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Photo of the Week

Paris Update Centre Pompidou Darren Palmer

Another view of the Centre Pompidou. Photo © Darren Palmer of Paris by Photo.

 

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Paris Update What's New in Paris

RESTAURANT/CLUB/CAFE
Wanderlust:
Finally, part of Les Docks, Cité de la Mode et Design will open to the public on June 6. Brunch on the terrace, take a yoga class, take in a concert or dance all night. 34, quai d'Austerlitz, 75013 Paris.

SHOPS
Stella Cadente:
The designer of very feminine clothing and accessories has a new Paris store that's like a gold-lined tunnel. 102 boulevard Beaumarchais, 75011 Paris.

Ecolo-Chic: Pop-up store in the Marais selling ethically resourced products, from toys and design to organic wine. 90, rue des Archives, 75003 Paris.

SMOKING
A new organization, L'Union pour les Droits des Fumeurs Adultes, has been formed to lobby for the rights of French smokers

JUSTIN ON THE ROOFTOPS
Keep your eyes peeled: Justin Bieber will be filming for the Web TV program live@home in an undisclosed location on the rooftops of Paris on the evening of May 31. Click here to win a pass to the taping.

 

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Paris Update Flash News

CAKE THE WAY WE LIKE IT

Paris Update Merce and the Muse

Goodies on display at Merce and the Muse.

Nowadays, American expatriates in Paris can easily satisfy almost all their nostalgic food cravings, from hamburgers to Reese’s peanut-butter cups or Oreo cookies. Until Merce and the Muse opened in the Upper Marais, however, it wasn’t easy to find good homemade, American-style cakes. The desserts at this homey, flea-market-furnished café are not just good, they are scrumptious and original, made from owner Merce Muse’s own recipes. The other day I shared a slice of chocolate layer cake with vanilla icing and another of pistachio cake with rose icing with a friend, but in truth I wanted to eat all of both of them. 1 bis, rue Dupuis, 75003 Paris. Tel.: 09 53 14 53 04. Open Tues.-Sun. for breakfast, lunch and coffee; brunch on Sunday. Heidi Ellison

 

Paris Update This Week's Events

For full details about an event, click on its name to visit the official Web site (in English when available).

play Art Saint-Germain-des-Prés

>Left Bank gallery walk. Collective opening, May 31, 6pm. May 31-June 3.

play Carré Rive Gauche

>Another Left Bank gallery walk, with 120 participating galleries. June 1-June 3.

play Champs-Elysées Film Festival

>A new Franco-American film festival, presided over by Lambert Wilson and Michael Madsen. Various locations, Paris, June 6-12.

play Chartre en Lumières

> The town of Chartres illuminates its monuments and the cathedral with colorful light installations. Through Sept. 15.

play Designer's Days

>Design shops, galleries, schools and more participate in a city-wide design event. Various locations, Paris, May 31-June 4.

play Festival de l'Imaginaire

> Performances by troupes from around the world, Maison des Cultures du Monde, Paris, through June 17.

play Festival de Saint Denis

> Music festival featuring both stars like Sir Colin Davis and young talents; ends with a dawn performance by horse whisperer Bartabas and oud player Mehdi Haddab, Cathedral and Legion of Honor, Saint Denis, through June 30.

play Festival Extensions

> Concerts, dance, films and more, various locations, Paris and Val de Marne, through May 31.

play Festival International des Jardins de Chaumont-sur-Loire

>"Gardens of delights, gardens of delirium" is the theme of this year's garden festival, Chaumont-sur-Loire, through Oct. 21.

play Festival Jazz à Saint-Germain-des-Prés

>Jazz acts ranging from amateur to big names like Ahmad Jamal and Yusef Lateef (together). Various locations, Paris, Through June 3.

play Le Court en Dit Long

>Festival of short films. Centre Wallonie-Bruxelles, Paris, June 4-9.

play Nomades

>Cultural festival in the third arrondissement; art, poetry, concerts and more. Various locations, Paris, May 31-June 3.

