Desmond Doyle (dancer)

Desmond Doyle (16 January 1932 – July 1991) was a South African ballet dancer who performed in England in the 1950s and 1960s before becoming ballet master of the Royal Ballet.[1]

Early life and training

Desmond Doyle was born in Cape Town, at the tip of South Africa, between the Atlantic and the Indian Oceans. Developed by the Dutch East India Company in the seventeenth century, and still known in Afrikaans as Kaapstad, it was the first European outpost in southern Africa. By the early twentieth century, it had become the legislative capital of South Africa and the bustling cultural and economic center of the Cape Province. In the world of the performing arts, the brightest star was Dulcie Howes (1908-1993), a ballet dancer, choreographer and teacher, who established the University of Cape Town Ballet School in 1934. Among her most promising students during the 1940s were Johaar Mosaval and Desmond Doyle.[2] After some years' study with her, and performing under her direction in the University of Cape Town Ballet, both of them went to London to continue their training at the Sadler's Wells Ballet School.

Professional career

In 1951, Doyle was accepted into the Sadler's Wells Ballet, under the direction of Ninette de Valois, and was promoted to soloist in 1953. During his years with the company, renamed the Royal Ballet in 1956, he created roles in a number of new ballets by Frederick Ashton, Kenneth MacMillan, and John Cranko. MacMillan often cast him in "cruel, overbearing roles because of his height and narrow face, as lethal as a knife blade."[3] He was not always villainous, however. He danced many roles in classical and romantic works already in the active repertory, including Les Sylphides, Swan Lake, The Sleeping Beauty, Coppélia, and Sylvia, and took prominent roles in such important ballets as de Valois's The Rake's Progress, Ashton's 'Symphonic Variations, and Alfred Rodrigues's The Miraculous Mandarin. Upon his retirement, he served as the company's ballet master from 1970 to 1975.[4]

Roles created

Among the ballets in which Doyle created roles are the following.[5]

Personal and later life

Doyle married fellow dancer Brenda Taylor. They had no children. He died in the seacoast municipality of Maricá, Brazil, in 1991, at the age of fifty-nine. His reason for being in Maricá, a small city about forty miles north of Rio de Janeiro, is not known. If he had traveled from Cape Town, directly across the South Atlantic from Brazil, he had possibly gone there in search of work.

References

  1. Debra Craine and Judith Mackrell, "Doyle, Desmond," in The Oxford Dictionary of Dance (Oxford University Press, 2000).
  2. Richard Glasstone, Dulcie Howes: Pioneer of Ballet in South Africa (Cape Town: Human & Rousseau, 1996), pp. 54, 98.
  3. Jann Parry, Different Drummer: The Life of Kenneth MacMillan (London: Faber & Faber, 2010), p. 226.
  4. Zoë Anderson, The Royal Ballet: 75 Years (London: Faber & Faber, 2008).
  5. Horst Koegler, "Doyle, Desmond," in The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Ballet, 2nd ed. (Oxford University Press, 1982).
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