Ask most people what they know about Boston’s ethnic cultures and they’re likely to answer with something about green beer and shamrocks, or a laundry list of the best places in the North End to get cannoli and really good spaghetti Bolognese. But there are other ethnicities that have a significant presence in Boston—if you only know where to look. As Francophiles the world over prepare to celebrate major French festivities such as Bastille Day and the Tour de France, Panorama decided to explore French culture in Boston and find out how, if only for a little while, visitors can pretend the Charles is the Seine. | ||
THE
CENTER OF IT ALL
Anyone seeking French culture in Boston would be advised to start
the search at the French Library and Cultural Center (53
Marlborough St., 617-912-0400). If someone within the city limits
is baking a baguette or paying musical tribute to Edith Piaf,
it’s the French Library’s raison d’etre to know about it and
share the info with the community.
The library itself is a tremendous resource for lovers of all things French. Incorporated in 1945, and lovingly nurtured by expatriate General Georges Doriot and his American wife Edna throughout the 1970s and 1980s, the library houses 25,000 books—the largest private collection of French literature in the U.S. It also offers French language classes for adults and children, cooking seminars, lectures by visiting French dignitaries, and, for some, a haven to connect or reconnect with French heritage.
For one day a year, the library throws one heck of a fete in celebration of Bastille Day, with the streets surrounding the building closed off for an old-fashioned block party with food and entertainment. This month’s celebration on July 15 is the first in two years for the French Library at its home base, which executive director Elaine Uzan Leary hopes is a sign that the anti-French sentiment that proliferated after France failed to back the U.S. military action in Iraq has dissipated. “It had an impact,” she confesses. “The people who come here regularly kept coming, but we didn’t have [the street party] because we could not get the corporate support.”
LOUIS
SLEPT HERE
Some of Boston’s most famous names and landmarks are intimately
connected with France. Revolutionary War hero Paul Revere
originally had the family name Revoire, like his Huguenot
descendants. And Faneuil Hall—one of Boston’s most significant
historical buildings—is named for French descendant Peter Faneuil,
who built it and donated it to the city in 1742.
At King’s Chapel, a column near the entrance was erected in 1917 as a memorial to Cavalier Saint-Sauveur, a French lieutenant who died while supporting the U.S. in the American Revolution. And Louis-Philippe d’Orleans, while in exile during the French Revolution in 1796, lived for several months above the Union Oyster House before claiming the French throne in 1830.
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SHOW ME
THE MONET
Though thousands of miles away from Montmartre, Boston-area
galleries and museums abound in works by prominent French
artists. Explore the treasures of the Museum of Fine Arts, where
you can view pieces by Degas, Manet, Monet and Renoir, to name a
few. Or drop by the Fogg Art Museum to visit the Art in France
exhibit, which showcases works by Matisse, Cezanne, and Leger, as
well as the not-to-be missed portrait of Madame de Pompadour
painted by Bouchard during the 18th century. Galerie d’Orsay (33
Newbury St., 617-266-8001) may be considerably smaller than its
Paris inspiration, but it features masterworks by Pissarro and
Chagall. If your idea of art has an engine and four wheels, ogle
French relics at the Larz Anderson Auto Museum’s L’Automobile
exhibit. Refer to listings in Museums.
PARLEZ
VOUS…SHOPPING?
The Back Bay, Boston’s shopping mecca, looks nothing like the
illustrious Champs-Elysees, but don’t be surprised to find many
of the same trendy French boutiques. Garb yourself in luxury at
Agnes B (172 Newbury St.), Chanel (5 Newbury St.), Hermes (338
Boylston St.) or Dior (100 Huntington Ave.). Then, accessorize at
Louis Vuitton (100 Huntington Ave. and Copley Place), Cartier (40
Newbury St.) and Longchamp (139 Newbury St.). Or indulge your
olfactory senses with the collection of perfumes and scented
candles at Diptyque (123 Newbury St.).
FOR
FANS OF SUBTITLES
The French take pride in their films for a good reason—after
Hollywood and India’s “Bollywood,” no country’s movies reach as
wide an audience and garner as much international attention from
critics. In Boston, independent movie houses like Kendall Square
Cinema (One Kendall Square, Cambridge), Harvard Film Archive, the
Brattle Theatre and the Coolidge Corner Theatre frequently show
new and classic French flicks. And from July 7–24 the Museum of
Fine Arts hosts its 10th annual French Film Festival, which
includes a celebration of the 60th anniversary of the film Les
Enfants du Paradis (Children of Paradise).
WATCHING THE WHEELS
Boston is known as a great sports town, and while a bike race
across the pond isn’t likely to rival the Red Sox for the
region’s affections, French restaurant Brasserie Jo (refer to
listing, page 65) is taking advantage of interest in all things
Lance Armstrong by showing the Tour de France on television. From
July 2–24, the restaurant also offers daily special spotlighting
dishes from the provinces through which the race passes. Just a
few miles south, the Jeanie Johnston Pub (144 South St., Jamaica
Plain, 617-983-9432) also offers the race on the tube daily.
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