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THE WORLD: FABULOUS PLACES, ERAS, PEOPLE, EVENTS By Maximillien de Lafayette
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MUSIC OF THE ERA. Read JEAN COCTEAU, SATIE AND LES SIX. Read CELEBRITIES OF THE ERA. Read ART OF THE ERA. Read ART AND PAINTINGS OF THE ERA. Read LIFESTYLES OF FRENCH WOMEN OF LA BELLE EPOQUE. Read |
PLEASURES OF THE ERA. Read CHARACTERISTIC STYLE OF THE ERA. Read FASHION OF THE ERA . Read PHOTOS OF THE LIFESTYLE OF THE ERA. Read PARIS BETWEEN 1920 AND 1930. Read POETRY OF THE ERA. Read
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FABULOUS
TIMES, PLACES AND PEOPLE
GAY PARIS IN THE 20s and 30s: Background, People, Places, Personalities, Pleasure, Style, Fashion, Arts, Poetry, Music and Adventure. According to Maximillien de Lafayette.
Mon
Dieu! To be and live in Paris during "Les annees folles", between the end of
1917 and 1934, especially if you were an eccentric artist, an intellectual
adventurer, a frou-frou femme fatale, a genius or an independently wealthy
American, willing to spend a lot of money on arts, dating and women. Ask
Madonna, Paulette Attie, Penelope de Vassy and Louise de
Chambertin. Really "real" America's la crème de la crème was there. The
"real" American high society, the privileged class, the snobs (Although it was
too early for the Americans to know how to be a snob), les bourgeois, wealth
filthy characters, the hustlers with a style, the scandalous adventurous
women, the schmoozer and the cruisers, the handsome gigolos, the champagne,
the caviar, the kisses and the misses, sex, the drama and all the "chic"
pleasures of the era. Hemingway was here. Paramour Stein too. Why Paris - what
made everybody want to come here and create, and drink, and dance, and paint,
and write stories or invent them? Women? obnoxious, over-cultured and
over-sophisticated Frenchmen? Bubbly champagne? Sinfully good wine? Nice plat
de fromage? A nostalgia? A fantasy? A new social, political and artistic era?
A modern Parisian revolution? Yes! Yes! All of the above! Paris was a magic.
And the people who lived in Paris were fabulous and delightfully mad! Tout le
monde etait fou et philosophe, meaning "Everybody was crazy and a
philosopher." Mistinguet, Edith Piaf, Sacha Guitry, Leo Ferre, Charles
Trenet, Fernandel, Patachou, Jean Cocteau, Jean Gabin, Marlene Dietrich,
Aristide Bruant, Jane Avril, La Goulue, Zozo Baker, Ernst Hemingway, Gertrude
Stein, Picasso lived that magical era.

FAMOUS
PEOPLE OF THE ERA. THE WHO'S WHO OF GAY PARIS
Photo, left: Marlene Dietrich. Right: Mistinguet.
Mistinguet,
Toulouse-Lautrec, Edith Piaf, Sacha Guitry, Leo Ferre, Charles Trenet,
Fernandel, Patachou, Jean Cocteau, Jean Gabin, Marlene Dietrich, Aristide
Bruant, Jane Avril, La Goulue, Zozo Baker, Ernst Hemingway, Gertrude Stein,
Picasso, Amadeo Modigliani, Marc Chagall, Constantin Brancusi, Fernand
Léger, Blaise Cendrars, Guillaume Appolinaire, Juan Gris, Max Jacob,
Coco Chanel, James Joyce, Igor Stravinsky, Tristan Tzara, Francis
Picabia, Marcel Duchamp, Sylvia Beach, Louis Aragon, Paul Eluard,
Andre Breton, Prevert, Bourvil, Man Ray, Margaret Anderson, Kiki, E.
