The Press

Ballerina a sweet sight

Anna Pavlova helped crashed motor bikers and dispensed advice on feet. Tom Hunt reports that she was also an incredible dancer.

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She was a nymph who trod ‘‘with measured steps the flower-bedecked lawn’’. Her dancing was a thing of ‘‘ecstasy and dreams’’.

She is today associated with a sickly-sweet dessert of egg white and sugar but it was not for a dessert that a New Zealand newspaper fawned with the headline, ‘‘The Symphony that is Pavlova’’.

Anna Pavlova was the arguably the world’s most loved ballerina when she visited New Zealand in 1926.

Her first performanc­e was on May 26 that year – 91 years ago this week – at His Majesty’s Theatre in Auckland, before a trip through provincial New Zealand, as well as Wellington and Christchur­ch.

She was hailed as a delicate beauty wherever she went.

‘‘Men have likened her to a blossom on the wind, to thistledow­n, to an ecstatic bird, to a lambent flame, and the words appear cold and vain when one thinks of the living Anna,’’ Truth exclaimed.

But when it was Pavlova talking, the subject was more pedestrian: foot care and ways of walking.

‘‘If you want to feel that – how do you say? – vim feeling, you will not get it through taking all these patent medicines,’’ she advised in The Evening Post.

‘‘You must walk to health. Walking is the very best exercise for the whole of the body.’’

She arrived in Auckland from Australia on the Maunganui – from where a special launch ferried her to a public reception on the jetty.

Before she even laid her pampered feet on New Zealand soil, demand for seats at the Auckland show broke records.

The Press was there for the arrival.

‘‘There was a stir in the ranks of many young girls who crowded outside the railing in the wharf shed when Madame was seen coming down the gangway with her husband and members of the company.

‘‘At the foot of the gangway two tiny girls met her, and each presented her with a bouquet.

‘‘For the rest of their lives they will be able to boast that they have been kissed by Pavlova.

‘‘As she passed slowly through the shed out on to the wharf, where her car was waiting to take her to the Grand Hotel, the dancer was followed by the crowd that had waited for her.’’

A newspaper advertisem­ent to see ‘‘the greatest dancer of all time’’ was selling dress circle and reserved stall tickets for £1, three shillings ($123 in today’s money).

The opening night would feature The Fairy Doll with Pavlova playing the doll and Laurent Novikoff in support. The Swan, Russian Dance, and Bolero would all be performed, the advertisem­ent promised.

It was June when she got to Wellington for seven nights and two matinees at the Grand Opera House and The Evening Post described her dancing as ‘‘transcende­nt’’.

In Christchur­ch – six nights and two matinees at the Theatre Royal – later that month she was hailed for her ‘‘witchery’’.

‘‘The great Pavlova and her wonderful ballet won the hearts of the large audience, and captivated every member with their beautiful art.

‘‘Quite different from anything ever seen, here before, the incomparab­le; dancer and her company, gained further applause which came frequently during the performanc­e.’’

It was July as Pavlova was driving through Woolston, Christchur­ch, and came across a motorcycle crash, where it first appeared the rider had broken his leg, newspapers reported.

‘‘Pavlova offered her car to send him to hospital but eventually he regained consciousn­ess and it was found that he could walk.’’

Quite how Pavlova the woman and pavlova the dessert – and which country the dessert came from – has been debated for years.

In 2008 it looked as if we could finally put the debate to rest with the publicatio­n of The Pavlova Story: A Slice of New Zealand’s Culinary History ,a book by Professor Helen Leach.

It said the first true pavlova recipe was Pavlova Cake from New Zealand in 1929; while a dessert named after the Anna Pavlova was a four-layered jelly from a book published in 1926.

For seven years New Zealand could be content the Pavlova was ours.

That was till New Zealander Andrew Paul Wood and Australian Annabelle Utrecht – fresh from looking at the subject for two years – ‘‘categorica­lly’’ stated the modern pavlova began life as a German torte, eventually travelling to the US, where it evolved into its final form.

‘‘The idea that it was invented in New Zealand or even Australia is a total fiction, as is the notion that the first pavlova desserts are of Antipodean origin, ‘‘ Wood said.

 ?? PHOTO: DEAN KOZANIC/FAIRFAX NZ PHOTO: ALEXANDER TURNBULL LIBRARY REFERENCE 1/2-089575-F PHOTO: ALEXANDER TURNBULL LIBRARY REFERENCE EPH-A-DANCE-1926-02 PHOTO: ALEXANDER TURNBULL LIBRARY REFERENCE 1/1-019146-F ?? Andrew Paul Wood and Annabelle Utrecht researched the history of the pavlova with bad news for both New Zealand and Australia. Anna Pavlova with a flock of sheep in New Zealand in 1926. Above, a poster for Pavlova’s Dunedin performanc­e in 1926. Rightt,...
PHOTO: DEAN KOZANIC/FAIRFAX NZ PHOTO: ALEXANDER TURNBULL LIBRARY REFERENCE 1/2-089575-F PHOTO: ALEXANDER TURNBULL LIBRARY REFERENCE EPH-A-DANCE-1926-02 PHOTO: ALEXANDER TURNBULL LIBRARY REFERENCE 1/1-019146-F Andrew Paul Wood and Annabelle Utrecht researched the history of the pavlova with bad news for both New Zealand and Australia. Anna Pavlova with a flock of sheep in New Zealand in 1926. Above, a poster for Pavlova’s Dunedin performanc­e in 1926. Rightt,...

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