Yvette Guilbert (French pronunciation: [ivɛt gilbɛʁ]; born Emma Laure Esther Guilbert, 20 January 1865 – 3 February 1944) was a French cabaret singer and actress of the Belle Époque.

Yvette Guilbert
Yvette Guilbert in 1913
Born
Emma Laure Esther Guilbert

(1865-01-20)20 January 1865
Died3 February 1944(1944-02-03) (aged 79)
Resting placePère Lachaise Cemetery
Occupation(s)Cabaret singer, actress on stage and in silent films
Known forBelle Époque diseuse, innovator of the French chanson, subject of portraits by Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec
Spouse
Max Schiller
(m. 1897)
AwardsAwarded the Legion of Honor as the Ambassadress of French Song, 9 July 1932
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Biography

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Born in Paris into a poor family as Emma Laure Esther Guilbert, she began singing, as a child but at age 16 worked as a model at the Printemps department store in Paris. She was discovered by a journalist. She took acting and diction lessons, which enabled her in 1886 to appear on stage at several smaller venues. Guilbert debuted at the Varieté Theatre in 1888. She eventually sang at the popular Eldorado club, then at the Jardin de Paris before headlining in Montmartre at the Moulin Rouge in 1890. The English painter William Rothenstein described this performance in his first volume of memoirs:

 
Yvette Guilbert,
by Joseph Granié [fr] (1895)

One evening Lautrec came up to the rue Ravignan to tell us about a new singer, a friend of Xanrof, who was to appear at the Moulin Rouge for the first time... We went; a young girl appeared, of virginal aspect, slender, pale, without rouge. Her songs were not virginal – on the contrary; but the frequenters of the Moulin were not easily frightened; they stared bewildered at this novel association of innocence with Xanrof's horrific double entendre; stared, stayed and broke into delighted applause.[1]

For her act, she was usually dressed in bright yellow with long gloves and stood almost perfectly still, gesturing with her long arms as she sang. An innovator, she favored monologue-like "patter songs" (as they came to be called) and often was billed as a "diseuse" or "sayer". The lyrics (some of them her own) were raunchy; their subjects were tragedy, lost love, and the Parisian poverty from which she had come. During the 1890s she appeared regularly alongside Kam-Hill, another star of the time, often singing songs by Tarride.[2] Taking her cue from the new cabaret performances, Guilbert broke and rewrote all the rules of music-hall with her audacious lyrics, and the audiences loved her. She was noted in France, England, and the United States at the beginning of the 20th century for her songs and imitations of the common people of France. Author Patrick Bade believed that Guilbert "derived her trademark black gloves from Pornocrates" a famous painting by symbolist artist Félicien Rops.[3]

She was a favorite subject of artist Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, who made many portraits and caricatures of Guilbert and dedicated his second album of sketches to her. Sigmund Freud attended her performances, including one in Vienna, and called her a favorite singer. George Bernard Shaw wrote a review highlighting her novelty.[4] The reviews were not all positive. The playwright and songwriter Maurice Lefèvre said of her

Let's enter the Chanson Moderne. There she is! Long leech, sexless! She crawls, creeps with hissings, leaving behind the moiré trail of her drool...On both sides of the boneless body hang, like pitiful wrecks, tentacles in funereal gloves. For she will, indeed, lead the burial of our Latin race. Complete negation of our genius...Poor little Chanson, faithful mirror in which men reflect themselves, are you responsible for their hideousness?"[5]

In 1897, she married Max Schiller, an impresario.[6] Guilbert made successful tours of England and Germany, and the United States in 1895–1896. She performed at Carnegie Hall in New York City. Even in her fifties, her name still had drawing power and she appeared in several silent films (including a star turn in F. W. Murnau's Faust). She also appeared in sound fims, including a role with friend Sacha Guitry. Her recordings for La Voix de son maître include the famous "Le Fiacre" as well as some of her own compositions such as "Madame Arthur". She accompanied herself on piano for some numbers.

