There's nothing I like better than reading
about Cyrano de Bergerac, and I thoroughly
enjoyed Sue Lloyd's biography on Edmond Rostand. Riding
the London tube, I read of Paris theatres, strolls in the Cambo-les-Bains countryside,
friendships with flamboyant actors Constant Coquelin and Sarah Bernhardt; and
the people, idealism and circumstance that inspired Rostand to write Cyrano.
The biography paints a picture of a man not
quite of this world, more in touch with his dreams and art than the people around
him, a condition that became starker as he got older.
His youth was protected by a close family, with loving
friendships and bonds, with teachers who encouraged his poetry, and an idyllic
romance with poet Rosemonde Gérard whom he went on to marry. As a young poet,
he idealised the poor, seeing something noble in failure, les Râtes, the failed
poets.
Throughout his life, he suffered from depression and
insecurities about his work. It's a shame he couldn't enjoy his success and the
fact that his ideal was universally aspired to. As is obvious from the
faultless verse in his work, he was a perfectionist. Burdened by his
aspirations, then living up to his success, friend Jules Renard commented, 'A
triumph would give him hardly any pleasure, and a failure will kill him.'
He paid with his health for the masterpieces he created, unable to work without being in a state of exaltation, 'a giving of his whole being, and exhilaration, a transportation, a sort of mental fever… when he tensed all his strings, he vibrated and sang from his head to his feet; and then he liberated that amazing eloquence.' (Louis de Robert)
He paid with his health for the masterpieces he created, unable to work without being in a state of exaltation, 'a giving of his whole being, and exhilaration, a transportation, a sort of mental fever… when he tensed all his strings, he vibrated and sang from his head to his feet; and then he liberated that amazing eloquence.' (Louis de Robert)
One of his running themes was that sensual love
and women were a distraction from life's most important goals, work and
creativity, which is surprising as Rosamond was his support and encouragement. She rescued work thrown away in his moods of despair and helped him to reconstruct
it, she gave up her own career to further his, she copied out his verse,
learned his speeches by heart (the actress playing Roxanne fell ill on the
historic premiere of Cryano, and as Rosamond knew the part by heart, she took
up the mantel), she nursed him during illness, she made a peaceful home, devoting
herself to Edmond and the family, ambitious for him and wanting the world to
know his work.
Despite all this his determination to fulfill
what he saw as his destiny, to inspire with beauty, console with grace, give
lessons for the soul in a time when passion and enthusiasm had been replaced by
banter and cynicism, only distanced him.
It’s sad that a man who wrote so ingeniously about
love neglected his family. His sons’ childhood memories were of a father locked
in his room in a depressed torture waiting for those rare moments of divine
inspiration. Rostand disapproved of his son(Maurice)’s homosexuality and
aspirations to be a writer, and after neglect to appreciate his wife giving up
her career for him, he demanded the same of his mistress, up-and-coming actress
Mary Marquet, later in his life. (Maybe I missed it through lazy reading, but the
biographer seems to have left word about any kind of philandering until the end
of the book, a big and sudden surprise as Rostand had been described as a man who disapproved
so of such 'distractions').
I recently read in Maugham's 'The Summing Up' about the impracticality of the disappointment we feel when we learn that the
idols we look up to are 'full of fault'. It's the mistakes that make a man. In a line from Lloyd's biography, Rostand asks, 'How can the soul come into
its own in this prim landscape?'
And how can a masterpiece come from a prim soul?
Blogpost here about the life and legend of Cyrano de Bergerac
Blogpost here about the life and legend of Cyrano de Bergerac
1 comment:
Thanks , for that <3
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