play Quinzaine des Réalisateurs

>The features and short subjects entered in this category at the Cannes Film Festival shown in Paris, Forum des Images, Paris, May 31-June 10

play Salon du Vin de La Revue du Vin de France

>Annual wine fair. Palais Brongniart, Paris, June 2-3

 

After the Parade Passes By: Ghosts of Bastille Days Past

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fireworks

By glancing at this photo, you have now seen more fireworks than I ever did on Bastille Day. I did, however, see two memorable characters in action… Photo © R.L. Wolverton | Dreamstime.com

 

To celebrate France’s biggest national holiday, in addition to the military parade that I talked about last week, the city organizes a fireworks display on Bastille ...

fireworks

By glancing at this photo, you have now seen more fireworks than I ever did on Bastille Day. I did, however, see two memorable characters in action… Photo © R.L. Wolverton | Dreamstime.com


To celebrate France’s biggest national holiday, in addition to the military parade that I talked about last week, the city organizes a fireworks display on Bastille Day Eve, July 13. During my first summer in Paris, I thought it would be fun to go see it.

Fortunately, I had already been wrong about a couple of other things by that point in my life, so what happened was not too much of a shock. It wasn’t fun. It wasn’t anything like fun. If, as the saying goes, getting there is half the fun, the other half in this case was getting home. As it turned out, finding a place to watch the show on the Esplanade des Invalides, which was where the fireworks were set off back then (now they’re at Trocadéro), was a midsummer night’s impossible dream. The crowd was so huge and dense that it was impossible to get anywhere near Invalides, and I ended up stuck on a side street hearing skyrockets go off a hundred yards away, getting the occasional glimpse of a red or green glow over the rooftops, but otherwise missing the whole thing.

The next year on July 13, I happened to be with a group of people who had just moved to Paris and thought it would be fun to go see the fireworks. I didn’t endorse the idea but went along to be a good sport. And guess what? The crowd was so huge and dense that it was impossible to get anywhere near Invalides, and we ended up stuck on a side street hearing skyrockets go off a hundred yards away, getting the occasional glimpse of a red or green glow over the rooftops, but otherwise missing the whole thing.

The next year after that on July 13, I happened to be with another group of different people who had also just moved to Paris, and they, too, thought it would be fun to go see the fireworks. Once again, I didn’t endorse the idea but went along to be, as always, a good sport. And guess what? The c. was so h. and d. that it was impossible to get anywhere near I., and we ended up stuck on an s.s. hearing s. go off a hundred y.a., getting the occasional g. of an r. or g.g. over the r., but otherwise missing the w.f.t.

I could go on, but to spare you the blow-by-blowing-it account, suffice it to say that this same scenario played out more or less identically five years in a row. Every year after my own first attempt, I would try to convince the people I was with that it wasn’t worth the effort, and every year I ended up going anyway, and every year I ended up missing the show again for all the same reasons. Obviously, I’m a slow learner.

It was on one of these attempts that I encountered Mr. Laser Gaze. This is the nickname I have given to a young man with a very narrowly focused perception of the world. It was on July 13 in about 1987. There I was, stuck yet again on Boulevard de la Tour Maubourg while the fireworks were bursting and blasting a block away, invisible to me. The end of the street was sealed off by the crowd. I was standing at the edge of the throng to see if there was any hope of moving forward (answer: no), when I suddenly felt a repetitive sharp stabbing pressure on the back of my right leg. I turned around and there was a young guy on a motor scooter who apparently felt an overwhelmingly compelling need to drive down that particular street at that particular time. Despite the fact that there were literally hundreds of people in his immediate field of vision, filling every square millimeter of street and sidewalk, he had decided, for reasons known only to him and God (and I’m sure God is still trying to figure them out), that I personally was the sole, single obstacle preventing him from enjoying the splendor of the pyrotechnical spectacle.

