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Roma Pryma-Bohachevsky ((ウクライナ語:Рома Прийма-Богачевська), translit. ''Roma Pryima-Bohachevs'ka'') (1927 – May 23, 2004) was a dancer and choreographer, who instructed thousands of students in the art of ballet and Ukrainian dance. ==Education== Roma Pryma was born into a musical family in Przemyśl, a city in present-day Poland, but spent her formative years in Lviv, a city in present-day western Ukraine (at the time, part of a newly established Soviet republic). At the age of 5, her mother, Ivanna Pryma, sensing her daughter's talent for movement, enrolled her in eurhythmics classes, as well as in the study of modern dance, under M. Bronevska, a disciple of Mary Wigman. Between the years 1939–44, Roma began performing at the Lviv Opera and Ballet Theater, and after a year and a half, she moved up from serving in the corps de ballet, to small solo roles of a character nature. Leaving her homeland after World War II, Roma and her mother resettled in Austria in 1944, where after 3 years she graduated with honors from the Academy of Music and Dramatic Arts in Vienna and later became a soloist in the ballet group of the National Theater in Innsbruck. At this point, Roma turned away from pursuing a career dedicated to classical ballet and followed her roots in alternative expression. After a meeting with Harald Kreutzberg at his villa in the Alps, she began to focus on creating expressionistic choreographies. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Roma Pryma-Bohachevsky」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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