Cardfile's Blog

July 25, 2012

Beach’s “Shakespeare and Company”

Filed under: Literature — cardfile @ 12:18 am
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Sylvia Beach (1887-1962) with the help of her partner, Adrienne Monnier (1892-1955), opened Shakespeare & Company in 1919.  Beach’s English-language bookshop was originally established on rue Dupuytren, moving to 12 rue de l’Odéon in 1921, where the store remained until 1941. The wooden Directoire facade of the shop was removed after the war, and the street-level frontage rebuilt in stone. Subsequently, it housed a gift store, a jeweller and, currently, a boutique for womens’ clothes. The only indication of its history is a small stone tablet between the floors noting that Ulysses was published there. The “new” Shakespeare & Company today is located at 37 Rue Bûcherie.

In the 1920s the store was a gathering place for writers such as Ezra Pound, Ernest Hemingway, Ford Madox Ford (English author; grandson of Ford Madox Brown), F. Scott Fitzgerald, Gertrude Stein, Man Ray, André Gide & James Joyce.

Beach initially published Joyce’s Ulysses in 1922, which was banned in the United States & in the United Kingdom. Subsequent editions were published under the Shakespeare & Company imprint in later years.

Beach was rounded up & sent to the Vittel detention camp at the end of 1942, but set free in 1943 because Monnier appealed to Jacques Benoist-Mechin, minister of police in the Vichy government. (Glass, Charles Americans in Paris: Life & Death under the Nazi Occupation  NY: Penguin, 2011).

Beach is buried in Princeton, NJ, where she lived before moving to Europe when her father became minister of the First Presbyterian Church.  Her papers are archived at Princeton University

July 4, 2012

Paris Ritz

“When I dream of afterlife in heaven,” Hemingway once wrote, “the action always takes place in the Paris Ritz”. The Ritz, located in the 1st arrondissement, is in fact two edifices. The one that faces the Place Vendôme was originally the residence of Armand Louis de Gontaut, the Duc de Lauzun, who was one of the commanders of the French troops at Yorktown during the Revolutionary War. The other half is a building that backs up against it on the Rue Cambon. Residents included Hemingway & couturier Coco Chanel; Hermann Göring lived in the Ritz during the occupation of Paris. Proust wrote parts of Remembrance of Things Past there. George Widener, the son of P.A.B. Widener of Lynnewood Hall in Elkins Park, PA, had been staying there with his family before boarding the RMS Titanic at Cherbourg (P.A.B. held part ownership in the White Star Line).

On August 30, 1997, Diana, Princess of Wales & Egyptian owner, Mohamed Al-Fayed’s son, Dodi, dined in the hotel’s Imperial Suite, which rents for $17,770 a night, before their fatal car crash.

http://www.vanityfair.com/society/2012/07/paris-ritz-history-france

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