She once gave a performance for the Prince of Wales, later King Edward VII, at a private party on the French Riviera. Hostesses vied to have her at their parties.

In later years, Guilbert turned to writing about the Belle Époque, and in 1902, two of her novels (La Vedette and Les Demi-vieilles) were published.[6] In the 1920s, there appeared her instructional book L'art de chanter une chanson (The art of singing a Song). She also conducted schools for young girls in New York and Paris. One of her pupils in Paris was the American soprano and folk song fieldworker Loraine Wyman. Another was Pamela Gibson, who became a senior archivist at Bletchley Park during the Second World War.[7]

Guilbert became a respected authority on her country's medieval folklore and on 9 July 1932 was awarded the Legion of Honor as the Ambassadress of French Song.

Yvette Guilbert died in 1944, aged 79, in Aix-en-Provence. She was interred in the Père Lachaise Cemetery in Paris.[8]

Twenty years later her biography That Was Yvette: The Biography of a Great Diseuse by Bettina Knapp and Myra Chipman (New York: Holt, Rinehart & Winston, 1964) was released.

Filmography

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  • Let's Make a Dream (1936) as Une invitée
  • Iceland Fisherman (1934) as La Grand-Mère Moan
  • The Two Orphans (1933) as La Frochard
  • La Dame D'en Face (1932)
  • Laissez faire le temps (1932)
  • En zinc sec (1931)
  • Bluff (1929)
  • Le manque de mémoire (1929)
  • L'Argent (1928) La Méchain
  • Die lachende Grille (1926) as Die alte Fadette
  • Faust (1926) as Marthe Schwerdtlein: Gretchens Tante / Marguerite's Aunt
  • Los dos pilletes (1924) as Zéphyrine
  • An Honorable Cad (1919)
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See also

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References

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  1. ^ Rothenstein, William (1934). Men and Memories, Vol 1. 1872-1900. London: Faber & Faber. pp. 65–66.
  2. ^ Du Temps des cerises aux Feuilles mortes (French chanson from the end of the 2nd Empire to the 1950s website Archived 19 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ Patrick Bade (2003) Félicien Rops. Parkstone Press Ltd, New York, 95 pp. [page 61] ISBN 1859958907
  4. ^ Laurence, Dan H., ed. (1989). Shaw's Music. Volume III: 1893–1950. London: The Bodley Head. pp. 207–214. ISBN 9780370302485. Retrieved 31 July 2022.
  5. ^ Waeber, Jacqueline (29 September 2011). "Yvette Guilbert and the Revaluation of the Chanson Populaire and Chanson Ancienne during the Third Republic, 1889–1914" in Jane F. Fulcher, The Oxford Handbook of the New Cultural History of Music, Page 272. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-534186-7. Retrieved 4 February 2014.
  6. ^ a b   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Guilbert, Yvette". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 12 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
  7. ^ "Pamela Rose obituary". The Daily Telegraph. 10 November 2021.
  8. ^ "Yyette Guilbert, Singer, Dies at 79. Paris Shopgirl Won Success On Stage with Folksongs. Visited U. S. in 1895–96". The New York Times. 4 February 1944. Retrieved 24 July 2009.
  • Louis de Robert The eternal enigma, New York City, 1897
  • Helena, Montana Daily Independent, Chit Chat of Affairs Mundane in Land of Gaul, Wednesday Morning, 10 November 1928, page 11
  • New York Times, "Yvette Guilbert, Singer, Dies at 79", 4 February 1944, page 16
  • Knapp, Bettina; Chipman, Myra (1964). That was Yvette; the biography of Yvette Guilbert, the great diseuse. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston.

Further reading

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Hackel, Erin. "Yvette Guilbert: La Diseuse." Kapralova Society Journal 15, no. 2 (Fall 2017): 1–5.

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