Named Desire are released.

1951 also sees the world premiere of Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger’s extraordinary movie, The Tales of Hoffmann, in which Ludmilla Tchérina stars. The event is a grand and glittering affair at the Metropolitan Opera, NYC. All the regulars have turned out: Rockefellers, Vanderbilts and Morgans together with a galaxy of showbiz celebrities. The atmosphere is expectant as the audience waits for the movie’s leading stars to take their seats for the show.

Michael Powell recalls what happens next (he uses Ludmilla’s birth name, Monique, rather than her stage name):

Their disappointment [at Moira Shearer’s absence] changed to enthusiasm when they saw Monique arriving on my arm. We had hired the jewels and furs, and she had been working all day on her make-up and hair. She made a late entry, of course, and she filled the auditorium when she took her place in the box which had been allocated to us. The whole audience rose to its feet to case her.

From the opening shots of the weather vanes to the final chorus in the beer cellar, the audience was stunned by the virtuosity of our production. … Monique as Giulietta had everybody turning their opera glasses on the box where she was sitting, outwardly unconscious of the sensation she was causing. Again and again, you could feel those wonderful waves of enthusiasm and admiration, which are usually only awakened in a live audience by a live performance.

Just a few months earlier, Ludmilla had called from Lyons with news of her beloved husband: “Oh, Micky, Micky, Micky…Edmond est mort…” He had died in a car accident at three o’clock in the morning on his way back to Paris:

They had been working on different films, Edmond in Monte Carlo and Monique in Barcelona. He had driven to Barcelona to spend the weekend with his wife, and had left her on Sunday evening. He had to be in Paris at the studio at noon on Monday. Monique was crying her heart out. She had turned instinctively to us, their closest friends, their guardians and benefactors. They had been riding the crest of the wave of beauty, youth and notoriety. Money was pouring in. Offers were pouring in. They were out every night. They were spending as fast as they earned. They were Tout Paris.

For Ludmilla Tchérina, 1951 is an emotional rollercoaster.

Ludmilla Tchérina – working with Powell and Pressburger

Wind the clock back four years to 1947…

Ludmilla first encounters Michael Powell when he summons her to London to audition for a part in his upcoming movie, The Red Shoes. He recalls…

The part of Irina called for an impressive young dancer, a beauty, a good-humoured, lazy slut, destined to become the wife of a rich, easy-going racehorse owner, by whom she would have three children. No more and no less.

By now, I was so convinced of my good luck that I reckoned she would turn up, and she did – in a French film starring Louis Jouvet. There she was, sluttish and lovely, twenty years old, a face to dream about, skin like the petal of a rose, eyes like twin moons, sprawling all over M. Jouvet’s bed, and apparently a dancer as well, or at any rate she danced or seemed to dance in the film, none of which I remember. What a dish! I ordered it to be brought to London. She arrived with a young man as beautiful and as remarkable as she was – her husband, Edmond Audran, the grandson of the poet.

Ludmilla and Edmond are short of cash and thrilled by the offer of film work. But it’s tough for Ludmilla. According to Joy Camden, a ballerina who worked with her on the film…

Tcherina did not speak English. She learned all the dialogue parrot fashion and Anton Walbrook [one of Ludmilla’s co-stars] and I, who both spoke French, were the only two people with whom she could converse during the filming. During the filming of “Heart of Fire”, Tcherina’s toes were bleeding and her husband demanded beefsteak to put on them. Remember, we were still rationed after the war, but miraculously a piece was found because he had made such a fuss.

The Red Shoes is arguably the greatest ballet movie ever made, a contemporary review describing it as “The nearest thing to a dope-addict’s dream … a brilliant wedding between Covent Garden and film craft.”

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The Venetian courtesan

The Venetian courtesan

1951. Ludmilla Tchérina sits imperiously on the set of The Tales of Hoffmann. A caption on the back of the photo reads:

Raven haired, French ballerina LUDMILLA TCHERINA stars in Act II as Hoffmann’s second love, the courtesan Giulietta. Tcherina made her British film debut in “The Red Shoes.” Her non-dancing role in “La Nuit S’Acheve” has just won her the Grand Prix Feminine, an award voted by the people of Vichy for the most popular actress of the year.

