Hand-coloured daguerreotype portrait of a bolero dancer with castanets, c. 1850. The original piece is preserved in the Photo Library IPCE (Institute of Cultural Heritage of Spain) in Madrid. It's a whole plate daguerreotype, the maximum size standard. It is a masterpiece of the History of Photography.
She debuted in Madrid in 1840 and around 1844 danced the title role for the first production of Giselle in Spain.[3] She performed in numerous works by Marius Petipa and was often partnered with him.[3] In the beginning of 1850s in Madrid's Teatro del Circo she has a rivaling with Sofia Fuoco. Guy-Stéphan was a favourite of Marquis de Salamanca so when Fuoco became a favorite dancer of general Narvaez theatrical rivalry turned into a political one. Those who preferred the government (and Fuoco) were wearing red carnation flowers in the buttonhole while the supporters of Marquis de Salamanca (and Guy-Stéphan) demonstrated their notion by wearing white ones.
Cyril W. Beaumont had a painting after J. H. Lynch showing Guy-Stéphan dancing 'Las Boleras de Cadiz' from the ballet divertissement L'Aurore at Her Majesty's Theatre in London in 1843 (now in the collection of the Victoria & Albert Museum),[4] and an engraving of Guy-Stéphan dancing in the same ballet appears in La Ilustración of 23 March 1850.[5] There is also an 1850 daguerreotype showing a dancer with castanets who has been identified as Marie Guy-Stéphan.[6]
References
^Le Guide Musical: Revue Internationale de la Musique Et de Theâtres Lyriques. Vol. 19. Bruselas. 4 September 1873. Nécrologie. A Paris, le 20 août, à l'âge de 55 ans, Mme Marie-Antoinette Guy-Stephan, ancienne danseuse de l'Opéra, dont la carrière a eu de l'éclat; elle avait pris sa retraite en 1856"{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
^Plaza Orellana, Rocío (2013). Los bailes españoles en Europa. El espectáculo de los bailes de España en el siglo XIX. Córdoba: Editorial Almuzara. p. 6. ISBN9788415338840.