E. Cummings, Georges Braque, Erik Satie, Ezra Pound,
Ford Madox Ford, Matisse, André
Derain, Darius Mihaud, Lucienne Delysle, Charles Boyer, Michele Morgan,
Diaghilev, Paul Renouard, Jean
Wiéner, Carlos Gardel, Maria Felix, Gershwin, Youmans, Andre Marlaux,
Jane Bathori, Maurice Chevalier, William Carlos, Nina Hamnett, Zyg Brunner,
Debussy, E. Renaudin, Leonide Massine, Poulenc, Auric, the shadow of
Mata Hari, Stravinsky, Jacques Rivière, Honegger, Paul Méral, Charlie Chaplin,
Paul Claudel, Mayol, Rolf de Maré, George Antheil, T. S. Eliot, Roger de la
Fresnaye, Marcel Duchamp, Filippo Marinetti,Jacques
Leclerc, Alice B. Toklas, Philippe Soupault, Walter Benjamin.
FABULOUS
TIMES, PLACES AND PEOPLE
PARIS IN THE 20s and 30s: Background, People, Places, Personalities, Pleasure, Style, Fashion, Arts, Poetry, Music and Adventure.
FABULOUS PEOPLE AND COLORFUL CHARACTERS OF THE ERA


Ernst Hemingway
Marlene Dietrich in
1930
Josephine Baker


Coco Chanel T. S. Elliot
FABULOUS
TIMES, PLACES AND PEOPLE
PARIS IN THE 20s and 30s: Background, People, Places, Personalities, Pleasure, Style, Fashion, Arts, Poetry, Music and Adventure.
LES ANNEES
FOLLES
BACKGROUND
Photo: Josephine Baker.
The First World War devastated many of the assumptions of the nineteenth century. Many in Europe had thought technology would lead to an ever more stable and prosperous mankind. The Great War showed it could kill and maim millions. The art and music of that period must be seen in the context of this radical shift in perspective. Things weren't just going to get better and better, old assumptions were turned over and hey... if the world's in a mess - maybe you should just say to hell with it, and have a big party. During the first quarter of the 20th century Paris became the magnet for a growing international colony of young artists, poets and musicians. The American poet Ezra Pound described it as the centre of the world, and the place for those who had "cast off the sanctified stupidities and timidities" and were looking for radical new directions.
Photo:
The lady pays the bill: illustration by Lorenzi in Fantasio,
15th Jan 1923
By the time of the First World War Montparnasse, which had taken over from Montmartre as the centre for artists' studios, cafés and bars, was the meeting place for a wide cross-section of new thinkers and experimenters. There was a huge exchange of ideas between these artists, composers, poets and writers, who met and discussed their work in the many cafés and nightclubs for which Montparnasse had became famous. At the same time various artistic movements and influences came and went, overlapping and cross-fertilising along the way. The most significant of the movements these young artists came to absorb was Cubism. Developed in Paris by the artists Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque, Cubism and its legacy changed the face of the arts forever. Representing its subjects in terms of geometrical figures - cones, cubes and spheres - with sober colouring, and in such a way that every aspect of the object could be seen, it also later incorporated collage techniques and stencilling using brighter colours. Cubism's influence steadily infiltrated the worlds of poetry, music and film for many years. Concurrent with Cubism, and pre-figuring many of the radical movements of these years, came the influence of Italian Futurism, expounded by the eccentric Filippo Marinetti. The first exhibition of Futurist works in Paris took place in 1912 and heralded a violent departure from traditional artistic values, glorifying the beauty and sleekness of the machine. Not only were the techniques of artistic representation changing, but the actual objects described were being revolutionised too. Cubism having more or less run its course, by 1918 the post-Cubist movement Purism had produced its manifesto, Aprés Cubisme, calling for clear and simple forms and strong basic shapes. The following year Dada took Paris by storm claiming new subjects to be described by the arts: "machinery, massacre, sky-scrapers, urinals, sexual orgies, revolution …" and through its more political stance ridiculed important governmental figures and institutions as a reaction to the meaningless horror of war. By 1924, with the publication of the Manifeste du Surréalisme Dada in turn was giving way to the Surrealist movement - "Its tyranny had made it intolerable". The writer André Breton, one of Surrealism's leading figures, described it as "pure psychic automatism" producing art works that were a true expression of the subconscious mind. All the arts felt its influence in some way. Not everybody chose to tread these new experimental paths though. In Montparnasse the École de Paris while adopting some modernist tendencies kept to more traditional forms and subjects, including the portraits, nudes and still-lives which Dada and "machine-art" had turned its back on. The artists Amadeo Modigliani, Marc Chagall and Constantin Brancusi were its chief exponents.