Photo by Robert Courtot.

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The Venetian courtesan and the sorcerer

The Venetian courtesan and the sorcerer

1951. Ludmilla Tchérina and Robert Helpmann in Act II of Powell and Pressburger's The Tales of Hoffmann.

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The Venetian courtesan and the sorcerer

The Venetian courtesan and the sorcerer

1951. Ludmilla Tchérina and Robert Helpmann in Act II of Powell and Pressburger's The Tales of Hoffmann.

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The Venetian courtesan and the sorcerer

The Venetian courtesan and the sorcerer

1951. Ludmilla Tchérina and Robert Helpmann in Act II of Powell and Pressburger's The Tales of Hoffmann.

Michael Powell remembers Ludmilla when he embarks on The Tales of Hoffmann three years later. He casts her as Giulietta, the smooth and slinky Venetian seductress, a role to which she is ideally suited. From his autobiography:

And the erotic splendors of Act Two, with Tcherina’s urchin sensuality! … Tcherina, when going full steam as Giulietta, was like a throbbing, pulsating dynamo. I know, because I took her in my arms during the rehearsal of the big seduction scene and nearly dropped her!

She’s quite a character too. Monk Gibbon, an Irish academic, poet and cultural critic, commissioned to write an accompanying book, The Tales of Hoffmann: A Study of the Film, recalls:

She had one vastly effective and disconcerting trick, that of raising her eyes for an instant to one’s own in a glance of the most open and cynical understanding imaginable, then suddenly in mock modesty veiling them with her heavy lashes. I know not why it should have been so, but this action, every time it was repeated, gave me a kind of vertigo.

In fact, Michael Powell casts Ludmilla in all three of his ‘art films’ – The Red Shoes (art and ballet), The Tales of Hoffmann (art and music) and Oh…Rosalinda! (the art of operetta, based on Johan Strauss’s Die Fledermaus), in which she displays a hitherto undiscovered talent for comedy.

Ludmilla Tchérina – becoming Ludmilla Tchérina

Ludmilla Tchérina with designer Bill Thomas
1954. Ludmilla Tchérina confers with designer Bill Thomas on the fabulous Empress gown she wears for palace scenes in Sign of the Pagan.

Ludmilla was born Monique Tchemerzine in Paris in 1924, her mother French, her father an exiled and impoverished Georgian prince.

She shows an early talent for ballet, studies with the foremost teachers and makes her professional début at 15. At 16 she is a star dancer at the Opéra de Marseille, where she meets Edmond Audran, who becomes more than just her stage partner.

Three years later, in 1943, the couple transfer to the Nouveaux Ballets de Monte Carlo where she is spotted by Serge Lifar, director of the Paris Opéra Ballet. He invents her stage name, Ludmilla Tchérina.

The next admirer to shape her career is Irène Lidova, an influential critic, writer on dance, and friend and benefactor of innumerable dancers and choreographers. Irène is taken both by Ludmilla’s talent and her looks: “She had inherited from her Georgian father a luminous ivory complexion and the carriage of a princess.” Irène persuades Ludmilla to appear in the first season of Les Ballets des Champs-Elysées, which she has set up in collaboration with the choreographer Roland Petit.

Her performances bring her to the attention of Christian Jaque, who offers her the starring role in his 1946 film Un revenant (A Lover’s Return). And that is where Michael Powell first encounters her. By this time, Ludmilla has become one of the young artists associated with the rebirth of French ballet immediately after World War II. She is confident and ambitious; and, fortunately for Michael Powell, temperamentally she is more a ballerina-star than an austerely devotional ballerina.

Ludmilla Tchérina – picking up the pieces

Ludmilla is distraught at Edmond’s death. For two years she refuses to dance. Finally, she meets and falls in love with Raymond Roi, a French industrialist. The couple are married in 1953 and her husband’s wealth gives Ludmilla the freedom to form her own experimental dance company in 1959. The following year she becomes the first western dancer to appear at the Bolshoi theatre in Moscow.

