Gaetano Apolline Baldassare
Vestris the Franco-Italian dancer and choreographer more commonly known as Gaetan
Vestris, studied dance and music in Italy, Vienna and Dresden. He entered the Académie
Royale de Musique in 1748, and in 1751, he succeeded his ballet teacher Louis
Dupré as Premier Danseur. He became embroiled in a dispute with Ballet Master Jean-Barthélemy
Lany and after a duel and a period of imprisonment, Vestris was dismissed from
the Opera and forced into exile in Berlin and then Turin, where he arranged his
first choreography. In 1755, on his return to Paris, he was re-hired by the
Paris Opera where he performed alongside his sister Theresa, in the ballets Emprise de l'Amour and Amadis. He also made regular trips to
Stuttgart to study under Jean-Georges Noverre. In 1761, Vestris was appointed
Ballet Master and Choreographer at the Académie royale de Musique in Paris,
however, having faced expulsion again, he would really only serve in the role
between 1770 and 1775. During that time, he created several ballets, including Médée et Jason (1770), Endymion (1773) and LeNid d'oiseau (1776). In 1776, he stepped
down to make way for Jean-Georges Noverre. He bid farewell to the stage in 1782
after triumphing at the King’s Theatre in London. Regarded as “the God of
Dance”, Vestris quickly became an outstanding performer of the Noble style inherent
in Noverre’s ballets. In his Lettres
sur la danse, Noverre wrote: “Vestris the father inherited Dupré’s fine
talent and his sobriquet; he was proclaimed the God of Dance; he equalled his
master in perfection and surpassed him in variety and taste. Vestris danced the
pas de deux with feeling and elegance. His frequent trips to Stuttgart led him
to study. He became a great actor and knew through the sincerity of his acting
how to add substance to all of my mimed poems in which he played the lead
characters. His retirement from the Opera was a fatal blow for Noble dance: deprived
of so fine a model, the genre drifted into the realms of extravagance”.