FABULOUS
TIMES, PLACES AND PEOPLE
PARIS IN THE 20s and 30s.
Photo:
Ezra Loomis Pound, American poet, critic and editor:
Illustration by Jeffrey Morgan.
As a back-drop to this
incredible cross-fertilisation within the arts the war raged for 4 years. It
ravaged the lives of many, and changed forever the way the arts and the artist
himself were viewed. No-one dreamed it would go on so long and the front line
drew so close to Paris at one point that the guns could be heard. In the
Battle of Verdun alone 300,000 French troops were killed, and in 1917 masses
of ordinary soldiers were beginning to mutiny because of bad leadership. Many
artists did their bit for the war. The poet Blaise Cendrars lost an arm
fighting at the front, and the artist Fernand Léger also enlisted,
going on to celebrate both the machinery of war and his fellow soldiers in his
paintings. Braque served in the infantry and was decorated twice and wounded
in the head. The Italian poet and critic Guillaume Appolinaire joined
the French army, receiving head injuries in 1916 just before being awarded
French nationality, while the ubiquitous poet Jean Cocteau served as an
ambulance driver on the Belgian front. The Italian artist Amadeo Modigliani
was turned down due to health problems, much to his disappointment.
CRAZY PEOPLE
These were crazy times fuelled by
crazy people. Artists were mad for Paris in the twenties. Flocking there to
explore the meaning of the 'modern' world. The list of people who lived and
worked there included Pablo Picasso, Apollinaire, Igor Stravinsky and a young
Ernest Hemingway. The scene wasn't just run by blokes, the American collector
Gertrude Stein played a crucial role in championing the art of the day.
Photo:
merican author Gertrude Stein (left) standing
with her partner, American secretary and writer
Alice B Toklas, 1925.
Who was there? Paris attracted all kinds of artists from a wide range of nationalities, and in the years surrounding the First World War Montparnasse was the place to be. The most popular of the quarter's early artistic colonies was La Ruche (The Beehive), which housed struggling artists at very cheap rents and in correspondingly poor conditions, from which they escaped into the relative comfort of Paris's cafés and bars. The influential Catalan artist Pablo Picasso had been in Paris since 1904, where he was joined in 1906 by the Spanish artist Juan Gris. Picasso moved from Montmartre to his new studio on a street overlooking Montparnasse cemetery in 1920. Amongst his early followers were the talented writers Guillaume Apollinaire and Max Jacob. 1906 also saw the arrival of the Italian sculptor and painter Amadeo Modigliani, hoping to discover the latest developments in modern art. By 1920 Ezra Pound was also there, along with James Joyce and Ernest Hemingway, the Russian composer Igor Stravinsky and the revolutionary Romanian Tristan Tzara, co-founder of the Dadaist movement. It's incredible to think that in one small corner of Montparnasse the artists Francis Picabia, Marcel Duchamp and Fernand Léger, the poets Jean Cocteau and Ezra Pound and writer Ernst Hemingway could all be found living within a stone's throw of each other, swapping ideas and supporting each other's work. Many Americans were attracted to Paris at this time. Hemingway lived over the sawmill on rue Notre-Dame-des-Champs in Montparnasse between 1924-26. When he first arrived he brought letters of introduction to both Ezra Pound and the American Gertrude Stein whose home at 27 Rue de Fleuris housed a brilliant art collection. By 1914 Stein, a great champion of Cubism, had become a significant figure in Parisian cultural life. Pablo Picasso was among her many visitors and her Saturday night soirées drew all kinds of artists, musicians and writers together. Another American woman, Sylvia Beach, settled in Paris in 1916 and three years later opened the bookshop "Shakespeare and Company". One of the shop's first visitors was the Surrealist writer Louis Aragon, and it was through "Shakespeare and Company" that James Joyce's Ulysses was first published. Also in Paris was the innovative American photographer Man Ray. According to Margaret Anderson of The Little Review he was there "photographing pins and combs, sieves and shoe-trees", as well as immortalising the young model Kiki in some of his most famous pictures. The poet and painter E. E. Cummings lived in Paris between 1921-1923, continuing to visit throughout the 20s and 30s. He described the city as a "divine section of eternity".