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Ludmilla Tchérina at the Galerie de Paris

Ludmilla Tchérina at the Galerie de Paris

1962. Ludmilla Tchérina stands on the balcony of the Galerie de Paris, where an exhibition of her gouaches, pastels and drawings is being held.

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Ludmilla Tchérina, artist

Ludmilla Tchérina, artist

1962. Ludmilla Tchérina poses in front of her artwork at the Galerie de Paris.

She also spends more time on her  lifelong passion for painting and sculpture – fields in which the Paris press take her seriously. She creates several monumental sculptures, including Europe à Coeur, chosen in 1991 by the EU to symbolise the union of Europe and now located at the European Parliament. And she publishes a couple of novels around the theme of the tragedy of a dancer.

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Ludmilla Tchérina at a first night

Ludmilla Tchérina at a first night

16 January 1952. Ludmilla Tchérina knows how to glam it up for a special occasion. A caption on the back of the photo explains:

TCHERINA AT BALLET RUSSE FIRST NIGHT
Ludmilla Tcherina, the ballerina, is seen in the foyer of the Adelphi Theatre, London this evening, January 16, as she arrived for the first night of the “Ballet Russe” season there. She wears a white satin dress, embroidered with diamante. Her pearl necklace holds a gold medallion.

Photo by Rabert Courtot.

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Ludmilla Tchérina in Oh…Rosalinda!

Ludmilla Tchérina in Oh…Rosalinda!

1955. Ludmilla Tchérina in the costume she wears for the masked ball at the climax of Oh…Rosalinda! A caption on the back of the photo explains:

Ludmilla Tcherina as Rosalinda in the new Michael Powell - Emeric Pressburger Technicolor CinemaScope production “OH-ROSALINDA!!” Starring Michael Redgrave and Mel Ferrer, Dennis Price, Anthony Quayle, Anneliese Rothenberger, Oska Sima, Ludmilla Tcherina, Anton Walbrook.

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Ludmilla Tchérina, the tragic actress of dance

Ludmilla Tchérina, the tragic actress of dance

1961. For her own dance company, Ludmilla Tchérina created Les Amants De Téruel, a dramatic, not to say melodramatic, ballet, which later was turned into a full-length film. According to Irène Lidova, Tchérina was subsequently proclaimed "the tragic actress of dance".

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Ludmilla Tchérina, lady of mystery

Ludmilla Tchérina, lady of mystery

1966. Ludmilla Tchérina teases and entrances as she hides behind an elaborately whimsical mask.

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Ludmilla Tchérina makes an entrance

Ludmilla Tchérina makes an entrance

9 August 1969. Ludmilla Tchérina, in an evening gown and ostrich-feather boa, arrives at a Red Cross ball in Monaco.

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Ludmilla Tchérina in L'Atlantide

Ludmilla Tchérina in L’Atlantide

1971. Ludmilla Tchérina extravagantly and exotically bedecked as Antinea for the television drama L'Atlantide.

Irène Lidova records that in her last years Ludmilla is “seen in spectacular form at theatre premieres and fashionable galas, still beautiful and elegantly dressed by the great Parisian couturiers”.

Ludmilla Tchérina with Salvador Dali
11 December, 1969. Ludmilla Tchérina, accompanied by Salvador Dali, attends The Paris Lido’s new show, The Grand Prix. Read more.

Want to know more?

Michael Powell’s two-volume autobiography, A Life in Movies and Million-Dollar Movie, are great primary sources. For an overview of Ludmilla’s life, career and achievements, take a look at the obituaries published in The Guardian, The Independent, The New York Times and The Telegraph.

Other topics you may be interested in…

Donyale Luna – the fashion world’s wayward moon-child
Monica Vitti
Monica Vitti – a sad childhood, a glittering career and a bitter old age
Princess Ira von Fürstenberg – celeb, fashion model, movie star

Filed Under: Films, Stars Tagged With: Ludmilla Tcherina, Michael Powell, The Red Shoes, The Tales of Hoffmann

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