When the Sarjeant Gallery mounted an exhibition of 40 works by New Zealand artist Ida Carey on the theme of theatre and ballet, a portrait of Margaret Scrimshaw, one of New Zealand’s most celebrated ballerinas was included. That same year the Gallery acquired the painting thanks to a bequest and it joined three other works by Carey in the Sarjeant collection.
Sixty-five years later in April this year, the obituary of Margaret Pellow nee Scrimshaw (1924-2023) appeared in the Waikato Times accompanied by Carey’s portrait of the dancer in her London heyday.
Born in Temuka, both Margaret Scrimshaw and her sister Norma were educated in the arts with Scrimshaw soon discovering a passion for ballet. She trained tirelessly, succeeding in competitions and examinations as well as winning many awards.
Aged 18 she opened the Margaret Scrimshaw School of Dance in Hamilton, assisted financially by her father, and proved to be as good a teacher as she was a performer. Reviews in newspapers were glowing with an Auckland newspaper saying, “the adorable premier danseuse, Margaret Scrimshaw, should be praised in verse rather than prose” and the Waikato Times at the time calling her “one of the Dominion’s leading ballerinas”.
The obituary vividly recounts a thrilling professional career when, after the war, Scrimshaw took her performing and teaching career to London where she danced in many ballets and worked as ballet mistress at the Theatre Royal Drury Lane. She danced alongside Margot Fonteyn and fellow New Zealand ballerina Rowena Jackson and counted them both as friends.