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Sarah Bernhardt

chapter
posted on 2016-08-06, 00:00 authored by Victoria DuckettVictoria Duckett
Sarah Bernhardt (born Sara-Marie-Henriette Bernard, 1844-1923) is the most famous French actress of the late nineteenth century. Celebrated for her golden voice and for the sinuous flow of her slender figure on stage, she was also a theatre manager, author, sculptor, painter, and a clever businesswoman. She developed and nurtured global fame in an era when the popular press facilitated international renown. Print media as well as the emerging phonograph and film industries enabled Bernhardt to cultivate and develop her celebrity into the early twentieth century, appealing to new publics and audiences. During the First World War she became a French porte-parole for the Allied cause, appearing on stage and in a propaganda film, as well as in demonstrations and events in support of Allied troops across France and America. When Bernhardt died in 1923 at the age of 78, millions crowded the streets to watch her funeral cortège pass through Paris. This essay explores her achievements in her lifetime.

History

Volume

1.5.2.05 Nineteenth-Century French Writing and Culture

Pagination

1-1

Location

[London, Eng.]

ISSN

1747-678X

Language

eng

Publication classification

B1 Book chapter

Copyright notice

2016, The Literary Encyclopedia

Editor/Contributor(s)

Forman E, Harkness N, Unwin T, Williams D, Yee J

Publisher

Literary Dictionary Company

Place of publication

[London, Eng.]

Title of book

The literary encyclopedia: exploring literature, history and culture