Avdotia Istomina

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Avdotia Istomina
by Henri-François Riesener (1820s)

Evdokia or (informally) Avdotia Ilyinichna Istomina (

ballerina of the 19th century[citation needed
].

Biography

She was orphaned at a young age, but was accepted into the Imperial Theater School, where children could live in complete security.[1]

A pupil of

Alexander Griboedov. Her dancing is the subject of a brilliant stanza in Eugene Onegin, which was described by Vladimir Nabokov
as the most mellifluous lines in the whole of Russian poetry.

She danced nearly all of the principal roles in ballets by Didelot. She became the first Russian dancer

en pointe.[1][2] She served in the Imperial Ballet for twenty years. She married a young actor, but he soon died. Late in life she remarried, this time to the dramatic actor Pavel Ekunin (ru: Павел Семенович Экунин). By this time she was no longer performing leading roles and her income was reduced by half. In the 1835/1836 season, she was injured during the performance and was asked to leave for treatment. Emperor Nicholas I of Russia
saw this request and wrote the order: to be dismissed. On 30 January 1836 Avdotya Istomina came on stage one last time and danced a little Russian dance.

She died of cholera on 26 June 26 (8 July) in 1848 in St. Petersburg. The inscription on her tomb: "Avdotya Ilyinichna Ekunina, a retired actress".[1][3]

See also

References