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Lida Martinoli (1914–1991) was an Argentine dancer, choreographer, and theatre performer in Buenos Aires. Born in Rosario, Santa Fe in 1914, she was the daughter of the artists Fanny Montiano and Carlos Martinoli. She studied ballet at La Scala in Milan before returning to Buenos Aires in 1932. She joined the corps de ballet of the Teatro Colón, where she danced until 1956. At the Teatro Colón, she served as prima ballerina during the 1940s, dancing the choreographies of Vaslav Nijinsky and Margarita Wallmann and starring in her version of The Nutcracker with and Maria Ruvanova. In 1953, as prima ballerina for Teatro Colón, she performed at Carnegie Hall in her North American debut. When she retired from dancing, Martinoli began to choreograph, and is known for her kitschy and outlandish

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  • Lida Martinoli (es)
  • Lida Martinoli (en)
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  • Lida Martinoli (Rosario, Santa Fe, Argentina, 1914 - Santa Fe, Argentina, 1992) fue una bailarina argentina y mucho después, un personaje de célebre excentricidad de la farándula teatral porteña. Hija de Fanny Montiano y Carlos Martinoli, ambos artistas, cursó estudios de ballet en La Scala de Milán, regresando a Buenos Aires en 1932 donde se incorporó al cuerpo de baile del primer coliseo porteño, el Teatro Colón, donde bailó hasta 1956. (es)
  • Lida Martinoli (1914–1991) was an Argentine dancer, choreographer, and theatre performer in Buenos Aires. Born in Rosario, Santa Fe in 1914, she was the daughter of the artists Fanny Montiano and Carlos Martinoli. She studied ballet at La Scala in Milan before returning to Buenos Aires in 1932. She joined the corps de ballet of the Teatro Colón, where she danced until 1956. At the Teatro Colón, she served as prima ballerina during the 1940s, dancing the choreographies of Vaslav Nijinsky and Margarita Wallmann and starring in her version of The Nutcracker with and Maria Ruvanova. In 1953, as prima ballerina for Teatro Colón, she performed at Carnegie Hall in her North American debut. When she retired from dancing, Martinoli began to choreograph, and is known for her kitschy and outlandish (en)
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  • Lida Martinoli (Rosario, Santa Fe, Argentina, 1914 - Santa Fe, Argentina, 1992) fue una bailarina argentina y mucho después, un personaje de célebre excentricidad de la farándula teatral porteña. Hija de Fanny Montiano y Carlos Martinoli, ambos artistas, cursó estudios de ballet en La Scala de Milán, regresando a Buenos Aires en 1932 donde se incorporó al cuerpo de baile del primer coliseo porteño, el Teatro Colón, donde bailó hasta 1956. En el ballet del Teatro Colón llegó a ser primera bailarina durante la década del 40, allí bailó coreografías de Vaslav Nijinsky y Margarita Wallmann, protagonizó su versión de El cascanueces junto a y Maria Ruanova.​ Al retirarse comenzó a coreografiar ella misma sus danzas a las que imprimió un toque de realismo "kitsch". Su comportamiento suscitó anécdotas clásicas en la historia de la danza porteña, especialmente cuando bailaba sus estrafalarias coreografías "La paisanita", "La muerte del cisne" y "La Leprosa" para la cual se adhería fetas de jamón que se iban desprendiendo a medida que avanzaba la danza. Inspiró a los guionistas Kado Kostzer y Alfredo Rodríguez Arias a escribir la pieza teatral "Famille d'Artistes" en Francia con actuación de Marilú Marini en 1989, fue llevada a escena en Buenos Aires en el Teatro Maipo en 1991 con Iris Marga.​ Su historia figura en libros de anécdotas del ámbito teatral argentino. Kado Kostzer dramaturgo y novelista argentino recuerda que “Lida había sido la primera bailarina en el Colón y había tenido su reinado en la época peronista, porque en aquellos años era la bailarina preferida de Eva Perón.​Lida Martinoli, hacía la famosa "Muerte del cisne" en las escalinatas de la Facultad de Derecho, una especie de antesala a lo que fueron después los happenings.​ El clan Martinoli formado por doña Fanny, la madre de los trece hermanos Martinoli: Lida, Héctor, Pepita, Felipe, Elsa, Sara, Esther, Regina, Yolanda, Armando, Luis, Roberto y Carlos fue reporteado hacia 1970 por Kado Kostzer en la revista Primera Plana, originando la pieza teatral. (es)
  • Lida Martinoli (1914–1991) was an Argentine dancer, choreographer, and theatre performer in Buenos Aires. Born in Rosario, Santa Fe in 1914, she was the daughter of the artists Fanny Montiano and Carlos Martinoli. She studied ballet at La Scala in Milan before returning to Buenos Aires in 1932. She joined the corps de ballet of the Teatro Colón, where she danced until 1956. At the Teatro Colón, she served as prima ballerina during the 1940s, dancing the choreographies of Vaslav Nijinsky and Margarita Wallmann and starring in her version of The Nutcracker with and Maria Ruvanova. In 1953, as prima ballerina for Teatro Colón, she performed at Carnegie Hall in her North American debut. When she retired from dancing, Martinoli began to choreograph, and is known for her kitschy and outlandish dances - the choreography for "La Leprosa" required the actor to stick ham to themselves that fell off during the dance, imitating the symptoms of leprosy. She died in Santa Fe in 1991. Screenwriters and wrote the play "" about Lida and the Martinoli family in 1989, which was staged at the Teatro Maipo in Buenos Aires in 1991. (en)
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