Marietta Baderna Giannini or Maria Baderna was an Italian ballerina, born in 1828, died c. 1892.[1][2] At age 16 she was the principal dancer at La Scala in Milan, when the unusual lithograph of her, surrounded by 16 poses, was published.[1] She appeared in Drury Lane, when Carlo Blasis was guest choreographer there.[1] On her first appearance there, in a new ballet The Pretty Sicilian in 1847, one reviewer saw room for improvement:

Marietta Baderna
Lithograph of Marietta Baderna aged 16
Born5 July 1828 Edit this on Wikidata
Castel San Giovanni Edit this on Wikidata
Diedc. 1892
OccupationDancer, ballet dancer Edit this on Wikidata

"In form she is petite, her features are most expressive and pleasing. She wears her hair in the most trying of all fashions-- the Chinese, but, withal, looks sweetly pretty; as candid critics we are bound to say there was nothing astonishing in her execution - it wanted that neatness which her predecessor, Fuoco, so eminently possessed. Still, it must be remembered that she is very young, and practice will make perfect for she is most graceful, especially in the position of that most difficult portion of the human frame divine - her arms. Even as the ballet proceeded we thought we saw improvement, for in the pas de deux with the Count (Mons. Croce) she was deservedly and enthusiastically applauded."[3]

Another critic, at the same performance, called her 'the heroine of the evening, and was more impressed:

“As yet she is not perfect, but she has every promise of becoming eventually first-rate. She has sure and neat, if not astonishing, execution, she pirouettes well, though too often; points well, and not too often; uses her arms with classical grace, displays an abandon and degage manner that is perfectly charming, and dances with invariable artistic feeling. [...] Mdlle. Baderna was loudly, constantly, and deservedly applauded in her introductory pas, which was quaint and original, in the grand pas seul, in which she evinced the most graceful characteristics of her style, and the pas de deux with M. Croce, which was full of excellent poses, and replete with well considered and perfectly executed mechanical feats. Her success was decided, and she was recalled at the end of her pas de deux with M. Croce and after the fall of the curtain.”[4]

Baderna's success continued with a triumphant appearance at Drury Lane in front of Prince Albert:

"A divertisement followed the opera, in the course of which Mademoiselle Marietta Baderna danced the Chachoucha, with such elegance and vivacity as to obtain an encore, which was joined in from the Royal box. After this the illustrious visitors retired, at half-past ten o'clock, leaving the new ballet, Spanish Gallantries, to be performed. The house was very fully attended."[5]

Baderna appeared in L'Odalisque and La Peri at Covent Garden.[4]

In 1850, Baderna moved to South America, giving performances in Rio de Janeiro, and lost her father to a yellow fever epidemic.[1] She was listed in the accounts of the Teatro di São Pedro de Alcântara as having the fourth highest salary, coming below only the two leading sopranos and the leading tenor.[6] She was still active in the mid-1860s in Rio, but died around 1865.[2]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d Lillian Moore (1965). Images of the dance: historical treasures of the dance collection 1581–1861. New York Public Library. ISBN 0-87104-093-X. OL 11106580M. Wikidata Q64698163.
  2. ^ a b Bayly, C. A.; Biagini, E. F. (2008-09-11). Giuseppe Mazzini and the Globalization of Democratic Nationalism, 1830-1920. OUP/British Academy. ISBN 9780197264317. Archived from the original on 2021-10-18. Retrieved 2020-10-03.
  3. ^ "The Era". London, England. February 7, 1847.
  4. ^ a b The Musical World. J. Alfredo Novello. 1847. baderna.
  5. ^ "The Court, & c.". Hull Packet. 26 Mar 1847.
  6. ^ Neto, Luiz Costa-lima (2017-03-15). Music, Theater, and Society in the Comedies of Luiz Carlos Martins Penna (1833-1846): Amidst the Lundu, The Aria, and the Alleluia. Lexington Books. ISBN 9781498532266. Archived from the original on 2021-10-18. Retrieved 2020-10-03.