Margot (2005) Poster

(2005)

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8/10
astonishing
blanche-225 April 2013
"Margot" is a no-holds barred documentary about the great ballerina - perhaps the greatest - Margot Fonteyn. She had a great talent for not only dancing but expression, and she had beauty. The documentary makes the point that what she didn't have was good judgment.

This documentary goes through her entire life and how she got into dance, her triumphant debut in America after the war, her marriage to Roberto "Tito" Arias, her partnership with Nureyev, and her very late retirement.

I had seen a documentary where Fonteyn was interviewed herself, and also read her autobiography. Well, all that was just the tip of the iceberg. Now that she's gone, there's more to the story. It's shocking and sad.

This documentary goes into her gun-running for her Panamanian husband, who was planning a revolution; her miscarriage with what was probably Nureyev's child; the shooting of her husband, which resulted in him becoming a quadriplegic; her difficulties with her stepson, and her sad death.

Fonteyn was unable to retire as early as most ballerinas because she needed the money. What she made, her husband took to finance his revolution, his political campaign, and to buy cattle for their farm. As far as the shooting he was involved in, it was apparently over a woman.

She was beloved by everyone who knew her, many of whom are interviewed here: Robert Helpmann, dance partner Michael Somes, Moira Shearer, Sir Frederick Ashton, Clive Barnes, family members of both hers and the Arias family, fellow dancers, and many others.

The picture that emerges is that of a woman under constant pressure, who never wanted to let anyone down, who worked with horrible arthritis and bleeding feet, a woman who, despite what seems to be bad treatment by her husband, was tirelessly devoted to him, a woman who, as one of the interviewees said, "needed to be needed," who died a pauper with Nureyev picking up her medical bills.

A fascinating, sad story of one of the great artists of the 20th century, her generosity of spirit, her loyalty, and her love. Truly not to be missed.
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8/10
The woman who would be queen
artisticengineer9 February 2011
Warning: Spoilers
Dame Margot Fonteyn (nee Peggy Hookham) was an acclaimed dancer from England, a Prima Ballerina Assoluta no less!, who was intriguing due to a lot of her activities offstage as well as on. In her lifetime there were a couple of film biographies of her that were made and shown, but a definitive biography was not possible until after the end of her life due to privacy restrictions involving some types of information (criminal and medical). This was the first of the posthumous biographies done of her and some very unsettling information comes out about her.

I am not referring to the infamous 1967 arrest of her and Nureyev in San Franciso for being at a marijuana party. In the 21st century that is hardly considered noteworthy; even back in 1967 that arrest was considered more of an embarrassment than anything that could hurt their already illustrious careers. That episode, shown in this mainly chronological biography, is actually humorous in a way.

Of interest are the facts, not released in her life, that as an aspiring ballerina in the late 1930s she had become pregnant twice by the music director of the ballet company. Both had ended in abortions and she had been stood up at the Registry Office; expecting him to come in and marry her. There had been considerably speculation in her lifetime (and afterwards) if she had an affair with Nureyev during their partnership. She had stated they did not have an affair (probably relying on the fact that people knew he was a homosexual and therefore probably not interested in her sexually) whereas Nureyev had admitted an affair. In this biography the information was released that at age 45 she had suffered a miscarriage and had told Nureyev about it-with him then exploding with a rage not seen from him before or after in front of the rest of the dance company. I can't imagine the father could have been anybody else; Margot was married to another man but her husband had been a total quadriplegic by then for over 4 years!

Her husband was Roberto "Tito" Arias, a Panamanian politician of dubious morality. In the late 1950s he had staged an attempted coup in Panama. Margot's involvement in this coup was profound; she bought more guns for the attempt than most members of the NRA who live in the South! Certainly not something one would expect from a demure ballerina! Prior to the coup and shortly after their marriage in 1955 he had been appointed ambassador from Panama to the United Kingdom and Margot had been elevated from being a symbol of the British Arts to being an ambassador's wife- the closest she could to being a queen. Closest that is, unless she actually became a queen- which she could have been by being the wife of the ruler of Panama! The biography does not deal into her motivations with the coup attempt nor why she decided to buy a farm in Panama in later years for retirement. However, her female companions in England did think it was odd that a woman who enjoyed an elegant lifestyle in England would want to live the life of a rustic farmer's wife in Panama; particularly a farmer who was sexually impotent as well as needing around the clock care.

The biography does address a controversial issue- namely that her dance career extended far longer than normal for a ballerina; due to her involvement with the young Nureyev, but with the effect of throwing the next generation of dancers off schedule. Lynn Seymour is interviewed and indirectly admits that Fonteyn's career was extended at the expense of hers (Seymour did not want to say that directly). This extended career of Fonteyn's was done as she was indeed a crowd drawer (and those crowds were VERY wealthy) , but sadly also due to her needing the money. This led to a sad debacle where she performed at age 67!- a sad shadow of her former self. The "Man who would be King" ends on a dreary and sad note-so too does this biography of a woman who wanted to be a queen.
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