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===Early career=== Nijinsky spent his summer after graduation rehearsing and then performing at Krasnoe Selo in a makeshift theatre with an audience mainly of army officers. These performances frequently included members of the Imperial family and other nobility, whose support and interest were essential to a career. Each dancer who performed before the Tsar received a gold watch inscribed with the Imperial Eagle. Buoyed by Nijinsky's salary, his new earnings from giving dance classes, and his sister Bronia's employment with the ballet company, the family moved to a larger flat on Torgovaya Ulitsa. The new season at the Mariinsky theatre began in September 1907, with Nijinsky employed as coryphée on a salary of 780 roubles per year.<ref>{{Harvnb|Parker|1988|pp=34–35}}</ref> He appeared with Sedova, [[Lydia Kyasht]] and Karsavina. Kchessinska partnered him in ''[[La Fille Mal Gardée]]'', where he succeeded in an atypical role for him involving humour and flirtation. Designer [[Alexandre Benois]] proposed a ballet based upon ''Le Pavillon d'Armide'', choreographed by Fokine to music by [[Nikolai Tcherepnin]]. Nijinsky had a minor role, but it allowed him to show off his technical abilities with leaps and pirouettes. The partnership of Fokine, Benois and Nijinsky was repeated throughout his career. Shortly after, he upstaged his own performance, appearing in the ''Bluebird'' pas de deux from the ''Sleeping Beauty'', partnering Lydia Kyasht. The Mariinsky audience was deeply familiar with the piece, but exploded with enthusiasm for his performance and his appearing to fly, an effect he continued to have on audiences with the piece during his career.<ref>{{Harvnb|Parker|1988|pp=36–37}}</ref> In subsequent years, Nijinsky was given several soloist roles at the Mariinsky. In 1910, [[Mathilde Kschessinska]] selected Nijinsky to dance in a revival of Petipa's ''[[The Talisman (ballet)|Le Talisman]].'' Nijinsky created a sensation in the role of the Wind God Vayou.
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