Colette
was the pen name of the French novelist Sidonie-Gabrielle Colette
(28 January 1873 – 3 August 1954). She is best known, at least in the English-speaking world, for her novel Gigi
, which provided the plot for a Lerner & Loewe musical film and stage musical.
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COLETTE TICKETS
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Early life, marriage
Colette was born in
Saint-Sauveur-en-Puisaye,
Yonne, in the
Burgundy Region of
France, the daughter of Jules-Joseph Colette and Adèle Eugénie Sidonie Landoy ("Sido"). In 1893 she married
Henri Gauthier-Villars, a famous wit known as "Willy", who was 15 years her senior.
Her first books, the
Claudine
series, were published under the pen name of her husband, "Willy", writer, music critic, "literary charlatan and degenerate",
[1].
Claudine
still has the power to charm; in
belle epoque
France it was downright shocking, much to Willy's satisfaction and profit.
Music hall career, affairs with women
In 1906 she left the unfaithful Gauthier-Villars, living for a time at the home of the American writer and salonist
Natalie Barney. The two had a short affair, and remained friends until Colette's death.
[2] She was also, according to
author Jean-Claude Baker’s book
Josephine: The Hungry Heart
, involved for some time with actress
Josephine Baker.
Colette took up work in the
music halls of
Paris, under the wing of
Mathilde de Morny, the
Marquise de Belbeuf, known as Missy, with whom she became romantically involved. In 1907, the two performed together in a pantomime entitled
Rêve d'Égypte
at the
Moulin Rouge. Their onstage kiss nearly caused a riot, which the police were called in to suppress. As a result of this scandal, further performances of
Rêve d'Égypte
were banned and Colette and de Morny were no longer able to openly live together, though their relationship continued a total of five years.
[3] She also was involved in a heterosexual relationship during this time, with the Italian writer
Gabriele D'Annunzio. Another affair during this period was with the automobile-empire scion, Auguste Herriot.
Second marriage, affair with stepson
In 1912 Colette married Henri de Jouvenel, the editor of the newspaper
Le Matin
. The couple had one daughter,
Colette de Jouvenel, known to the family as Bel-Gazou. Colette de Jouvenel later stated that her mother did not want a child and left her in the care of an English nanny, only rarely coming to visit her.
In 1914, during
World War I, Colette was approached to write a ballet for the
Opéra de Paris which she outlined under the title "Divertissements pour ma fille". After Colette herself chose
Maurice Ravel to write the music, he reimagined the work as an opera, to which Colette agreed. Ravel received the libretto to
L'Enfant et les sortilèges
in 1918, and it was first performed on
21 March 1925.
[4]
During the war she converted her husband's
St. Malo estate into a hospital for the wounded, and was made a
Chevalier of the Legion of Honour (1920). She divorced Henri de Jouvenel in 1924 after a much talked-about affair with her stepson,
Bertrand de Jouvenel.
Third marriage
thumb
Colette married
Maurice Goudeket in 1935. After 1935 her
legal
name was simply Sidonie Goudeket. Maurice Goudeket published a book about his wife,
Close to Colette: An Intimate Portrait of a Woman of Genius
. An English translation was published in 1957 by Farrar, Straus & Cudahy, New York.
Continued writings
Post-war, her writing career bloomed following the publication of
Chéri
(1920). Chéri tells a story of the end of a six-year affair between an aging retired
courtesan, Léa, and a pampered young man, Chéri. Turning stereotypes upside-down, it is Chéri who wears silk pajamas and Léa's pearls, and who is the object of gaze. And in the end Léa demonstrates all the survival skills which Colette associates with femininity. (The story continued in
La Fin de Chéri
(1926), which contrasts Léa's strength and Chéri's fragility and decline).
After
Chéri
, Colette entered the world of modern poetry and paintings revolving around
Jean Cocteau, who was later her neighbor in
Jardins du Palais-Royal. Their relationship and life is vividly depicted in their books. By 1927 she was frequently acclaimed as France's greatest woman writer. "It ... has no plot, and yet tells of three lives all that should be known", wrote
Janet Flanner of
Sido
on its publication in 1930. "Once again, and at greater length than usual, she has been hailed for her genius, humanities and perfect prose by those literary journals which years ago ... lifted nothing at all in her direction except the finger of scorn."
She published around 50
novels in total, many with autobiographical elements. Her themes can be roughly divided into idyllic natural tales or dark struggles in relationships and love. All her novels were marked by clever observation and dialogue with an intimate, explicit style. Her most popular novel,
Gigi
, was made into a
Broadway play and a highly successful
Hollywood motion picture,
Gigi
, starring
Maurice Chevalier,
Louis Jourdan and
Leslie Caron.
Legacy
A controversial figure throughout her life, Colette flaunted her
lesbian affairs.
In the
German occupation of France during World War II she aided her Jewish friends, including hiding her husband in her attic all through the war.
She was a member of the
Belgian Royal Academy (1935), president of the
Académie Goncourt (1949) (and the first woman to be admitted into it, in 1945), and a Chevalier (1920) and a Grand Officier (1953) of the
Légion d'honneur.
When she died in
Paris on
3 August 1954, she was given a state funeral, although she was refused
Roman Catholic rites because of her divorce. Colette is interred in
Père Lachaise Cemetery in Paris.
Singer Rosanne Cash paid tribute to the writer in the song, "The Summer I Read Colette", on Cash's album
10 Song Demo
.
Notable works
- Claudine à l'école
(1900)
- Claudine à Paris
(1901)
- Claudine en ménage
(1902)
- Claudine s'en va
(1903)
- Dialogues de Bêtes
(1904)
- La Retraite Sentimentale
(1907)
- La Vagabonde
(1910)
- L'Envers du music hall
(1913)
- La Paix Chez les Bêtes
(1916)
- L'enfant et les sortilèges
(1917, Ravel opera libretto)
- Mitsou
(1919)
- Chéri
(1920)
- La Maison de Claudine
(1922)
- Le Blé en herbe
(1923)
- La Fin de Chéri
(1926)
- La Naissance du Jour
(1928) (translated as Break of Day
)
- Sido
(1929)
- Le Pur et L'Impur
(1932)
- La Chatte
(1933)
- Duo
(1934)
- Le Képi
(1943)
- Gigi
(1945)
- L'Étoile Vesper
(1947)
- Le Fanal Bleu
(1949)
- Paradis terrestre
, with photographs by Izis Bidermanas (1953)
See also
Biography
- Sylvain Bonmariage, Willy, Colette et moi
, with an introduction by Jean-Pierre Thiollet, Anagramme ed., Paris, 2004 (reprint)
References
- Bot generated title -->
- Wild Heart: A Life: Natalie Clifford Barney and the Decadence of Literary Paris
- Women of the Left Bank: Paris, 1900–1940
- LA Phil Presents | Piece Detail - Maurice Ravel: L'enfant et les sortilèges