CHICAGO — Maria Tallchief, one of America’s first great prima ballerinas who gave life to such works as “The Nutcracker,” “Firebird,” and other masterpieces from legendary choreographer George Balanchine, has died. She was 88.
Tallchief died Thursday in Chicago, her daughter, Elise Paschen, said Friday.
Tallchief danced with the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo from 1942 to 1947, but her career was most associated with the New York City Ballet, where she worked from 1948 to 1965. Balanchine, the Russian-born dance genius, was not only the company’s director; in 1946, he became Tallchief’s husband for some years.
Tallchief told Women’s Wear Daily in 2003 that when she first worked with Balanchine she thought, ” ‘I am seeing music. This is it!’ I was a musician myself, and I thought, ‘I am in my place now.’ I knew that that’s the way I wanted to dance.”
Tallchief was one of five Oklahoma natives of American Indian descent who rose to prominence in the ballet world from the 1940s through the 1960s. She retired in 1965, when she started teaching the next generation of dancers.
Tallchief created roles in many of Balanchine’s ballets, including “Orpheus,” in 1948, and “Scotch Symphony,” in 1952. She was the Sugar Plum Fairy in his original production of “The Nutcracker” in 1954.
In the 1970s, Tallchief served as artistic director of the Lyric Opera Ballet in Chicago. She later founded and was artistic director of the Chicago City Ballet.
Jacques d’Amboise, a former New York City Ballet dancer who partnered with Tallchief in many performances, said she was the Mount Everest of dance.
“She was the perfect representative of the American ballerina,” said d’Amboise, who with the National Dance Institute in New York. “There is one word for her: Grand. She was absolutely grand.”



