Madame de Pompadour: Difference between revisions
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==See also== |
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==External links== |
Revision as of 11:39, 12 September 2006
Madame de Pompadour, (1721 – April 15, 1764) was a well known courtesan and the famous mistress of King Louis XV of France.
Early life
Madame de Pompadour was born Jeanne-Antoinette Poisson in 1721 in Paris. It is suspected that her biological father was the rich financier Le Normant de Tournehem, who became her legal guardian when her official father was forced to leave the country in 1725 after a scandal and she lived with her mother and sister. Her younger brother was Abel-François Poisson de Vandières (who would later become the Marquis de Marigny). She was intelligent, beautiful, and educated; she also learned to dance, engrave and to play the clavichord.
She was married in 1741 (at the age of 19) to Charles-Guillaume Le Normant d'Etiolles, nephew of her guardian. With him, she had two children, a boy who died the year after his birth in 1741, and Alexandrine-Jeanne, born August 10, 1744, and nicknamed "Fanfan."
Contemporary opinion supported by artwork from the time considered Poisson to be quite beautiful, with her small mouth and oval face enlivened by her wit. Her young husband was soon mad about her and she reigned in the fashionable world of Paris.
The King's mistress
Poisson caught the eye of the monarch Louis XV in 1745. A group of courtiers, including her father-in-law, endorsed her as courtesan to Louis XV, who was still mourning the death of his second mistress, the Duchess of Châteauroux. [1] Jeanne-Antoinette was invited to a royal masquerade ball in February 1745 that celebrated the marriage of the king's son. By March she had become a regular visitor and king's mistress, and the king installed her at Versailles. He also bought her Pompadour, the first of six residences. In July, Louis made her a marquise, had her legally separated from her husband, and on September 14 she was formally presented at court.
Madame de Pompadour was an accomplished woman, with a good eye for Rococo interiors. She had a keen interest in literature. She had known Voltaire before her ascendancy, and the playwright apparently advised her in her courtly role. Contrary to popular belief - and contemporary opinion - she never had much direct political influence, but she supported Belle-Isle and endorsed the Duke of Choiseul to the king. However, she did wield considerable power and control behind the scenes, which was reflected when another of the king's mistresses, Marie-Louise O'Murphy, attempted to replace her around 1754. The younger and inexperienced O'Murphy was arranged to be married off to a lesser noble, and out of the royal court's inner circle.
Choiseul encouraged the basic shift in French foreign policy away from Prussia and towards France's hereditary rival, the Austrian Habsburgs. This alliance eventually brought on the Seven Years' War, with all its disasters, the battle of Rosbach and the loss of New France (Canada). However, Pompadour persisted in her support of these policies, and, when Bernis failed her, brought Choiseul into office and supported him in all his great plans: the Pacte de Famille, the suppression of the Jesuits, and the peace of Versailles that lost Canada. She also discreetly endorsed Diderot's Encyclopédie project.
Pompadour was a woman of verve and intelligence. She planned buildings like the Place de la Concorde and the Petit Trianon with her brother, the Marquis de Marigny. She employed the stylish marchands-merciers, trendsetting shopkeepers who were turning Chinese vases into ewers with gilt-bronze Rococo handles and were mounting writing tables with the new Sèvres porcelain plaques. Numerous other artisans, sculptors and portrait painters were employed, among them the court artist Jean-Marc Nattier, in the 1750s Francois Boucher, and later Francois-Hubert Drouais (illustration, right). Drouais renders her demurely at traditional lady's work with her tambour and embroidery silks, among luxurious fittings that include a Sèvres-mounted table with a goat's mask in the latest goût Grèc. She is not young, but there is freshness and sparkle to everything about her. There is no sign that she is ill and about to die.
Pompadour suffered two miscarriages in the 1750s, and she is said to have arranged lesser mistresses for the king's pleasure to replace herself. Although they did not sleep together after 1750, Louis XV remained devoted to her until her death in 1764 at the age of 42. At the time she was publicly blamed for the Seven Years' War.
In popular culture
- The classic pink of Sèvres porcelain is rose de Pompadour.
- The Pompadour haircut is named after her.
- "Pompadour heels", (more commonly known as "Louis heels") are named after her.
- The "Coupe de champagne" (French champagne glass) was supposedly first moulded on her breast.
- Madame de Pompadour has been depicted on screen in film and television on many occasions, beginning with Madame Pompadour in 1927, in which she was played by Dorothy Gish. Other actresses to have played her include Anny Ahlers (Die Marquise von Pompadour, 1931); Jeanne Boitell, (Remontons les Champs-Élyssées, 1938); Micheline Presle, (Si Versailles m'était conté, 1954); Monique Lepage, (Le Courrier du roy, 1958); Elfie Mayerhofer (Madame Pompadour, 1960); Noemi Nadelmann (Madame Pompadour, 1996); Katja Flint, (Il Giovane Casanova, 2002); and Sophia Myles (Doctor Who — "The Girl in the Fireplace", 2006).
- Madame Pompadour, a musical in two acts with music by Leo Fall and book and lyrics by Rudolph Schanzer and Ernst Welisch ran on Broadway in 1924 and 1925, and featured Wilda Bennett as "Madame la Marquise de Pompadour".
- She was the subject of several portraits throughout her lifetime. [2] [3] [4]
- Madame Pompadour is the name of PeeWee's rag doll in the Robert A. Heinlein juvenile novel Have Space Suit, Will Travel.
- In "My Name is Kim Sam Soon", the title character presents an ice cream confection named "Marquis de Glacerie" in honor of Louis XV and Madame de Pompadour. She tells them (Madame de Pompadour's skirt fluttering in the wind was the cause of the Seven Years War) that after finding out that one of the frequent customers there is a player (of women) and tells the customer to protect his country and not be drowned in the pleasures of riches and vanity, like what happened to Louis XV due to Madame de Pompadour's beauty.