Cleo Nordi (Russian: Клео Норди; 28 January [O.S. 16 January] 1898 Kronstadt, Russian Empire – 30 March 1983 London), was a Russo-Finnish ballerina who danced as a soloist with Anna Pavlova's company before becoming a renowned teacher of the Russian ballet tradition in London.[1] She was involved in three dance-related films.
Through her marriage to Walford Hyden, Pavlova's musical director and a light orchestra conductor, she was one of the first ballerinas screened on British television in 1934.[5] She made dance arrangements for the musical theatre, sometimes herself appearing in productions and became involved in cinema.[6] She had supporting roles in two films, in Cafe Colette (1937), Latin Quarter (1945) and was choreographer in the production of Caravan (1946).[citation needed] She travelled widely, including to Australia and Asia where she adopted the practice of Kundalini yoga.[7][8]
Cleo Nordi died in Fulham, aged 85 in 1983.[citation needed]
Bibliography
Davis, Janet Rowson. "Ballet on British Television, 1932-1935: A Supplement." Dance Chronicle, vol. 7, no. 3, 1984, pp. 294–325. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/1567654. Nordi appeared dancing the Tarantella in an early UK television broadcast of ballet in 1934. Retrieved 02.02.2019
^"Nordi, Cleo (b. 1899)." Dictionary of Women Worldwide: 25,000 Women Through the Ages. . Encyclopedia.com. 29 Jan. 2019 <https://www.encyclopedia.com>.
^Elfrida Eden Fallowfield. The Dancing Débutante: The adventures of a society beauty on and off the stage. London: Mereo Books. 2014. ISBN978-1861513335[2] retrieved 30-01-2019