Yvonne Chouteau, Native American Ballerina, Dies at 86 |
Yvonne Chouteau, Native American Ballerina, Dies at 86
The New York Times
2016-01-29
Yvonne Chouteau, one of the five celebrated Oklahoma ballerinas with an American Indian background, in a 1963 photo. Credit Jack Mitchell/Getty Images |
Yvonne Chouteau, a former principal dancer of the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo who emerged as one of a celebrated group of dancers known as the American Indian ballerinas of Oklahoma, died on Sunday at her home in Oklahoma City. She was 86.
The cause was congestive heart failure, said Mary Margaret Holt, director of the School of Dance and dean of the College of Fine Arts at the University of Oklahoma. Ms. Chouteau was a founder of the dance school, one of the leading institutions of its kind in the Southwest…
…Part French and part Shawnee–Cherokee, Myra Yvonne Chouteau was born into a pioneering Southwestern family in Fort Worth on March 7, 1929, the only child of Corbett Edward Chouteau and the former Lucy Annette Taylor. The family soon moved to Vinita, Okla., and her father, who was known as C. E. Chouteau, became a prominent American Indian figure in the state.
Ms. Chouteau was a direct descendant of Maj. Jean Pierre Chouteau (1758-1849), who established Oklahoma’s oldest white settlement in 1796…
Read the entire obituary here.
Tags: ballet, Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo, C. E. Chouteau, Corbett Edward Chouteau, dance, Jack Anderson, Jean-Pierre Chouteau, Mary Margaret Holt, Myra Yvonne Chouteau, New York Times, Oklahoma, The New York Times, Yvonne Chouteau