Céleste Mogador
Céleste Mogador | |
---|---|
Born |
Élisabeth-Céleste Venard December 27, 1824 Paris, France |
Died |
February 18, 1909 84) Montmartre, France | (aged
Nationality | French |
Élisabeth-Céleste Venard (December 27, 1824 – February 18, 1909), better known by her stage name Céleste Mogador and often referred to simply as Mogador, was a French dancer and writer. She was also the countess of Chabrillan.
Early life and career
The daughter of Anne-Victoire Vénard, she was born in Paris, France, on December 27, 1824.[1] Her father died when she was six; she was neglected by her mother and abused by her stepfather. At the age of sixteen, she began performing at the Cirque Olympique. She helped introduce dances such as the quadrille and the can-can at the Bal Mabille.[2] She is credited with being the first to dance the schottische. She also sang in cabarets, performing songs by Sebastián Iradier. One source has suggested that the character Carmen in Bizet's opera of the same name may have been based on Mogador.[3]
In 1854, she married Lionel de Moreton, count of Chabrillan. He was named consul for France in Melbourne, Australia, and died there in 1858.[2][4] In 1854, she published a memoir Adieu au monde, Mémoires de Céleste Mogador. In 1877, she published Un deuil au bout du monde describing her experiences in Australia.[5]
She was director of a theatre company, the Folies-Marigny. Mogador also wrote a number of plays, including Les voleurs d'or, Les Crimes de la mer, Les Revers de l'Amour, L'Américaine and Pierre Pascal.[5] During the Franco-Prussian War, she established Les Soeurs de France to look after wounded soldiers and she opened her home to children orphaned during the war.[1]
The name "Mogador" refers to the 1844 bombardment of Mogador in Morocco, now known as Essaouira.[5]
Literary work
Mogador wrote a series of novels:
- Les Voleurs d'or (1857)
- Sapho (1858)
- Miss Pewell (1859)
- Est-il fou? (1860)
- Un miracle à Vichy (1861)
- Mémoires d'une honnête fille (1865)
- Les deux soeurs (1876)
- Les forçats de l'Amour (1881)[5]
Death
Mogador died in Montmartre, France, at the age of 84 on February 18, 1909.[1]
References
- 1 2 3 "Chabrillan, Céleste de (1824–1909)". Australian Dictionary of Biography.
- 1 2 Tardi, Alan (2016). "Champagne, Uncorked: The House of Krug and the Timeless Allure of the World's Most Celebrated Drink". p. 251. ISBN 1-61039-689-8.
- ↑ Baim, Jo (2007). Tango: Creation of a Cultural Icon. p. 138. ISBN 0-253-02775-6.
- ↑ "Comte Lionel De Chabrillan (1818–1858) First Consul for France at Melbourne, 1852–1858" (PDF). Institute for the Study of French-Australian Relations.
- 1 2 3 4 "Céleste Mogador". L’Intermédiaire des chercheurs et des curieux (in French). April 20, 1910.
External links
- The French Consul's Wife: Memoirs of Celeste de Chabrillan in Gold-Rush Australia. Translated by Clancy, Patricia; Allen, Jeanne. 2003. ISBN 0-522-85066-9.
- Mossman, Carol A (2009). Writing with a Vengeance: The Countess de Chabrillan's Rise from Prostitution. ISBN 0-8020-9691-3.