Marc Chevalier
Gone Home
- Messages
- 18,125
- Location
- Los Feliz, Los Angeles, California
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The best-known (and best-loved) Frenchman in the United States wasn't Lafayette or DeToqueville. It was Maurice Chevalier.
When I was a little boy in the early 1970s, every man and woman over the age of 50 asked me, "Are you related to Maurice Chevalier"? (I wasn't.) They'd always add, with a *****le in their eyes and a big smile, "What a wonderful performer he was!" Apparently, Maurice Chevalier really struck a chord with American audiences in the late '20s and '30s. His screen persona was charming and naughty, but somehow not dirty. *** for his characters was fun, a part of life's joy. He made it palatable to many Americans who might not have accepted the same from a Yankee actor.
I know that Maurice Chevalier the man was rather less charming (or tasteful) than the characters he played. Chevalier performed for the Germany's WWII-era leaderships in Vichy France, and he ***ually harassed his frequent co-star, Jeanette MacDonald. However, American moviegoers knew nothing of that. They simply enjoyed Maurice Chevalier the persona: a poor, streetwise Parisian who found success through charm, resourcefulness, and endless bouts of flirtation.
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The best-known (and best-loved) Frenchman in the United States wasn't Lafayette or DeToqueville. It was Maurice Chevalier.
When I was a little boy in the early 1970s, every man and woman over the age of 50 asked me, "Are you related to Maurice Chevalier"? (I wasn't.) They'd always add, with a *****le in their eyes and a big smile, "What a wonderful performer he was!" Apparently, Maurice Chevalier really struck a chord with American audiences in the late '20s and '30s. His screen persona was charming and naughty, but somehow not dirty. *** for his characters was fun, a part of life's joy. He made it palatable to many Americans who might not have accepted the same from a Yankee actor.
I know that Maurice Chevalier the man was rather less charming (or tasteful) than the characters he played. Chevalier performed for the Germany's WWII-era leaderships in Vichy France, and he ***ually harassed his frequent co-star, Jeanette MacDonald. However, American moviegoers knew nothing of that. They simply enjoyed Maurice Chevalier the persona: a poor, streetwise Parisian who found success through charm, resourcefulness, and endless bouts of flirtation.
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