Historical Dictionary of Brussels

BÉJART, MAURICE

(1927- )
Maurice Béjart, the pseudonym of Maurice Jean Berger, was born in Marseilles, France, on 1 January 1927. A dancer and choreographer, he studied in Paris and London and performed with the Ballet de l'Étoile dance group in Paris in 1953. He formed his own company—the Ballet Théâtre de Paris — in 1957. Based on the success of its 1959 production ofLe sacre du Printemps, Béjart was named director of theBallet du XXe Siècleat theThéâtre royal de la Monnaie. The creator of extravagant ballet productions, includingLes Quatre Fils Aymon(1961),Nijinsky(1972), andLe Martyr de St.Sebastien(1986), Béjart later expanded beyond Western traditions to draw on Eastern cultures (Raga[1977],The Kabuki[1986]). Expounding the universality of dance, Béjart employs an expressionist style that incorporates jazz and avant-gardemusic, nontraditional dance forms, and unusual settings.
He exerted an enormous influence on ballet in Belgium. Following a conflict with the director of the Théâtre, Béjart moved the ballet to Lausanne, Switzerland, in June 1987, and he became director of the Ballet Béjart that year.