A professional photographer from 1914, he established a studio at 9 Hart Street, Bloomsbury in the early 1920s and later at 7 Suffolk Street, Pall Mall. Sasha's stage, theatre and society portraits were published regularly in magazines such as The Tatler and The Sketch. He continued working until the early 1950s from his last studio at 22 Panton Street, Leicester Square.
Vivienne began her photographic career in 1934 assisting her husband, Ernest Entwistle, and son, Antony Beauchamp, before opening her own studio.
Kurt Hutton was a staff photographer for Picture Post magazine from 1940 until 1957.
Born in London, Edwards studied ballet with Miss Hutton Moss, Freda Grant and Lucia Cormani. She became one of the first English girls to join Anna Pavlova's company in 1912 until 1916 when she joined Theodore Kosloff's company touring America and then teaching at his ballet schools in San Francisco and Dallas for fifteen years. In 1934 she returned to England and for a time gave up dancing and teaching. However, she returned to dancing after the war and studied with Phyllis Bedells taking all of her RAD examinations including the Advanced Teachers' Certificate. She taught at the Royal Ballet School from 1947 to 1955 and at the RAD from 1947 to 1963. She joined the committee of the RAD's Production Club in 1948 and worked closely on the revision of the RAD's Major syllabi and Courses of Study in the mid-1950s, alongside Ursula Moreton and Tamara Karsavina. She was awarded the 1977 Queen Elizabeth II Coronation Award for her outstanding services to the art of ballet.