Eugénie Buffet

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Eugénie Buffet

Eugénie Buffet in 1933
Background information
Born 1866
Tlemcen, French Algeria
Origin Paris, France
Died 1934 (aged 6768)
Genres chanson réaliste
torch songs
Occupations singer, actress
Associated acts Aristide Bruant

Eugénie Buffet (1866–1934) was a French singer who rose to fame in France just prior to World War I. She has been called one of the first,[1] if not the first,[2] performer of the chanson réaliste genre. She became a national sensation in France, performing in the fashionable cafés-concerts of Paris as well as embarking on both national and international tours.[1][2][3] Her biggest success is said to be her performance of the song "La Sérénade du Pavé" (Sidewalk Serenade), written by Jean Varney in 1895.[2] She was also known to perform in the street for charity in the poorer areas of Paris – work for which she was awarded the Légion d'honneur.[1][2][4]

Early life

Born Marie Buffet in Tlemcen, Algeria in 1866,[5][6] (in an area that was then known as French Algeria,) Eugénie Buffet was the daughter of a seamstress and a soldier.[2] At the age of only 6 months, her father died in a military hospital in Oran; as a result her family was quite poor.[2]

At the age of 17, Buffet started acting.[2] She struggled in her early years and was living in near poverty; she had moved to Marseilles in order to perform, but she was not very successful at first and was said to have been "booed and hissed off of the stage".[2] She was worked mainly in the cafés-concerts of Marseilles, until 1886 when she became the mistress of comte Guillaume d'Oilliamson.[3][7][8] The wealthy French count brought Buffet with him to Paris to show off to his friends.[2] Buffet went from "near starvation" to living a fashionable Parisian life.[3][8]

Career in music

Eugénie Buffet at Les Ambassadeurs in 1896, by artist Lucien Métivet

While in Paris, Buffet became involved in right-wing politics; she attended one of the founding rallies of the Ligue des Patriotes and sang "La Marseillaise" for the nationalists. As a result she became the darling of such anti-Dreyfusards as Paul Déroulède.[3]

In 1892 Buffet attended a performance at Le Chat Noir by the cabaret singer Aristide Bruant; Buffet found herself moved by his performance and approached him with the idea of her portraying one of the poor and unfortunate girls of whom Bruant would often sing.[2] Buffet had spent a short time in the Prison Saint-Lazare which had put her into direct contact with women of such description,[1][9] and she was also said to have followed prostitutes on their rounds at night in order to better emulate their dress and demeanor in her own performances.[2]

Buffet would combine these experiences to create her famous performances as la pierreuse (the streetwalker) and she debuted her character in an 1882 performance at La Cigale, a famous nightclub in the Quartier Pigalle of Paris.[2][3][9] During performances Buffet wore a tattered apron and red scarf, a common costume of prostitutes at the time.[2]

Soon Buffet became a national celebrity – she performed at such famous cafés-concerts as the Théâtre de la Gaîté-Montparnasse, the Théâtre de la Gaîté-Rochechouart, and Les Ambassadeurs.[1][2] She also sang in less conventional locations such as the streets of the poorer neighbourhoods of Paris, and even at coal mines, in order to raise money for the poor and homeless.[1][2][3] Buffet also performed daily at the Exposition Universelle of 1900, a world's fair held in Paris.[3]

Eugénie Buffet, ca. 1920

In the early 1900s Buffet tried her hand at managing her own cafés-concerts: From 1902–1903 Buffet ran a cabaret in Montmartre called the "Cabaret de la Purée" (Down-on-Your-Luck Cabaret) and later in 1903 she ran an establishment called the Folies-Pigalle which was closed down that same year by the police because it was "a meeting-place for right-wing enemies of the regime."[2][3][10]

In addition to performing in Paris, Buffet toured and performed for soldiers during WWI,[2] she performed at the Royal Palace of Brussels and in the early 1920s she toured the United States, Morocco and the Antilles.[2][3][4][11]

