Mademoiselle Parisot

Mademoiselle Parisot

Mademoiselle Parisot in a 1799 mezzotint by Charles Turner after John James Masquerier
Born c. 1775–1777
Occupation Opera, Ballet dancer
Years active 1789–1807

Mademoiselle Parisot (c. 1775 – after 1837) was a French opera singer and ballet dancer in the late 18th and early 19th centuries. Her provocative costumes and dances caused an uproar in London and led to the imposition of restrictions on performances.

Background

Parisot's given name has been cited as Rose[1] and as Céline,[2][3] but during her career she was commonly referred to simply as "Mademoiselle" or "Madame" Parisot. She debuted at the Théâtre de Monsieur in Paris at age 14 in a 20 December 1789[4] production of l'Infante de Zamora.[5] Parisot was trained by Jean-Antoine Favre Guiardele, the ballet-master of the French Opera.[6] The Victoria & Albert Museum identifies Parisot's father as the journalist Pierre-Germain Pariseau who was mistaken for a royalist and subsequently guillotined in 1794;[1] however, in Louis Péricaud's chronicle of the Théâtre de Monsieur, Parisot's first name was Eugénie and her father was a sculptor. Her father allegedly told her:

My daughter was raised between a linnet and a lark, but it was a nightingale which taught her to sing.[4]

Dancing career in England

After the death of her father, Parisot moved to London where she made her stage debut at the King's Theatre on 9 February 1796 in a production of Piramo e Tisbe.[7] The Morning Chronicle spoke of the 19-year-old's performance favorably and described her balance "as positively magical, for her person was almost horizontal while turning as a pivot on her toe."[8] Parisot frequently wore costumes that accentuated her legs as she danced, leading the Monthly Mirror to remark on her degree of flexibility in a 1796 performance in the ballet le Triomphe de l'Amour as creating "a stir by raising her legs far higher than was customary for dancers",[9] while Leigh Hunt reported that she was "very thin and always smiling".[3] Parisot's salary for the 1795–1796 season was £600 and she earned £577 in 1799–1800 and £840 during the 1803–1804 season.[10]

Mademoiselle Parisot in a 1796 caricature by Robert Newton. The Bishop of Durham and the Duke of Queensberry are in the theatre box to the left.

In the late 1790s, Parisot often danced with Rose and Charles Didelot, a husband and wife ballet pair that were trained in Paris and were later influential in developing Russian ballet.[11] In 1798 The Hon. Shute Barrington, Bishop of Durham, denounced a dress she had worn while dancing at the Opera as "indecent".[12] The risqué dance moves of Parisot and the Didelots and Parisot's use of sheer, neoclassical costumes that often exposed one breast[11] led the same bishop to denounce the "immoral" antics of the French ballet dancers.[13] The church's response attracted much ridicule and was parodied by many British caricaturists, including James Gilray, Isaac Cruikshank and Robert Newton, who produced multiple caricatures of the Bishop and the Duke of Queensberry looking under Parisot's skirt.[8] In a 2 March 1798 address to the House of Lords, the Bishop declared that the French "female dancers, who, by the allurement of the most indecent attitudes and most wanton theatrical exhibitions succeeded but too effectually in loosening and corrupting the moral feelings of the people."[14] In response to the outcry, the colour of dancer's costumes was changed from light pink, flesh-toned pieces to a less provocative white[13] and the performances were not to extend past midnight.[15]

In 1799, Parisot "astounded" British theatre goers when she dressed in menswear to play Lindor in a production of The Agreeable Surprise.[16] A "shawl dance" performed by Parisot at the King's Theatre as part of the January 1805 production of the ballet, La belle Laitiere, ou Blanche, Reine de Castile "was received with enthusiastic applause."[17] On 15 June 1805, a riot occurred at the Opera due to the manager Mr. Kelly, following the Bishop of London's orders to end the ballet by midnight, drawing the curtain before a dance by Parisot was completed. The angry theatre patrons "threw all the chairs out of the boxes into the pit tore up the benches, destroyed the chandeliers, jumped into the orchestra, smashed the piano forte and broke all the instruments of the poor unoffending performers."[15]

Retirement

Mademoiselle Parisot retired from the stage at the end of the 1807 season and married a Mr. Hughes, "an eminent florist-worker",[18] who lived at Golden Square.[19] An announcement in The Gentleman's Magazine for December 1807 read simply

Mr. Hughes, of Golden-square, to Madame Parisot, of the Opera-house.[20]

At the time of her retirement, she was still playing at the King's Theatre in the ballet La belle Laitiere, and it was reported in January 1808 that she had been replaced in this by a Miss Cranfield.[21] In March of that year Le Beau Monde reported Parisot's marriage to a Mr J. Hughes and claimed that "the lady is said to be three score years of age and to have retired from public life with three score thousand pounds".[22] The actual sum she accrued from her performances is estimated to be around £12,000.[6] Parisot's colleague, Michael Kelly (1762–1826), published a memoir in 1826 in which he reported that Hughes was "a man of property".[23]

