Nicolas de Lenfent
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Nicolas de Lenfent ("Nicki") is a fictional character in the Vampire Chronicles universe created by Anne Rice. He was a vampire and was born and raised in Auvergne, France, the eldest son of a draper. He was a companion to Lestat de Lioncourt.
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[edit] Publication history
Nicolas de Lenfent appears only in The Vampire Lestat, the second novel in the Vampire Chronicles, although he is referenced in other works in the series, including The Tale of the Body Thief. Nicolas is also the founder of the Théâtre des Vampires, the vampire theatre that figures prominently in Interview with the Vampire.
[edit] Fictional character biography
[edit] Personality
Nicolas, nicknamed "Nicki" by Lestat, is described as having dark hair and eyes. He has a very dark, cynical and pessimistic personality. Although he often manages to conceal this from Lestat, he has a sarcastic and ironic nature that contrasts with Lestat's own generally enthusiastic and wildly cheerful outlook on life.
Despite his cynicism, Nicolas is still convinced that the Christian teachings are correct, and he cannot understand Lestat's unwillingness to believe. He delves deeper into his cynicism as his view of the world takes a darker turn. He claims that there is no good or evil, there is only good art, or bad art.
The character of Nicolas is important in explaining Lestat's later fixation with Louis de Pointe du Lac, a young Creole gentleman whom Lestat cites as seeming "in his cynicism and self-destructiveness the very twin of Nicolas [...] Yet Louis gained a hold over me far more powerful than Nicolas ever had," refuting earlier claims by Louis in Interview with the Vampire that Lestat had simply been after his inheritance. In The Tale of the Body Thief, Lestat refers to Nicki as his former lover, indicating that the two shared a romantic relationship as mortal men.
[edit] History
Nicolas grows up in a small town in Auvergne, France, the eldest son of a draper. His family is respectably middle-class, and Nicholas is educated.
Initially, Nicolas meets Lestat de Lioncourt when they are both children and are participating in an outing to "The Witches Place", a location where witches were burned at the stake in previous years. Lestat makes an impression on Nicolas when he begins to scream and cry during the outing. The two meet again as young men, after Lestat defeats the wolves plaguing the village. Nicolas, acting as a spokesperson for the town, presents him with a red velvet cloak and boots lined with the wolves' pelts.
Nicolas is intrigued by Lestat, and requests to speak to him privately so that Lestat can tell him how he achieved the impossible. Lestat is not interested until he learns from his mother that Nicolas, like him, is a rebel. He has returned to the village because he is in disgrace: he was sent to Paris to study law at the Sorbonne, but instead fell in love with the violin, abandoned his studies and sold his textbooks to take lessons from Mozart. Although he has returned to the Auvergne, Nicolas has not given up his dream and continues to play his violin at home, prompting his father to threaten to break his hands.
Lestat seeks Nicki out at the village tavern, and the two discover that they understand each other. They quickly become inseparable and have long, soul-seeking talks together, which they refer to as "Our Conversation". Eventually Nicolas and Lestat run away together to Paris. They find work in a small theatre on the Boulevard du Temple, called Renaud's, where Lestat begins acting, and Nicolas plays the violin.
When Lestat is kidnapped by Magnus and transformed into a vampire, he hides from Nicki, seeking to conceal his dark nature. He attempts to watch over Nicki from afar, sending him expensive gifts, such as a Stradivarius violin, and buying him a new apartment. Believing that Lestat has abandoned him in spite of the numerous gifts, Nicolas sinks into a depressive and drunken state. One night Nicolas senses Lestat nearby and plays the violin in an unsuccessful attempt to coax him out.
Shortly thereafter, Nicolas is abducted by a coven of vampires led by Armand. They feed from him yet do not kill him, and his mind snaps irreperably, plunging him into a darkness from which he does not escape. Lestat comes to the catacombs under Les Innocents, knowing that Armand has Nicolas, and liberates him after some difficulty.
After being rescued and returning to Lestat's home with him, Nicki pleads for the Dark Gift. Lestat refuses, but is finally convinced to turn Nicki into a vampire. As Lestat feeds from Nicolas, he is plunged into the darkness in which Nicolas resides. He describes the scene as a seamless black sea, where all colours have faded, and that he sees only a bird soaring over the void expanse. He describes a feeling of having lost all that was once cherished. He describes it also as worse than his moment of darkness at the Inn, and tries to recoil from it. He does give Nicolas the Dark Gift, and a silence is put between them.
After the transformation, Nicolas becomes catatonic. Gabrielle and Lestat take Nicolas into Paris, where he slips from their grasp and disappears into the night. Lestat cannot read Nicki's mind, but Gabrielle can, and tells him that the only things Nicolas thinks of are the funeral pyre under Les Innocents, upon which he was almost killed, and Renaud's theatre. They deduce that he must have run to the theatre and the find him there, sitting alone. Lestat gives the violin he had retrieved for him and Nicolas begins to play, improvising dark and terrible music. Lestat describes the music as "the darkness exploded, the darkness molten" and is horrified by it.
The remaining members of Armand's coven appear and begin to dance, and Nicolas join them. Nicolas finally becomes vocal, and he demands the theatre, slinging insults at Lestat and finally admitting that he never wanted them to succeed in Paris, he wanted them to starve, because it was what he wanted, rather than what his father wanted. Nicolas proclaims his group to be the Theatre of the Vampires, and becomes the troupe's playwright and composer.
Lestat grants Nicki his wish and turns over the theatre. He and Gabrielle decide to leave Paris and leave Nicolas in Armand's care. The coven attempts to care for Nicolas, and refers to him fondly as "Our Violinist", but he becomes progressively more insane and difficult to deal with, accosting strangers on the street and making no attempt to conceal his vampiric nature. Armand finally resorts to restraining Nicolas in a cell and cuts off his hands to prevent him from playing his violin so manically. Nicolas becomes full of despair and once released writes a stack of new plays, then demands that the coven build him a funeral pyre and hold a sabbat, else he set fire to the theatre and kill himself there. The coven abides by Nicolas's wishes and organizes a sabbat for him, where he dances into the flames, committing suicide.
Nicolas's prized Stradivarius violin, as well as an account of his death, are sent on to Lestat. He keeps the instrument with him, and later uses it to play for Akasha. Centuries later, during Lestat's journey to heaven and hell, he is unable locate Nicolas in either realm. This indicates that Nicolas could still be alive, in one form or another, but the character does not appear again at any point in the series.
[edit] Appearances in other media
Nicolas appeared as a character in the short-lived Broadway show Lestat: The Musical composed by Elton John and Bernie Taupin, and was played by Roderick Hill. In this production, Nicki, and not Lestat, was depicted as being an actor, and possessed a more cheerful and kinder personality than his literary counterpart.
[edit] References
- Rice, Anne. The Vampire Lestat. Alfred A. Knopf, 1985. ISBN 0345313860
- Lestat: The Musical at the Internet Broadway Database
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