Louis-Aimé d'Auvigny (about 1738, in Paris â after 1795, in Tulchyn, Poland, now Ukraine) was an 18th-century French dancer, ballet master, choreographer, and dance teacher.
D'Auvigny was probably the son of a writer and historian Aymé-Jean Chabaille d'Auvigny de Morinval, step brother of dancer and dance teacher Nicolas-François-Hyacinthe Dubus, known by his stage name Hyacinthe, and of the comic actors Gabriel-ÃÂléonor-Hervé Dubus, whose stage name was Soli (Sauly), and Pierre-Louis Dubus, whose stage name was Préville. His mother was their sister, Louise-ÃÂlisabeth Dubus (marriage 1737).
In Stuttgart, he married dancer Marie Claudine Toscani (1746âÂÂ1768) on 6 March 1764. She was the daughter of Italian comedians Giovanni Battista Toscani and Isabella Gafforia.
After making his debut in the ballet of the Comédie-Italienne in 1753 and of the Comédie-Française in 1755 (two years after Préville), D'Auvigny spent some years in Lyon where he danced with Jean-Georges Noverre. In 1760, Noverre called him to the court of Stuttgart and gradually entrusted him with the responsibility of ballet.
When Noverre left in 1767, D'Auvigny was appointed ballet master and kept this position until Easter 1771. In 1770, he set among others the ballets of Calliroe, tragédie en musique by Antonio Sacchini presented at the theatre of Ludwigsburg Palace. In July 1772, he danced in Paris. In the winter and spring 1772/1773 he was a ballet master at the King's Theater on Haymarket in London.
In Palace Theater, Ludwigsburg
In King's Theatre in the Haymarket, London
In December 1773, he danced at the Royal Opera of Versailles, There he met the Polish prince Adam Kazimierz Czartoryski and his wife Izabela, who offered him a job in Poland. He became a dance teacher at Warsaw in Nobles' Academy of the Corps of Cadets (1774âÂÂ1794) and a private teacher of the children of the Czartoryski princes in their residences in Warsaw (in the Blue Palace), in Powàzki near Warsaw (Izabela Czartoryska's summer residence, modeled on Marie Antoinette's Hameau de la Reine) and sometimes at the Czartoryski Palace in Puà Âawy. From 1795, he worked as a dance teacher in the residence of count Stanisà Âaw SzczÃÂsny Potocki in Tulchyn.
D'Auvigny's death belongs to Julian Ursyn Niemcewicz's pen: "already advanced in years, a resident of Tulchyn, he took a young wife, and died on his wedding night â a harsh lesson", Niemcewicz comments, "for old men".
He was the father of painter-miniaturist Charles (Carl, Karol) d'Auvigny (1 September 1765, Ludwigsburg â 4 February 1830, Warsaw).