From the author of Nureyev, the
definitive biography of the celebrated Russian dancer,
now comes the astonishing and unknown story of Marie
Duplessis, the courtesan who inspired Alexandre Dumas
fils’s novel and play La dame aux camélias,
Giuseppe Verdi’s opera La Traviata, George
Cukor’s film Camille, and Frederick Ashton’s
ballet Marguerite and Armand. Sarah Bernhardt,
Eleonora Duse, Greta Garbo, Isabelle Huppert, Maria
Callas, Anna Netrebko, and Margot Fonteyn are just a few
of the celebrated actors, singers, and dancers who have
portrayed her. Drawing on new research, Julie
Kavanagh brilliantly re-creates the short, intense, and
passionate life of the tall, pale, slender girl who at
thirteen fled her brute of a father and Normandy to go
to Paris, where she would become one of the grand
courtesans of the 1840s. France’s national treasure,
Alexandre Dumas père, was intrigued by her, his
son became her lover, and Franz Liszt, too, fell under
her spell. Quick to adapt an aristocratic mien, with
elegant clothes, a coach, and a grand apartment, she
entertained a salon of dandies, writers, and artists.
Fascinating to both men and women, Marie, with her
stylish outfits and signature camellias, was always a
subject of great interest at the opera or at the Café de
Paris, where she sat at the table of the director of the
Paris Opéra, along with the director of the Théâtre
Variétés, the infamous dancer Lola Montez, and others.
Her early death at age twenty-three from tuberculosis
created an outpouring of sympathy, noted by Charles
Dickens, who wrote in February 1847: “For several days
all questions political, artistic, commercial have been
abandoned by the papers. Everything is erased in the
face of an incident which is far more important, the
romantic death of one of the glories of the demi-monde,
the beautiful, the famous Marie Duplessis.”
With The
Girl Who Loved Camellias, Kavanagh has written a
compelling and poignant life of a nineteenth-century
muse whose independent and modern spirit has timeless
appeal.
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