Kschessinska fled her home, with her son Vova, on 27 February 1917 (
Old Style), during the February Revolution. Her home occupied by the Bolsheviks, Kschessinska wrote "And Petrograd was a nightmare world of arrests, the assassination of officers in the streets, arson, pillage". After staying with friends and relatives for a time, she left Petrograd on 13 July, ending up in
Kislovodsk with Andrei. On 30 December 1919, the
White Army no longer able to stop the Red invasion of the
Caucasus, she was forced to flee to
Novorossiysk. On 13 February 1920, Mathilde, Vova, and Andrei boarded a
Lloyd Triestino liner, leaving behind Russian soil. On 12 March 1920, they arrived at Kschessinska's
Cap-d'Ail villa. On 30 January 1921, Andrei and Mathilde were married at the Russian Church in Cannes. According to Kschessinska, the
Grand Duke Kirill Vladimirovich of Russia "bestowed on me the name of Krassinsky, with the title of Princess. Our son was similarly given the title Prince." In 1935, due to their
morganatic marriage, they added the name Romanovsky, and Romanov was added to their son's. On 9 December 1925, she converted from
Catholicism to
Russian Orthodoxy. On 5 February 1929, they moved into their
Paris home. On 26 March, Kschessinska opened a dance studio, and gave her first lesson on 6 April. By 1933, she had over a hundred students, boys and girls. Her students included
Tatiana Riabouchinska,
Pearl Argyle,
Andrée Howard,
June Brae,
Margot Fonteyn,
Pamela May,
Harold Turner, and
Diana Gould. On 14 June 1936, she made her last appearance on stage at the age of 64, a jubilee performance at
Covent Garden. In 1960, she published an autobiography titled
Souvenirs de la Kschessinska (published in English as
Dancing in St. Petersburg: The Memoirs of Kschessinska). In later years, she suffered financial difficulties but remained indomitable. She died in Paris at the age of 99. She is buried at the
Sainte-Genevieve-des-Bois Russian Cemetery with her husband and son. == Cultural depictions ==