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Before Marilyn Monroe: Sarah Bernhardt

6/14/2015

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PicturePortrait of Sarah Bernhardt (1864) source: wikimedia
Before there was Marilyn Monroe or Kim Kardashian, there was Sarah Bernhardt, a trendsetter during the Belle Époque period in France. This was a time when artisans were stretching the limits of imaginations. Sarah was a diva of the stage and she both attracted and repulsed European royalty and wealthy American audiences with her stunning beauty and unpredictable behavior.

While researching the Durant family for the second novel in my series, I came across a reference to Bernhardt in the court testimony of the trial: Heloise (Ella) Durant Rose vs. William West Durant (1903). Ella sued her brother for an accounting of how he had spent the money gained from the sale of their father's Adirondack Railway company and some 1/2 million acres of land in New York State.

On cross examination Ella was asked more than once if she was associated with Sarah Bernhardt and her theater entourage while she lived in London from 1885-1892. This was an obvious ploy to detract from the main intention of Ella's lawsuit: her brother's mishandling of her affairs while holding her power of attorney. However, it may also been true that Ella was palling around with the theater set. In fact, when William visited London in 1889, Ella invited Monsieur Pierre Berton to dine with her and her brother at the Hotel Savoy. William was fit to be tied when he realized that Ella's dinner companion was Sarah Bernhardt's one-time lover and actor in Bernhardt's theater troupe.

One could hardly blame Ella for enjoying the company of thespians. It must have been exciting to be living in London in the late 1880s and to associate with artists that had similar interests as her: writing and producing plays. Ella was after all working on her own play: Dante: a Dramatic Poem which was published in 1889. Although I have not found references to Sarah Bernhardt in any of the scant collection of Ella Durant's correspondence housed at Syracuse University, I did find a number of letters from Lady Anne Thackeray Ritchie, part of the literary scene of London at the time.

William's reaction to Ella's choice of friends, and his lawyer's use of this association against her, may have seemed trite when the issue came up at the trial. By 1903 Sarah Bernhardt was an international star. But when she first arrived in America in 1881-82 to put on Camille at the Booth Theater in New York City, the American critics were scandalized. Maybe it was the plot: a story about a French courtesan. Or it may have been the American's audience lack of understanding of French theater. Either way, as typical American fashion, the more scandalous the topic, the more attracted people were to the story. Bernhardt became an over night sensation, so much so that the American press made fun of  prudish Queen Victoria for refusing to the allow the play to be shown in London. That ban didn't last long either.

Sarah Bernhardt was a trendsetter. When she came to America she enthralled wealthy industrialists like the Vanderbilt men, supposedly procuring the handkerchief used by one of them to cry into during her production, and framing it. She had many lovers, including royalty. She became so popular that women copied her style. When she wore an ostrich feather in her cap, other women followed suit. When she wore gloves up the length of her arms to hide her bony structure, other women did also, bony arms or not. It was said she was tempestuous, and not afraid to tell people, including Prince Napoleon and the Prince of Wales, what she thought of them if she felt they were rude toward her. Yet she remained famous. She was given gifts of jewels by her many male admirers and made millions from her fame, especially in America.

The only other reference I have to associate Ella Durant with Sarah Bernhardt is a mysterious Count de la Salle. In the court testimony, William's lawyers question Ella about her money lending to this Count from Paris. Again they insinuate a connection to Sarah Bernhardt, asking Ella if the Count was in the same social set.  In my reading about Sarah Bernhardt I can find nothing about a Count de la Salle. I am still looking for any references about this man for my second novel in the Durant family saga. While doing so I get to read about the likes of Sarah Bernhardt, and imagine what it was like if Ella was to meet her after a performance of Camille in London.

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 What Does it Mean to be a Robber Baron?

3/12/2015

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PictureA political cartoon depicts John D. Rockerfeller on top of his oil monopoly. Source; wikimedia
I was having a conversation with an English friend  who is assisting me with my trilogy on the Durant family. I must say it's been useful having him around to explain to me the difference between a Count, Duke, Lord, and Baron. God forbid I get those titles wrong while writing about the aristocratic friends that the characters in my novel palled around with in Europe.

Much to my surprise however is how little these Brits knew about American history.

You can imagine my surprise when I mentioned Harriet Tubman in an email and was asked: "Who was Harriet Tubman?"

"What?" I said to my friend across the Atlantic. "You don't know who Harriet Tubman is?" It's funny that we Americans gobble up stories about King Henry VIII and his philandering, murderous antics, yet my Brit friend didn't know a stitch about one of the most famous heroines in American history.

"Did you know she risked her own life to bring slaves to freedom? That she started what is today our modern Hospice system? Housing aged-terminally ill freed slaves in her home and seeking donations from neighbors to help with their care?"

"Do you know who Mary Seacole is?" was his reply.  (I didn't but that is not the point). The lack of interest in his country's former colony came to a head for me when we were working on ideas for promotional material on my book and I suggested the use of the term 'robber baron' to describe the ruthless New York City businessmen of the time period.

"It may confuse people in Europe." I was told. "What?" Yes indeed, so the term comes from the medieval times. It refers to the noblemen that acted less than noble by charging exorbitant tolls and tariffs on highway travel. Who would have known? Not me. That's not how I learned it in American History class back in High School. Robber barons were the Rockerfellers, the Vanderbilts and the Morgans. They bilked the masses out of their money while amassing their own fortunes. Right? If my high school teacher had told me that the term came from medieval times it went in one ear and out the other. I just remember the political cartoons. They left a lasting impression and I don't recall one Brit being depicted in them. (Although I have since learned that Carnegie was a Scotsman).


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    Sheila Myers  Professor at Cayuga Community College in Upstate New York.

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