Succès de scandale

Succès de scandale (French for "success from scandal") is a term for any artistic work whose success is attributed, in whole or in part, to public controversy surrounding the work. In some cases the controversy causes audiences to seek out the work for its titillating content, while in others it simply heightens public curiosity. This concept is echoed by the phrase, "there is no such thing as bad publicity".[1]

Belle Époque

The Luncheon on the Grass was one of the first in a series of Parisian succès de scandale.
Not a commercial success in Europe, Paul Chabas's September Morn ended up in the permanent collection of the New York Metropolitan Museum of Art, after scandalising Anthony Comstock and his New York Society for the Suppression of Vice.
Strauss' head on a silver platter satirizes the decapitation of John the Baptist in his operatic version of Wilde's Salome

Belle Époque Paris was notable for many succès de scandale; this was also where and when the term originated. In all the examples below, regarding famous artists kicking off their career with some sort of scandal, there are at least some connections with turn of the 20th century Paris. In other cities, provoking a scandal appeared more risky, as Oscar Wilde found out shortly after his relatively "successful" Parisian scandal (Salomé — 1894, portraying the main character as a necrophile):

Other examples

This was not the last time that Comstockery fanned the success it wanted to fence: "I expect it will be the making of me" said Mae West to the press in 1927, under arrest after the Society for the Suppression of Vice had maneuvered to get her play titled "Sex" re-censored by the Police Department Play Jury — a few years later, over forty, her sex-symbol status paid off: her 1935 film contract made her the highest paid woman till that day.

Films qualified as succès de scandale include Louis Malle's 1958 The Lovers,[6] and Bertolucci's 1972 Last Tango in Paris.[7] Scandal also boosted the success of writings with modest literary qualities.[8] Even famous writers like Flaubert and Joyce have been described as deploying succès de scandale recipes to their advantage.[9]

See also

References

  1. "no such thing as bad publicity"
  2. Clare Brook. "Why BLUE needs a Succès de Scandale" at www.bluemarinefoundation.com
  3. Le Figaro, 30 May 1912, Un Faux Pas Gaston Calmette editorial, cited in Buckle, Nijinsky, p.242. Buckle suggests Calmette was seeking to imply Nijinsky was showing bulging genitalia when seen in profile.
  4. Richard Taruskin. Stravinsky and the Russian Traditions: A Biography of the Works Through Mavra, p. 1008 University of California Press, 1996. ISBN 0520070992 ISBN 9780520070998
  5. Whitesitt, Linda. "Antheil, George". Grove Music Online. Oxford Music Online. Retrieved 3 December 2011.
  6. Ginette Vincendeau. "The Lovers: Succès de scandale" at www.criterion.com
  7. Patrick Duynslaegher. "Last Tango in Paris: Succès de scandale" in Knack, 31 January 2011.
  8. Isabelle de Courtivron. "The French Still Love a Succes de Scandale" in The New York Times. June 22, 1997
  9. Valérie Bénéjam. "The Elliptical Adultery of Ulysses: A Flaubertian Recipe for Succès de Scandale", pp. 76–93 in James Joyce and the Nineteenth-Century French Novel edited by Finn Fordham and Rita Sakr. Rodopi, 2011. ISBN 9042032901 ISBN 9789042032903
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