Choreographer

1927-2007

Maurice Bejart

Maurice Béjart was a French-born dancer, choreographer, and opera director known for combining classical ballet and modern dance with jazz, acrobatics, and musique concrète (electronic music based on natural sounds). 

After studying in Paris, Béjart toured with the Ballets de Paris de Roland Petit (1947–49), the International Ballet (1949–50), and the Royal Swedish Ballet (1951–52). In 1954, he founded Les Ballets de l’Étoile (later Ballet Théâtre de Maurice Béjart), for which he choreographed his masterwork, Symphonie pour un homme seul. His other ballets include Voilà l’homme, Promethée,  
and Sonate à trois. In 1960, following his successful ballet version of Igor Stravinsky’s masterpiece Le Sacre du Printemps, he became director of ballet at BrusselsThéâtre Royal de la Monnaie. The same year, he became artistic 
director of the Ballet du XXe Siècle (Ballet of the Twentieth Century), which became one of the foremost dance companies in the world. In 1987, the troupe moved to Lausanne, Switzerland, and was renamed Béjart Ballet Lausanne. Béjart’s productions with the Twentieth Century troupe were notable for their flamboyant theatricality and their innovative reworking of traditional music and dance materials, often in an unusual and controversial fashion. 

In 1961, Béjart launched his career as an opera director with Jacques Offenbach’s Tales of Hoffmann, followed in 1964 by Hector Berlioz’s Damnation of Faust. His original works include a musical, The Green Queen (1963), and ballets such as Bolero (1960), Ninth Symphony (1964), Firebird (1970), Nijinsky, Clown of God (1971), and Notre Faust (1975). Among his many honors are the Japanese Order of the Rising Sun from Emperor Hirohito (1986) and the Japan Art Association’s Praemium Imperiale prize (1993) for theater/film.