FABULOUS
TIMES, PLACES AND PEOPLE
PARIS IN THE 20s and 30s.
Photo:
Towards Verdun, France: aquatint by Paul Renouard, 1916.
PLACES
AND HANG OUTS
Artists in Paris like an area where they can get drunk, drink coffee and smoke
ciggies. During this era the centre of the action was Montparnasse. Favourite
hang outs included cafés the Dôme and Rotonde. Here you might see
Modigliani doing some
sketches, or Picasso
and Erik Satie
doodling on some napkins - dreaming up some wild scheme. Praise art and pass
the Gauloise, baby.
What they got up to and where...
The cafés and bars of Montparnasse were a vital meeting place where new ideas
were hatched and mulled over. By night Modigliani, a notorious night prowler,
could be found drinking cheap red wine and sketching ideas for his sculptures
and paintings. In the afternoons Ezra Pound and Ford Madox Ford
played chess on the terrace of the Dôme, which was also frequented by
Braque and André Derain, and occasionally Picasso and
Matisse.
Picasso and the composer Erik Satie doodled on napkins and
tablecloths cooking up ideas for their collaborations, and by the light of a
street gaslight Satie was remembered feverishly scribbling in his
notebook. On Saturday nights Cocteau, Milhaud and other composers and
poets visited the Parisian fairgrounds, music-halls and circuses together,
enthralled by the barrage of sounds that assaulted their ears all at once. The
cafés at the centre of Montparnasse's night-life were the Dôme,
La Rotonde, Le Selecte, and Le Coupole which were all
on the Boulevard de Montparnasse. The Metro Vavin station was conveniently
close by. The Dôme in particular was popular with the English and
Americans. Their normal day would start with breakfast at the Dôme
after which they would go about their business until the afternoon when they
would return again to the café's terrace as a prelude to the night's
activities. Hemingway, a frequent visitor at the Closerie des Lilas
just down the road, described the Dôme and Rotonde as the
places to be seen publicly, which "anticipated the columnists as the daily
substitutes for immortality". Montparnasse's cafés and bars were the perfect
environment for being seen, doing business deals, swapping ideas and all with
the inimitable influence of alcohol to oil the inspiration and conversation.
Photo:
Cafe de la Paix, Paris is crowded with foreigners and visitors in the
aftermath of the war's end - illustration by Louis Sabattier in the Graphic,
1919.
After the
First World War, Jean Cocteau and the group of composers who became
known as Les Six began to frequent Le Boeuf sur le Toit. The
bar was named after a work by Darius Mihaud, a member of Les Six,
and on its opening night the pianist Jean Wiéner played tunes by
Gershwin and Youmans while Cocteau and Milhaud played
percussion. Amongst those to be spotted there were the Russian impresario
Diaghilev, Pablo Picasso, the film-maker René Clair, the singer
Jane Bathori and even Maurice Chevalier. In the Parisian cafes,
night-clubs and bars large amounts of alcohol were often consumed. It could
inspire the mind, but notably amongst the Americans who gathered at night in
Montparnasse, large amounts often led to bar fights. For many years absinthe
had been the favourite drink amongst artists and writers, but was officially
banned in France in 1915. The powerful and enigmatic green liquor was 68%
proof and thought to be the ruin of many a great mind, and was soon replaced
by Pernod. Women were no exception when it came to alcohol and
pleasure-seeking in Montparnasse, and in the view of some, they dominated the
quarter. The American writer William Carlos Williams observed
that "The men merely served as their counterfoils". They indulged in the same
abandonment as many of the men. The bohemian British artist Nina Hamnett
described how during the pre-war July 14th celebrations she borrowed a jersey
and corduroy trousers from Modigliani, went to the Rotonde and
danced in the street all night.
FABULOUS
TIMES, PLACES AND PEOPLE
PARIS IN THE 20s and 30s.


