Marie Rambert
Dame Marie Rambert DBE (born Cyvia Ramberg; 20 February 1888 – 12 June 1982) was a Polish-born British dancer, pedagogue, and ballet director renowned for founding Ballet Rambert in 1926 and fostering the emergence of modern British ballet through her innovative teaching and choreography support.[1][2] Born in Warsaw to a middle-class Jewish family, Rambert initially studied dance as a schoolgirl before pursuing serious training in Paris from 1905, where she encountered influences like Isadora Duncan and Émile Jaques-Dalcroze's eurhythmics. In 1912, she joined Serge Diaghilev's Ballets Russes, assisting Vaslav Nijinsky in preparing Le Sacre du printemps and participating in its 1913 premiere, though her role was limited due to her physique not suiting principal dancing.[2][1] Emigrating to London during World War I, she trained under Enrico Cecchetti, married theatre manager Ashley Dukes in 1918, and opened her ballet school in 1920, emphasizing technical precision and musicality. The company's inaugural work, Frederick Ashton's A Tragedy of Fashion in 1926, marked its birth as a platform for experimental choreography, evolving from classical roots to pioneer contemporary dance by nurturing talents like Ashton, Antony Tudor, and Andrée Howard.[2][1] Rambert directed the company until 1966, receiving the Legion d’Honneur in 1957 and DBE in 1962 for her contributions, which included shifting British ballet toward narrative innovation and psychological depth over mere virtuosity, thereby establishing Rambert as Britain's oldest continuously operating professional dance ensemble.[1][2]