Showing posts with label Paris. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Paris. Show all posts

Sunday, November 3, 2019

Louise Weber ... le Can-Can


Magnificent sights draw us to far-off places and when we look beyond the touristy allure, we often find
 interesting stories of people who contributed to the vibe enlacing that far away place.  Here is one.

During Belle Epoque, Paris was alive and a young dancer, for a brief period, attracted throngs of good-timing gentlemen with her teasing dance floor routines.  Over a century later, Louise Weber, La Goulue, is well remembered as a person and for her storied contribution to la belle vie de Paris.  She brought-on ... le Can-Can!

Her mother was a laundress and a young Louise "borrowed" garments to dress and dance.  She found her calling in clubs in Paris' Pigalle.  At the newly opened Moulin Rouge, patrons filled the house enjoying her high-spirited routines.  She perfected the high kick, danced on tables, tipped off men's hats with her toes and downed the spirited drinks of patrons.  She was the toast of Paris and the highest paid entertainer of the day.

As time passed her career faded.  She'd married but lost her husband and son.  She became depressed, overweight and drank heavily while living in a caravan wagon.  In 1928, unrecognizable, she sold peanuts, cigarettes and matches on a street corner in sight of the Moulin Rouge.  She passed away within a year.

Louise Weber's name isn't widely recognized but her Can-Can is.  Around the world fun lovers clap, sing and swing along as they enjoy the high-kicking filles.  They are unknowingly paying tribute to the girl who, daring
to be a little risque, showed Paris and the world of her day how to live in the moment, to enjoy.....le Can-Can!


A poster by Weber's friend and artist
Toulouse-Lautrec who featured her
in many of his works.


le Moulin de la Galette, the cabaret where Louise Weber performed
her Can-Can in the late 1880's before moving on to the newly
constructed Moulin-Rouge and the height of her stardom.



At her modest tomb in Paris' Cimetiere de Montmartre, one sees
fresh flowers and tokens left by caring Parisians and others who,
still today, remember Louise Weber for the joie de vivre she brought
 to Paris with le Can-Can so many years ago.


Thursday, April 25, 2019

Avril à Paris .... Le jardin du Luxembourg

Yes, it is April in Paris.  Parisians welcome the sun, the warmth and the company of
others as they come together at Luxembourg Gardens in the city's Latin Quarter.

Developed in the 1600's by Marie de Medici, the Luxembourg Gardens' promenades, historic
statues, monuments, flower beds and fountains offer one an ideal outing following winter's long, dreary days.

The pond in front of the palace is a gathering place for children (and parents) who excitedly race
 sailboats, running to catch-up with their little wind-driven vessels.  There is again a welcome mist  from the Observatory Fountain and the many statues again call to mind people and times past.  But Parisians most
look forward to a park bench, Spring's warmth, a good book...and maybe a friend. It is April in Paris!

The Luxembourg Palace






Monday, April 15, 2019

Notre-Dame de Paris


Along the Seine in the quiet of the evening, its' beauty was accented against a nearly darkened sky.
The image of Notre-Dame de Paris was cherished that evening and will be long remembered.