Floria Capsali (28 February 1900 – 29 June 1982) was an Ottoman-born Ballet dancer, choreographer and Dance education.
She began her school career at a primary school in Bitola, from where she moved on to the "primară franceză Saint Vincent de Paul", a French-language primary school. After the family relocated to Bucharest Floria Capsali attended the Școala Centrală, having won a scholarship. Three year after she settled with her mother and younger sister in Bucharest, the war reached Romania in 1916: she found herself working as her mother's helper at an armaments family. Soon afterwards her mother changed jobs, becoming director of a military hospital, and after school finished she spent each afternoon in the hospital "among the wounded ... talking to them, running their errands and even dancing, as far as I then knew how to". From Școala Centrală she moved on to the Stoenescu Theatre Academy and, a year later, the Bucharest Music Conservatory. At the conservatory she attended singing classes, and also learned music theory from the director of the institution, Dumitru Georgescu Kiriac. For a time she sang as a member of the prestigious Romanian Patriarchate choir.
In 1926 Floria Capsali married the sculptor Mac Constantinescu (whose work was sometimes produced under the pseudonym "Mihail Filip"). Constantinescu was something of a visual-arts polymath who turned out to be a talented stage-set designer, evidenced some years later by his work on the set and costumes for the stage-show-spectacular "Nuntă în Carpați" ( "Carpathian Wedding") by Paul Constantinescu.
By 1927 Capsali was well established as a member of the ballet elite in Bucharest. That year she was invited to participate in the so-called "Monographies project")/" itemprop="url" title="Wiki: Monograph">Monograph coordinated from the University of Bucharest under the leadership of the eminent sociologist Dimitrie Gusti, researching a wide range of folkloric and ethnographic topics in the Romanian village communities. Other notable participants from the interface between the artistic and academic esdtablishments included the Ethnomusicology Constantin Brăiloiu and George Breazul, as well as Capsali's visual artist husband, Mac Constantinescu. Capsali travelled all over Romania with one of Gusti's teams of "monographic school city-intellectuals", collecting folkloric materials over an "extended period". The information gathered on informatiom on folkdance traditions created an intensified appreciation of "authentic" Romanian folkdance. Some of the material was used for Romanian ballet productions during (and beyond) the 1930s.
Throughout the later 1920s and the 1930s Capsali was a regular presence in Romanian ballet productions, latterly not just as a dancer, but increasingly as a producer. At or shortly before the start of 1930 she opened her own private dance school at which many of Romania's finest dancers of the successor generation would be trained. Pupils included Gabriel Popescu, considered by some the greatest Romanian ballet dancer to date, of any generation.Marcel D. Popa, Alexandru Stănciulescu, Gabriel Florin-Matei, Anicuța Tudor, Carmen Zgăvărdici, Rodica Chiriacescu, Dicționar enciclopedic, Editura Enciclopedică, anul apariției 1993-2009 On 5 April 1930 the "Flora Capsali" dance spectacular opened at the "Teatrul Liric" in the presence of George Enescu. Presented under the auspices of the "Romanian Compioserts' Association", it was the first show of its kind in the country. It turned out to be the first in a succession of ballet-based shows. Between 1931 and 1938 she worked for Constantin Tănase at the "Cărăbuș Theatre", staging a tradition of stage shows reflecting the Romanian folklore revival: "Şapte gâşte potcovite au plecat să se mărite" ( loosely, "Seven geese went off to get married"), "Florăresele", Dodola, Călușari. Reflecting the centralised nature of artistic life in Romania, most of her performances were given in Bucharest, but there were exceptions. In 1937 at Sinaia it was not as a dancer but as a director that she presented the premier of "Fata din Drăguş" ( "The Girl from Drăguş") by Sabin Drăgoi and "Jocurile Olteneşti" ( the " Games") by Paul Constantinescu. She also built an international career, accepting invitations to perform in France, Germany, Greece and Yugoslavia between 1926 and 1933.
In 1938 Capsali took charge of the ballet at the Romanian National Opera, becoming the first ballet teacher to be employed there. She reorganised the Dance troupe, increasing the number of soloists and established a group of leadership assistants within it, with whom she co-ordinated directly. She retained the position until 1950.
During her later years Capsali ran the "Liceul de Coregrafie din București" ( "Bucharest Choreography Academy") at which generations of Romanian dancers have been - and continue to be - trained. In 1998 Arts and Education Minister Andrei Marga decreed that the name of the college should be changed to "Liceul de Coregrafie Floria Capsali".
Paris
Bucharest
Recognition
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