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  1. Lichine and Riabouchinska decided to make Los Angeles their home base in 1953. They opened and presided over The Lichine Ballet School in Beverly Hills. The school had an international flavor and was often visited by dancers from touring companies.

  2. 25 juin 2012 · Irina Kosmovska, an inspiring teacher and former artist of the Ballet Russe, also taught at the Lichine School and elsewhere. She founded the Los Angeles Junior Ballet Company, a high quality and ambitious pre-professional group.

  3. In 1943 Lichine and Riabouchinska married and moved to Los Angeles. They opened a ballet school where they both taught, although David continued to choreograph throughout the world. Riabouchinska was very famous in her own right, but taught ballet in Los Angeles, under the name of Madame Lichine.

  4. In 1953, Lichine and Riabouchinska settled in Los Angeles, where they opened a ballet school and for some time also directed a performing group, the Los Angeles Ballet Theatre. She continued to teach at the school after his death in 1972, at the age of sixty-one.

  5. In 1966 Balanchine appointed her as ballet mistress of the Los Angeles Ballet Company and principal teacher of the Los Angeles Ballet School. She was a member of the School of American Ballet Summer staff at their permanent residence in New York City.

  6. 30 août 2000 · After success as guest artists for such companies as the Australian Ballet, the Ballets des Champs-Elysees and London Festival Ballet (now English National Ballet), the Lichines opened a ballet...

  7. Born Lilly Samuels, daughter of Jack and Bluma Samuels, both Holocaust survivors, she attended public school while growing up in Los Angeles and at the age of 10 received a Ford Foundation scholarship to study ballet at the David Lichine and Irina Kosmovska Ballet School.