HOTEL MEURICE, Paris
I had another encounter with the Hotel Meurice in those early days. There remain only a few memory fragments, it was so long ago. I think the reason I haven’t completely forgotten is that making my life and learning about life in Paris was of inordinate importance to me at that time. My dream from the earliest moments here was to somehow become a Parisian.
Martha circa 1970 |
Soon afterwards, Peggy decided on a trip to Paris, and Martha
insisted she look me up.
She
was traveling with an older woman as sort of a traveling
companion. I didn’t quite understand
their relationship, other than Peggy had a strong, loudish, not very
appealing
personality, and it was clear that the other lady was footing the bills.
I wasn't very taken with either of them. I was invited for drinks at
the Meurice where
they were staying, a world I was still singularly unused to, but no
longer
intimidated by either.
We had a drink at the Meurice’s rooftop bar. I’m glad I went, because that open-air
terrace no longer exists --except, I believe, in one of the presidential penthouse
suites-- and I fondly remember the impressive view of the Tuileries Gardens and
the Place de la Concorde.
Painting of the Tuileries Gardens by Jules Herve |
I was still quite poor. I had
moved from my Champs Elysées room to a minuscule studio apartment with toilet on
the landing; I was young, and I had
friends who were equally poor, and life in my adopted city seemed close
to perfect.
(It’s odd how many times over the years bits and pieces of Peggy and of that evening have passed through my mind, even though I hardly remember her face anymore.)
She suddenly announced she was so smitten with Paris that she, too, was going to find a way to move here.
(It’s odd how many times over the years bits and pieces of Peggy and of that evening have passed through my mind, even though I hardly remember her face anymore.)
She suddenly announced she was so smitten with Paris that she, too, was going to find a way to move here.
In the decades I’ve lived in France, I have seen so
many Americans arrive to make their lives here, only to throw up their arms in
exasperation or anger a few months or a few years later. It is not easy to learn a new language and understand
another culture, and accept such a different way of life all at the same time.
I was just about to warn her that life might not be quite so glamorous in a more humble neighborhood far from the Meurice. She preempted my comments, by adding: “And I wouldn’t dream of living in any other neighborhood than right here on the rue de Rivoli, and I would need at least 1000 square feet to house my furniture, and …."
You can fill in the blanks. I have forgotten the details, but she
continued to list just about everything that would make living comfortable in, say, Palm Beach, and assuming Paris would naturally
have to accommodate all of those American necessities.
I realized I would never have to worry about seeing Peggy settle in Paris, and of course she never did.
The Meurice Reception Staff 2012 |
Your input is welcomed: frank.pleasants@libertysurf.fr
[Photos are mine unless otherwise credited]
Next: " A Two-Dollar Hamburger Under A Silvery Dome" ... and "Dorothy Ann At The Stork Club"
4 comments:
Might this be a bit of a roman à clé ?
Could be!
I felt like a true "fly on the wall" ... watching it all rather than just reading it!
Well done - I look forward to reading some more.
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