Rudolf Nureyev Dance Foundation v. Noureeva-Francois

7 F. Supp. 2d 402, 1998 WL 375272
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJune 26, 1998
Docket94 CIV. 7701 DC
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 7 F. Supp. 2d 402 (Rudolf Nureyev Dance Foundation v. Noureeva-Francois) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rudolf Nureyev Dance Foundation v. Noureeva-Francois, 7 F. Supp. 2d 402, 1998 WL 375272 (S.D.N.Y. 1998).

Opinion

AMENDED OPINION

CHIN, District Judge.

Rudolf Nureyev was perhaps the greatest dancer of his time. He will be remembered not only for his brilliance on the stage, but for his daring flight to freedom in 1961, when he became the first of the great Russian dancers to defect to the West. He continued to dance, as a free man, for three decades.

Nureyev died of AIDS-related illnesses in Paris on January 6, 1993. Although he was penniless when he defected, he eventually amassed a fortune and left a world-wide estate worth some $21 million.

Two months before his death, Nureyev donated his American assets, with a value of $7 million, to a newly-created dance foundation. , After his death, his sister and niece objected to the transfer. The dance foundation then commenced this action to “quiet title” — to obtain a judgment declaring the gifts valid. Nureyev’s sister and niece filed counterclaims seeking to void the transfer. They contend that Nureyev was not of sound mind when he executed the deeds of gift and that Nureyev was unduly influenced by his attorney, who was appointed by Nureyev to run the foundation. They contend further that the attorney took advantage of Nureyev’s weakened state to gain control of a $7 million foundation.

This case was tried to the Court in November 1997. Having considered all the evidence and the parties’ arguments, I find that Nureyev’s gifts to the dance foundation, the Rudolf Nureyev Dance Foundation (“RNDF”), were validly made and that Nureyev was of sound mind when he made them. In addition, I find that Barry Weinstein, Nureyev’s attorney, did not unduly influence Nureyev.

Rudolf Nureyev was a strong-willed person who dared to defy a government. He was not a person who could be manipulated or unduly influenced, and this remained true even near the end. He was surrounded by close friends who were articulate, successful people, who cared for him immensely, who were willing to disrupt their own lives to be with him, and who would not have let anyone take advantage of him. It is also clear that although Nureyev’s dancing would not have been forgotten, he nevertheless wanted to leave behind a legacy. Charles Jude, one of Nureyev’s closest friends, testified that Nureyev “thought he cannot die, he is a god” (Tr. 203), but Nureyev knew that he was a mere mortal in body. He wanted his name and spirit to carry on after his death and he created the foundation for that purpose. The evidence demonstrates unequivocally, and I so find, that Weinstein carried out the wishes of his client in good faith at all times and in an able and conscientious manner.

Accordingly, judgment will be entered in favor of plaintiff. Pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 52, my findings of fact and conclusions of law follow.

STATEMENT OF THE CASE

A. The Facts

1. Rudolf Nureyev

Nureyev was born on March 17,1938, on a train en route to Vladivostoek, where his father was serving in the Russian army. In 1959, he joined the Kirov Ballet Company as a dancer. He quickly became a soloist, performing in ballets such as Swan Lake.

*405 On June 16,1961, he defected to the West. At the end of a tour in Paris with the Kirov Ballet Company, as he was about to be returned to Moscow by two Russian policemen, he presented himself to French customs inspectors at Le Bourget airport. He requested political asylum, declaring, “I want to stay. I want to stay.” (Rudolf Nureyev, The Bid for Freedom (hereinafter Bid for Freedom), in Rudolf Nureyev, Three Years in the Kirov Theatre 16, 23 (T.I. Zakrshev-skaya, et al., eds., 1995) (hereinafter Three Years in Kirov Theatre) (see PX141)).

Nureyev explained his reasons for defecting as follows:

Now and then in life one has to take a decision like lightning, almost quicker than one can think. I have known this in dancing when something on the stage goes wrong. That is how it felt that hot morning in June 1961 on Le Bourget airfield, outside Paris, as I stood in the shadow of the great Tupolev aircraft which was to fly me back to Moscow.
Its huge wing loomed over me like the hand of the evil magician in Swan Lake. Should I surrender and make the best of it? Or should I, like the heroine of the ballet, defy the command and make a dangerous — possibly fatal — bid for freedom? During my stay in Paris I had felt the threat mounting. I was like a bird inside a net being drawn tighter and tighter. I knew this was a crisis.
For a bird must fly. I see nothing political in the necessity for a young artist to see the world: to compare, assimilate, to enrich his art with new experiences, both for his own profit and that of his country. A bird must fly, see the neighbor’s garden and what lies beyond the hills, and then come home, enrich his people’s lives with tales of how others live and the broadened scope of his art.

(Bid for Freedom at 16).

When Nureyev defected, he abandoned all that he had owned, including what he described as his “dearest worldly possessions” — a collection of ballet shoes and leotards purchased during his travels around the world. He described how he felt moments after he defected, as he was being led away by the French authorities:

This was freedom, yet ironically, freedom was taldng on the form of its exact opposite. . Once again, policemen were on either side of me, but French this time. ■ I was entering on a new life almost naked as when I was bom.

(Bid for Freedom at 24).

Nureyev’s “new life,” of course, was a phenomenal success. After his death, he was described as:

the world’s most famous dancer, a man who spent a quarter of a century on stage performing an average of some three hundred ballets a year. He took the best of Russian ballet with him to the West and in the process became known to people far outside the realm of dance. The leading choreographers of his day — Frederick Ashton and Jerome Robbins, Martha Graham and Twyla Tharp, Roland Petit and Maurice Bejart — created ballets exclusively for him. And Nureyev himself created his own versions of ‘Cinderella’ and ‘Romeo and Juliet,’ as well as updating numerous classical ballets. In his lifetime, Nureyev became a living monument to himself ....

(Three Years in Kirov Theatre at 13).

In April 1992, after he stopped dancing, Nureyev conducted the American Ballet Orchestra for a performance of Tchaikovsky’s Romeo and Juliet at the Metropolitan Opera in New York City. Jeannette Etheredge, a longtime friend, testified at trial that when she attended the performance, she spent more time watching Nureyev in the orchestra pit than the dancers on stage. (Tr. 307). She explained why:

[I]t was watching him with a new career in his life. And he was also the kind of person that when you saw him on stage, if there were 120 people on that stage, the only person you looked at was him.

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