Photos from L to R: #1.American painter,
photographer and film-maker
Man Ray, with one of his paintings. #2.La Rotunde: illustration by
Zyg Brunner, La Vie Parisienne, 1923.
MUSIC OF THE ERA
Cocteau, Satie and Les Six
"Enough of clouds, waves, aquariums, water-sprites, and nocturnal scents;
what we need is a music of the earth, everyday music".
Photo:
French composer Erik
Satie at the piano: pencil sketch by E. Renaudin.
Between 1914 and 1924 a
complex mood of change was in the air which, in its simplest terms, involved
a new freedom to experiment and a sweeping aside of traditionally held
values. In music this took the form of a revolt against the Impressionism of
Debussy and the dense chromaticism of German romanticism. Jean
Cocteau led the way with his new aesthetic for a Parisian musical
avant-garde claiming Erik Satie as its leader, and members of Les
Six as its chief protagonists. In 1918 Cocteau published his
manifesto The Cock and the Harlequin, calling for the creation of a
new, truly French music. It was to be based on simplicity, clarity and
humour and inspired by popular Parisian entertainment - the sounds of the
fairs and circuses, musical-hall and cabaret singers, the syncopated dance
music coming from America, and notably the sounds of everyday life - sirens,
machinery, steamships, typewriters.The group of musicians surrounding
Cocteau at this time were known as Les Nouveau Jeunes of which
Satie was a member during 1918. The other members were Louis Durey,
Arthur Honegger, Germaine Tailleferre, Georges Auric, Darius Milhaud
and Francis Poulenc. From 1916 onwards the group's chief venues were
the Salle Huygens, which also included works of art and performances of
poetry, and the Théatre du Vieux-Colombier, which was run by the singer
Jane Bathori. Milhaud began to add to these regular performances with
Saturday evening dinners at his apartment. Afterwards they would all adjourn
to the fairgounds, circuses, cinemas or music-halls and soak up the effects
of a million experiences and sounds all going on at once which were to
become a crucial part of their compositions. Paris's popular Nouveau
Cirque and Cirque Medrano included a cosmopolitan array of
acts - clowns, acrobats, jugglers, magic and animal numbers - as well as
musical plays, pantomimes and even operettas. The annual fair was a
spectacular event too, containing many of the elements of the circus, as
well as stalls selling household goods and food. The pivotal work as far as
Cocteau's ideas were concerned had been Erik Satie's ballet
Parade, which he saw as symbolising the emergence of a new Parisian
musical avant-garde. It was the result of the colourful collaboration
between Cocteau (who devised the scenario), Picasso (who
designed the sets and costumes), the choreographer Leonide Massine
and Satie, and its premiere in 1917 caused a riot. By 1920 the group
of six composers had transformed into Les Six and become a
prominent force in Parisian musical life. It has to be said though that
their musical styles were all very different, and they followed Cocteau's
ideas to a greater or lesser degree. Their main bond seems to have been one
of friendship although they were often extremely critical, as well as
supportive, of each other's work. The group eventually dissolved as their
careers and musical outlooks developed and took different paths. Satie,
Milhaud, Poulenc and Auric continued to be inspired by popular
genres up until 1924. With Satie's death in 1925 the era drew to a
close.

FABULOUS TIMES, PLACES AND PEOPLE
PARIS IN THE 20s and 30s.
MUSIC

Photos
from L to R: #1. "A couple of flappers with a gentleman friend - La Vie
Parisienne, 1926." #2. Writer, artist and film-maker
Jean Cocteau with composer Darius Milhaud, 1921
Hypnotic rhythms, strong
primary colours, lots of woodwind and a theme of pagan ritual - the 1913
Parisian premiere of Stravinsky's Rite of Spring caused a
complete riot. The police had to be called as the sound of the orchestra was
drowned out by the shouting of those for and against the tumultuous, barbaric
new music. The venue was Paris's Théatre des Champs-Élysées and the
performance was given by Diaghilev's eminent Ballets Russes.
When the critic Jacques Rivière reviewed the premiere he described the
Rite as the first work to challenge Impressionism with its rawness, primitive
rhythms, and preference for woodwinds over the romantic sound of the strings.