He also seemed to have difficultly expressing this concept. He didn’t beep his horn. He didn’t say anything. He just kept bumping his front tire into my leg over and over, scowling at me with an enraged grimace on his face. My first reaction was that he must be either blind or an idiot. Did he think he had any faint hope of plowing through all those people, or did he just not see them? Then my second reaction was to go with “idiot,” because he was, after all, riding a scooter and trying to go see fireworks. But, with reflection, my third reaction was not to rule out vision-impaired right away, because it was only when I stepped aside and gestured toward the human barricade in front of me, saying “Go right ahead,” that he finally turned around, realizing (at last) that he’d have a better chance of driving his scooter through the Amazon rainforest.

Discouraged by the repeated fireworks fiascoes, I gave up on the rockets’ red (and green) glare after that, but for many years my wife and I used to enjoy another mainstay of the July 14 festivities: the firemen’s balls. On the evenings of July 13 and/or 14, each of the firestations in Paris hosts a bal des pompiers with a live band (invariably, as though dictated by Central Casting, featuring at least one accordion), cheap drinks, light food and little amusements like raffles and carnival games. Our friends and we used to go every year to swill bad champagne, eat bad French fries and watch people dance badly to bad music. We had a good time.

It was at one of these events that I encountered The Speedy Mediator, the nickname I have given to a young man who, unbeknownst to him, impressed me tremendously in the way he handled an unpleasant situation (sometimes those firemen’s balls get hot!) (punchline ©2011 by the Puerile Punners League, all rights reserved).

The incident in question took place at the now-demolished Marché Saint Honoré firehouse. It was the night of July 13, c. 1990, and the ball was in full swing. Nancy and I were sitting at a table near a group of German tourists and another group of hard-partying British guys in their early 20s who were drinking as though there were no Bastille Day. In sharp contrast, the Germans, all couples in their 50s or 60s, probably on a group tour, were just sitting there talking quietly. Most of the women had one of those single cellophane-wrapped roses that those indigent, itinerant and incredibly insistent street vendors were already selling back then.

At one point one of the young Brits was doing a parody of a kind of hoochie-coochie shimmy dance and cracking everyone up. To spice up his act, he reached over, grabbed the rose of the German lady nearest him and put it in his mouth like a tango dancer. It was funny for everyone except the rose’s rightful owner. At the first opportunity, she lunged forward and grabbed her blossom back, possibly inflicting thorn damage, and then loudly and firmly told the guy, in surprisingly idiomatic English, to get lost. Only she didn’t exactly say “get lost.” The expression she used would be more properly spelled “#@%£ §##!”

Maybe I misheard. Maybe she was asking him if his name was “Chuck Goff.” Or maybe she was saying that she had been sick for a long time and had a “stuck cough.” Or pointing out that the plastic glasses of wine, on sale for the equivalent of about a dollar, were a “buck quaff.” Or that his dancing style would make a “duck scoff.” In any case, she was really mad. But get this: instead of delivering a perfunctory apology, or just ignoring her completely, as most people would have done, the young man went over to her and said, very calmly and politely, “Excuse me, did you just tell me to “#@%£ §##?”

There then ensued a short conversation that I couldn’t overhear but that I wish I had, because I would love to know how he did it: one minute later that kid was waltzing across the dance floor with that woman in his arms, smiling and cracking jokes and making her laugh her head off. Obviously, he had launched and maintained a barrage of bonhomie that no one could resist. Putting his own ego aside, he had transcended generational and national-cultural differences in order to quickly and handily transform a belligerent confrontation into a pleasurable experience for all concerned.

It is nearly impossible to put into words how much I admired that guy. But I’ll try: I admired that guy. A lot. Seriously, I wish I had his people skills and he had my mortgage. This was some time ago, and he is no doubt putting his special powers to use in the workforce now (and paying his own mortgage). I sincerely hope that he’s in the UK diplomatic corps, although sometimes I wonder if he stayed in Paris – and became a motivational speaker for rose sellers.

David Jaggard

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