
'Deliciously entertaining.' Financial Times'Scintillating . . . fizzes with balletic energy.' Daily Mail'Gripping . . . bursting with extraordinary characters and anecdotes.' Sunday Telegraph'An extraordinary tale, enthrallingly told.' GramophoneSuch was the credo of the ruthlessly manipulative and resourceful Serge Diaghilev - the Russian impresario who created the modern art form of ballet.Commissioning such legendary names as Nijinsky, Fokine, Stravinsky and Picasso, he produced a series of radically original works that had a revolutionary impact throughout the Western world.Off stage there was scandal and sensation, collaboration and competition, tempestuous affairs and a wild carousel of mayhem. The Ballet Russes left a matchless artistic legacy, ending with the abrupt death of Diaghilev in 1929.But the achievements of its heroic prime would continue to set the standards for the next era.