This view was ignored by Jean Cocteau who later hailed Satie's
Parade as the pivotal work in the war against Impressionism. Written
four years after The Rite of Spring's scandalous first performance,
Debussy's final sonata comes from quite a different sound world, with themes
and ideas that seem to swirl about in the wind. "Debussyism" became a key
target for Paris's new avant-garde composers, who were tired of the haziness
of Impressionism and saw the sounds of popular entertainment as the new way
forward. Here, though, even Debussy lightens his music with references
to popular music. Writing for the violin and piano in a balanced way is
notoriously hard. Yet according to Poulenc, in this sonata Debussy
created a masterpiece through "sheer instrumental tact". The theme of the last
movement was a real headache for Debussy, who described it as circular,
"like a snake swallowing its own tail". During the First World War Debussy was
ill with the cancer that would eventually kill him. Disturbed by the war's
hideous events he had decided to write the final, but unfinished, group of
sonatas to which this sonata belongs, not so much for himself but to "give
proof, however small it may be … that French thought will not be annihilated".
After his name on the title page of the three sonatas he managed to finish
appeared the qualification "musicien francais".


Photos from L to R: #1. Dancing to a Jazz band in a
French night club:
illustration by Zyg Brunner in La Vie Parisienne, 1926. #2. French writer,
artist and film-maker Jean Cocteau, circa 1925:
illustration by Selbstbildnis.
When Diaghilev
commissioned Jean Cocteau to come up with a new ballet scenario he said
"Surprise me", and Parade was the result. Parade got its name from
the small afternoon shows put on by the Parisian fairs and circuses to
advertise the evening's programme. It had a fine pedigree - Satie wrote
the music, Cocteau devised the scenario, Pablo Picasso designed
the costumes and sets and Leonide Massine was the choreographer. It was
premiered at the Théâtre du Châtelet in Paris on 18th May 1917 by Diaghilev's
brilliant Ballets Russes. Satie's score was certainly a big
"surprise" and caused a riot on its first night. The writer E. E. Cummings
was there shouting angry abuse at the crowd when they booed the work. The
music included the sounds of a typewriter, sirens and a lottery wheel, and
Picasso's costumes included some in the shape of American sky-scrapers.
Parade can be seen as reflecting the growing interest in all things
American, especially the cinema, in Paris at the time. Cocteau's
creation of the "Little American Girl" in Parade was thought to have been
inspired by The Perils of Pauline which were showing in Parisian
cinemas. Parade's greatest significance was as a turning point in the
so-called war against Impressionism and German romanticism espoused by
Cocteau through its use of everyday themes and sounds.
FABULOUS TIMES, PLACES AND PEOPLE
PARIS
IN THE 20s and 30s.
MUSIC
Photo:
English comedian and
actor Charlie Chaplin with a bulldog in the film Champion
Charlie.
Satie was closely connected with the group of Parisian composers championed by Jean Cocteau and known as Les Six. Honegger was a member of Les Six but didn't feel the deep fascination with popular Parisian entertainment of Satie and other members of the group, and so these influences can't be heard in his music. By contrast, in his first major work, Dit des Jeux du Monde, there are echoes of Stravinsky's Rite of Spring, in both its theme - a sort of allegory of the creation of the world - and the instruments it uses: double string quartet, double bass, flute, trumpet, bass drum, and bouteillophone (Bottlephone). The action apparently happens "nowhere" and when it was staged at Paris's Théâtre du Vieux Colombier in December 1918 it was advertised as a "mystery" production, with words by the Belgian poet Paul Méral. Its first performance caused yet another Parisian scandal. Milhaud wrote Le Boeuf sur le Toit shortly after returning from Brazil in 1919, where he had been acting as secretary to the diplomat and poet Paul Claudel. Influenced by the music he heard there, Milhaud's Le Boeuf sur le Toit is full of the rhythms of South American dances. On Saturday nights Milhaud had often visited Paris's fairgrounds and circuses where he was fascinated by the sounds of so much going on at once; so many colourful chance combinations. Along with the South American dance-styles in Le Boeuf, Milhaud also cleverly imitates this colourful fairground simultaneity through polytonal writing (music written in more than one key at a time). Milhaud originally called the work Cinéma Fantasie. By about 1917 Charlie Chaplin's films were beginning to be screened in Paris (Chaplin himself appeared in person at the Casino de Paris in 1917), and Milhaud saw Le Boeuf sur le Toit as a possible accompaniment to a Chaplin film. During the 1920s Milhaud and Les Six met regularly at a bar in Paris which soon moved to larger premises, re-naming itself after this work. Poulenc was a true Parisian. He grew up in the city and claimed to have "frequented the Parisian music-hall without stop" from the age of fifteen to thirty. His favourite music-hall singer was Maurice Chevalier, and it's Chevalier's unique, rubato singing style that can be heard echoing through Cocardes. During the war, music-hall stars had become more and more popular, and in the Paris of the 1920s Chevalier and the singer and dancer Mistinguett reigned supreme. Cocardes were a part of what Poulenc referred to as his "street music" side - snapshots of the Paris he grew up in.
