Marcia Haydée Salaverry Pereira da Silva is a Brazilian-born ballet dancer, choreographer and ballet director. She was prima ballerina of the Stuttgart Ballet under John Cranko and succeeded him as the company's director, serving from 1976 to 1995. She has been director of the Santiago Ballet since 1992.
Career
Born in Niterói, Haydèe studied with several masters, joined the Royal Ballet School in London and then the Grand Ballet du Marquis de Cuevas in 1957. She entered the Stuttgart Ballet in 1961, where she was named the Prima ballerina the following year. With John Cranko, she created roles in full-length ballets, such as Juliet in Romeo and Juliet, Tatiana in Onegin and Kate in The Taming of the Shrew. She said: A frequent dance partner in Stuttgart was for 30 years Richard Cragun, beginning with Romeo and Juliet. Her performance as Kate received a review in The Times: Kenneth MacMillan created for her parts in Stuttgart in Las Hermanas, based on Lorca's The House of Bernarda Alba in 1963, The Song of the Earth with Mahler's music Das Lied von der Erde in 1965, and Requiem after Fauré's Requiem in 1976. John Neumeier created for her roles such as the Lady of the Camellias with music by Frédéric Chopin premiered in 1978, and Blanche in A Streetcar Named Desire. Maurice Bejart created roles for her in the full-length production Wien, Wien, nur du allein, in Divine, a ballet about Greta Garbo, in Isadora and Gaiete Parisienne, among others, shown both in Stuttgart as with his company in Brussels. After Cranko's death, Haydée was from 1976 to 1995 director of the Stuttgart Ballet. She has also the director of the Santiago Ballet, the ballet of the Municipal Theatre of Santiago in Chile, from 1992 to 1996, and again from 2003. Haydée appeared in several films, documentations of her work as well as filmed ballet. She appeared in the dance filmDie Kameliendame, directed by John Neumeier and produced by the NDR in 1986–87. She took part in the film Golgotha, filmed in Germany and Bulgaria from 1992 to 1994, directed by Mikhail Pandoursky. She played in the 2000–02 German literary film , directed by Ralf Schmerberg. Jean Christophe Blavier, her partner in ballet for many years, produced in 2006 a documentary DVDM. for Marcia. Marcia Haydée – die Tanzlegende des 20. Jahrhunderts.. He produced the documentary Marcia Haydée – Das Schönste kommt noch! in 2007, first broadcast by 3sat on 15 December 2007. She published John Cranko in 1973 and Mein Leben für den Tanz in 1996.
Cornelia Stilling-Andreoli: Marcia Haydée – Divine. Fotografien von Gundel Kilian, Henschel-Verlag, Berlin 2005, 216 pp.
Felipe J. Alcoceba und Brigitte Schneider: Dance & dancers Stuttgart Ballet. Edition Braus, Heidelberg 1997 Catalogue of an exhibition at the Württembergische Landesbibliothek in collaboration with the Stuttgarter Ballett for the Stuttgart Ballet Festival: Hommage à John Cranko and the project TanzRegion of the cultural region Stuttgart 1997),
Maurice Béjart und Rainer Woihsyk : Marcia Haydée. Belser, Stuttgart, Zürich 1987, 136 p.,
: Stuttgarter Ballett. Auf neuen Wegen. Kunstverlag Weingarten, Weingarten 1981, 271 pp.
Hannes Kilian, Heinz-Ludwig Schneiders, Horst Koegler, John Percival: Marcia Haydee. Porträt einer großen Tänzerin. Thorbecke Verlag, Sigmaringen 1975,