A turn-of-the-century recording of Buffet singing "Sois bonne ô ma belle inconnue" (Be good oh my beautiful unknown) was used in the film score of the Jean Renoir film La Chienne.[12][13]

Other works

In 1927 Buffet appeared in the silent film Napoléon directed by French filmmaker Abel Gance; she played the role of Laetizia Bonaparte, Napoleon's mother.[1][14]

In 1930 Buffet published her ghostwritten memoir titled: Ma Vie, Mes Amours, Mes Aventures: Confidences recueillies par Maurice Hamel (My Life, My Loves, My Adventures: Confessions obtained by Maurice Hamel), published by writer, poet, journalist and editor Eugène Figuière.[2][8]

Death

Suffering from illness as early as the late 1920s, Eugénie Buffet fell into poverty by the end of her life. She died in Paris in 1934.[1][2]

Portrayal in film

Eugénie Buffet was said to have inspired the character of Mademoiselle Amy Jolly, Marlene Dietrich's role in the 1930 film Morocco.[5][15] French signing icon Édith Piaf also portrayed Eugénie Buffet in the 1954 French musical film French Cancan.[16][17]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 Frith, Simon (2004). Chanteuse in the city: the realist singer in French film, Routledge. p. 219-220. ISBN 0-415-29905-5
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.7 2.8 2.9 2.10 2.11 2.12 2.13 2.14 2.15 2.16 2.17 2.18 2.19 Conway, Kelley (2004). Chanteuse in the city: the realist singer in French film, University of California Press. p. 41-51. ISBN 0-520-24407-9
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 3.7 3.8 Berlanstein, Lenard R. (2001). Daughters of Eve: a cultural history of French theater women from the Old Regime to the fin de siècle, Routledge. p. 203. ISBN 0-674-00596-1
  4. 4.0 4.1 Dillaz, Serge (1991). Chanson sous la 3. République, Tallandier. p. 255. ISBN 2-235-02055-0 (French text)
  5. 5.0 5.1 Baudelaire, René. (1996). La chanson réaliste..., Editions L'Harmattan. p. 49-50. ISBN 2-7384-4831-3 (French and English text)
  6. Leutrat, Jean-Louis (1994). La chienne de Jean Renoir, Editions Yellow now. p. 119. ISBN 2-87340-095-1 (French text)
  7. Friang, Michèle (1998). Femmes fin de siècle: 1870–1914 : Augusta Holmès et Aurélie Tidjani ou la gloire interdite, Editions Autrement. p. 256. ISBN 2-86260-821-1 (French text)
  8. 8.0 8.1 8.2 Laver, James (1966). Manners and morals in the age of optimism, 1848–1914, Weidenfeld & Nicolson. p. 240. ASIN B0006D6E6K
  9. 9.0 9.1 Moore Whiting, Steven (1999). Satie the bohemian: from cabaret to concert hall, Oxford University Press. p. 20. ISBN 0-19-816458-0
  10. Moore Whiting, Steven (1999). Satie the bohemian: from cabaret to concert hall, Oxford University Press. p. 176. ISBN 0-19-816458-0
  11. Dawbarn, Charles (2008). Chanteuse in the city: the realist singer in French film, BiblioBazaar, LLC. p. 150. ISBN 0-554-61475-8
  12. Renoir, Jean (1990). Renoir on Renoir: interviews, essays, and remarks, CUP Archive. p. 268. ISBN 0-521-38593-8
  13. Robertson Wojcik, Pamela (2001). Soundtrack available: essays on film and popular music, Duke University Press. p. 268. ISBN 0-8223-2800-3
  14. French Cancan at the Internet Movie Database
  15. Bret, David (2000). Marlene Dietrich, my friend: an intimate biography, Robson Books. ISBN 1-86105-319-3
  16. Robertson Wojcik, Pamela (2001). Soundtrack available: essays on film and popular music, Duke University Press. p. 137. ISBN 0-8223-2800-3
  17. Crosland, Margaret (2002). A cry from the heart: the life of Edith Piaf, Arcadia. ISBN 1-900850-50-8

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