Photo: French surrealist artist, poet, essayist and critic André Breton
wearing a crown of thorns. Beneath is a quote from his 'Manifeste du
Surrealisme'
He was convinced that using
popular tunes gave a national voice to modern music, a theme that chimed
with Cocteau's new musical aesthetic at the time. Jean Cocteau
wrote the texts, which are full of references to aspects of urban life - the
circuses, fairs, cinemas and music hall - as well as lots of different kinds
of confectionery … "Child's Nurse" begins: "Tecla our golden age / Pipe /
Carnot Joffre / I offer to everyone who has neuralgia / Giraffe wedding / a
"Good day" from Gustave / Gounod's ave Maria / Virtuous rose-queen of
the village / Song by Mayol / Touring Club phonograph...Auric's
Overture is his contribution to a work commissioned from him and Jean
Cocteau by Rolf de Maré, director of Paris's Ballets Suédois
(Swedish Ballet). Auric had suggested that it be a combined
effort by all the members of Les Six, but Louis Durey declined,
unhappy with his friends' radical attitudes towards Impressionism, and
Ravel in particular, and so only five composers contributed. Les
Mariés de la Tour Eiffel shows Cocteau's ideas in their extreme.
It was a ballet with a difference - a ballet with dialogue, and Cocteau's
dialogue, like the rest of the work, is full of his favourite everyday
themes and references to popular entertainment. The action takes place on
the first platform of the Eiffel Tower, and shows the eccentric antics of a
wedding party gathered there. Auric's Overture sets the mood, with
lots of brass and timpani, creating a bizarre, bumpy march instead of the
wedding march that would normally be expected. Brass fanfares combine with
melodies in different keys producing all the effects of the fairground.
Antheil described his Ballet Mécanique as "the new fourth
dimension of music" - as well as a dead-end. It was originally a
collaboration with the French artist Fernand Léger, famous for his
"machine-art" paintings. Léger had toyed with the idea of "simultanist
art" which involved film-like techniques of cutting and close-ups with no
logical progression or explanation. This led to his decision to attempt a
film with no scenario, using a prism in front of the camera to destroy the
perspective. The result was Ballet Mécanique, for which George
Antheil was chosen to write the music. Having written it Antheil
felt the music could also stand alone and it was premiered in its own right
two years later in Paris. The incredible line up of instruments called for
were 4 player-pianos (all playing simultaneously), an aeroplane propeller,
gongs, rattles and a xylophone. Repetition and syncopation are powerful
elements in the music, as is the influence of jazz styles. The outrageous
premiere drew many of Paris's celebrities to the Théatre des Champs-Èlysées
in 1926. James Joyce was there sporting an eye-patch, T. S. Eliot
was spotted with an unidentified woman in black, and Diaghilev and
Ezra Pound were also present. Ballet Mécanique has been
described as symbolising "the acme of demented modernism" but is highly
significant in that it can be seen as looking forward to minimalism.

FABULOUS TIMES, PLACES AND PEOPLE
PARIS IN THE 20s and 30s.
FABULOUS PEOPLE OF THE ERA




Photos: From L to R: #1,2,3: Maria Felix. #4. Edith Piaf.


Charles Boyer Maurice Chevalier with Jeanette MacDonald