Taglioni retired from performing in 1847; for a time she took up residence at the
Ca' d'Oro on the
Grand Canal in
Venice. When the ballet of the Paris Opéra was reorganized on stricter, more professional lines, she was its guiding spirit. With the director of the new
Conservatoire de danse,
Lucien Petipa, and Petipa's former pupil, the choreographer
Louis Mérante, she figured on the six-member select jury of the first annual competition for the
corps de ballet, held on 13 April 1860. Her only choreographic work was
Le papillon (1860) for her student
Emma Livry, who is remembered for dying in 1863 when her costume was set alight by a gas lamp used for
stage lighting.
Johann Strauss II composed the "Marie Taglioni Polka" (Op. 173) in honour of Marie Taglioni's niece, Marie "Paul" Taglioni, also known as "Marie the Younger". The two women, having the same name, have often been conflated, or confused with each other. Later in England, she taught
social dance and ballroom to children and society ladies in London; she also took a limited number of ballet pupils. She resided at #14
Connaught Square, London from 1875 to 1876. Taglioni died poor in
Marseille on 22 April 1884, the day before her 80th birthday. Her body was moved to Paris. There is some debate over whether she is buried in
Montmartre or in
Père Lachaise, or if the grave Montmartre site belongs to her mother. The local dancers began leaving their worn pointe shoes on the Montmartre grave as a tribute and thanks to the first pointe dancer. ==See also==