An 1827 advertisement in the Morning Chronicle listed "Madame PARISSOT de PARIS" as a business selling French perfume and flowers at No. 324 Oxford St in London.[6]

Parisot was alive in 1837, living in Paris under her husband's name.[24]

Legacy

The 1796 Epsom Oaks winner, the Thoroughbred racehorse Parisot, was named after Mademoiselle Parisot.[25]

In January 1799, a coloured mezzotint by Charles Turner after John James Masquerier was published which showed Parisot dancing, lightly clothed with a garland (illustration above).[19][26]

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mademoiselle Parisot.
Mademoiselle Parisot
A ballet dancer with a long skirt lifting her right leg perpendicular to her torso. Two men in a opera box look up her skirt
A peep at the Parisot with Q in the corner: Mademoiselle Parisot in a 1796 caricature by Isaac Cruikshank displaying her risque dancing style. The "Q" in the title is the Duke of Queensberry. 
Three ballet dancers, two females around a male dressed in revealing costumes. The dancer on the right (Parisot) has an exposed breast.
Modern Grace, -or- the operatical finale to the ballet of Alonzo e Caro: Rose Didelot, Charles Didelot and Mademoiselle Parisot in a 1796 caricature by James Gilray. 

References

  1. 1 2 Staff. "The origins of ballet". Victoria and Albert Museum. Retrieved 11 March 2012.
  2. Mlle Céline Parisot at racollection.org.uk, accessed 6 June 2012
  3. 1 2 Stott, Andrew McConnell (2009). The Pantomime Life of Joseph Grimaldi:Laughter, Madness and the Story of Britain's Greatest Comedian. Edinburgh: Canongate Books. p. 144. ISBN 9781847678164.
  4. 1 2 Péricaud, Louis (1908). Théâtre de "Monsieur" (in French). Paris: E. Jorel. p. 70. Ma fille a été élevée entre une fauvette et un pinson, mais, c'est un rossignol qui lui a appris à chanter.
  5. Houssaye, Arsène (1867). Les femmes du diable (in French). Paris: M. Lévy. p. 331.
  6. 1 2 3 Lehmann, Caitlyn (December 2011 – January 2012). "Madame Parisot". Dance Australia. 117: 44.
  7. Staff (8 February 1796). "King's Theatre". The Times.
  8. 1 2 Alexander, David S. (1998). Richard Newton and English Caricature in the 1790s. Manchester: The Whitworth Art Gallery. p. 133. ISBN 0719054796.
  9. Chazin-Bennahum, Judith (2005). The Lure Of Perfection: Fashion And Ballet, 1780–1830. London: Routledge. p. 116.
  10. Milhous, Judith and Robert D. Hume (1993). "Opera Salaries in Eighteenth-Century London". Journal of the American Musicological Society. 46: 74. doi:10.1525/jams.1993.46.1.03a00020.
  11. 1 2 Gatrell, Vic (2006). City of Laughter: Sex And Satire in Eighteenth-Century London. New York: Walker and Company. p. 370.
  12. Farington, Joseph, ed. James Greig (1924) The Farington diary vol. 4, p. 62 (footnote)
  13. 1 2 Carter, Alexandra (2004). Rethinking Dance History: A Reader. London: Routledge. p. 67.
  14. Cobbett, William and John Wright, Thomas Curson Hansard (1803). The parliamentary history of England. London: T.C. Hansard. p. 1308.
  15. 1 2 Staff (1827). The Annual biography and obituary, Volume 11. London: Longman, Rees,Orme, Brown and Green. p. 55.
  16. Chazin-Bennahum, Judith (2005). The Lure Of Perfection: Fashion And Ballet, 1780–1830. London: Routledge. p. 88.
  17. Burgh, Allatson (1814). Anecdotes of music, historical and biographical. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown. p. 354.
  18. Staff (1807). "Theatrical Intelligence". The Cabinet: or, Monthly report of polite literature. 3: 69.
  19. 1 2 Whitman, Alfred (1907). Charles Turner. London: G. Bell & Sons. p. 156.
  20. Urban, Sylvanus, ed., The Gentleman's magazine, vol. 77, p. 1171
  21. The National Register dated January 17, 1808, p. 43
  22. The Athenaeum, no. 4236 dated January 2, 1909, p. 22
  23. Kelly, Michael (1826) Reminiscences of Michael Kelly, of the King's theatre and Theatre royal, Drury Lane, including a period of nearly half a century, p. 339
  24. Staff (October 1837). "Miscellaneous". The Musical World. 7: 126.
  25. Black, Robert (1891). The jockey club and its founders: in three periods. London: Smith, Elder. p. 220.
  26. After John James Masquerier 1778–1855 Mademoiselle Parisot, Stipple engraving, 213 X 171 mm at racollection.org.uk, accessed 6 June 2012
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