Starving on the French Riviera

08:46PM, Wednesday 09 October 2019

Anne de Courcy
Phyllis Court Club

FESTIVAL favourite Anne de Courcy made a return visit to talk about her latest book, Chanel’s Riviera.

Subtitled “Life, Love and the Struggle for Survival on the Côte d’Azur, 1930-1944”, Anne described her book as a biography of the Riviera.

Illustrated with photographs from the book, Anne’s talk showcased her detailed knowledge of the subject as she mentioned some of the famous figures who flocked to the Riviera in the Thirties.

These included artists such as Picasso, writers Ernest Hemingway, W Somerset Maugham, HG Wells and Jean Cocteau, as well as Winston Churchill, Wallis Simpson and Edward VIII. And, of course, Coco Chanel herself, who entertained a string of lovers at the villa she designed and had built — the first thing she actually owned.

Anne described how the atmosphere changed following the outbreak of war. Many refugees from Northern Europe, including Jews fleeing persecution, sought refuge on the Riviera, and with the fall of France in 1940 food shortages made life really tough.

Anne gave us a vivid picture of Chanel as a self-sufficient, independent woman with considerable business acumen, despite her difficult childhood.

Abandoned by her father and brought up in a convent, Anne found it remarkable that Chanel did not become institutionalised but managed to be an original.

Responding to audience questions, Anne revealed she is currently in negotiations for her next book, provisionally titled Five Love Affairs and a Friendship, about writer and heiress Nancy Cunard and set in the Twenties.

Asked what she thought Chanel would make of her brand today, Anne said she’d probably approve of the pieces reminiscent of her early designs. However, being always impeccably turned out, she didn’t believe Chanel would think much of the fashion for “bed hair”.

A knowledgeable and thoroughly entertaining speaker, I can see Anne de Courcy making many more return visits to Henley Literary Festival.

Cathy Johnson

Most read

Top Articles

Father and son try to sell shop after eight months

Father and son try to sell shop after eight months

CONCERNS have been raised about the future of a shop and post office in Shiplake after it was put up for sale. The property in Station Road has been listed for sale with a leasehold for almost £150,000. Owners, father and son Andrew and Archie...

Charlie Anderson-Jeffs, from Harpsden

Charlie Anderson-Jeffs, from Harpsden

WHEN I was 13, I worked at Bix Manor and met Katie, who worked in the kitchen. Our friendship blossomed and I used every excuse to go to the kitchen. We even used to pretend to be boyfriend and girlfriend to get each other out of sticky situations. I...