To see him now in filmed interviews is to appreciate that every word and drooped eyebrow was slyly chosen to bolster his all-purpose brand. He was, at once, the wild Tatar boy and the silken Parisian aesthete, the lonely lad and the promiscuous lover, the supreme ego and the shy, grateful colleague who supported Fonteyn financially in her dotage. He was, or tried to be, all things to all men and women.